xt7hdr2p886z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hdr2p886z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640915  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 15, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 15, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7hdr2p886z section xt7hdr2p886z Trustees Name New Vice President
HAWKSWORTH
Kernel Managing Editor

By GARY

The University Hoard of Trustees

today approved the appointment of
Dr. Glen wood 1.. Creech to the recently established position of Vice
President for University Relations.
Dr. Creech, a native Kentucklan and
UK alumni, currently is director of the
agricultural division of the W. K. Kellogg
Foundation, Battle Creek, Mich.
The Trustees created the position
when they submitted their budget to the
legislature.
Dr. Oswald said the new vice president would work very closely with him in
the increasingly important role of "the
University's relations with its many publics."
In heading University relations, Dr.
Creech will be directly responsible for the
activities of the directors of alumni affairs,
development, and public relations and Information.
Dr. Creech received a B.S. agriculture at UK in 1941 and completed his M.S.
in agricultural education here ni 1950. He
served in a research position in UK's College of Education after receiving his masters degree and also worked as an associate editor in the College of Agriculture
and Home Economics Department of Public Information.

si:.

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.

DR. GLENAVOOD L. CREECH

Dr. Creech, presently in Europe in
connection with his duties with the Kelwill assume the vice
logg Foundation,
presidency in January.
Dr. Oswald said he was particularly
pleased to invite the Casey County na

tive back to the University. "I feel that
we are most fortunate in being able to
attract "one of its ablest graduates," back
to the University, he said.
The Trustees also approved the secondary job of extension professor of agricultural extension for Dr. Creech.
Dr. Oswald assured the Trustees that
Dr. Creech's educational background and
service as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and executive
capacity with the Kellogg Foundation
would be an asset to this position.
The Trustees meeting opened with a
presentation of a resolution to former
Gov. Bert T. Combs. Special mention was
made of Gov. Combs' contributions to
the University in pioneering the Community College system, in spearheading the
improvement of University research facilities in agriculture and the physical sciences, and in allowing an unlimited search
for the best possible man to fulfill the
presidential vacancy created by the resignation of Frank G. Dickey.
Gov. "Ned" Breathitt, who presided
over the meeting, added his congratulations and thanks for creating a responsible tax base on which to build the educational systems of the state and for the
wisdom of selecting Dr. Oswald as the
president of the University.
Combs, in accepting the resolution,
said he realized that the University had
not conquered all of its problems yet,
but he added, "you are working on those

e.

The terms for both advisory boards are
staggered at one, two. three and four-yeappointments. All subsequent appointments will be made for four years.
Dr. Oswald said of the appointees,
"I believe we are on the right track in
the appointment of people of this caliber
to these advisory bodies. It is an opportunity for the son to officially advise the

father."

The groups will act in an advisoiy
capacity to the Trustees and the University administration.
The appointments to the Elizabeth-tow- n
advisory board went to Lee E. Stear-maMunfordville; James D. Larue Jr.,
Hodgenville; Bernie D. Sears, Radcliffe;
Charles L. Morgan, Brandenbuig; Robert
C. Wade, Glendale; J. Ray Jenkins, Elizabethtown. and Mrs. C. B. Morgan, Leitch-fieln,

d.

The advisory committee for Hopkins-vill- e
includes W. D. Talbert, chairman,
Hopkinsville; Louis Langhi. Frank Lacy
III, William G. Deatherage, W. W. Bryan,
all of Hopkinsville; George S. Boone,
Smith Broadbent III, Cadiz.
Elk-to-

n;

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S

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Vol. LVI, No. 7

V

problems and not sweeping them under
the rug."
"I am proud of what I see and what
I hear about the University," Combs said.
The final action of the Trustees was to
approve Gov. Breathitt's appointments to
the advisory boards of the Community
Colleges at Elizabethtown and Hopkins-vill-

u$l.
At Freshman Seminar

J

Dennie Barker and Mrs. Melvin Drucker listen intently to discussion
leader Sam Burke at the YVVCA Seminar on Sex. About 60 students
attended the Seminar that was held Saturday in the Student Center.

'Sex Not Everything,'
Psychologist Explains

Don't expect of sex that which can come only from love.
Mrs. Melvin Drucker, psychologist at Agnes Scott College,
told 60 women attending a YWCA seminar Saturday.

"Too many young people say
'gimme love out of sex, and it
Just doesn't work that way,"
Mrs. Drucker said.
She explained that the current
generation is one pampered by
indulgent parents wanting to
make a better life for their children and showered with material
possessions.
"You haven't had to wait for
things," she told the women, explaining: the same feeling often
carried over to attitudes toward
sex In an "I want it now" expression.
She said the modern college
age student is more knowledgeable and accepting toward a
variety of sexual attitudes but
also in danger of losing self
identity through less clearly defined values.
"Earlier, a child's sex education
came mainly from reading the
Sears Roebuck catalog and staring of models wearing then unmentionables," Mrs. Drucker said.
Mrs. Drucker said a person
must be a successful human to
be successful in sex, defining
humaness as a knowledge and
acceptance of help and a willingness to give.
"Being human today takes dar-inIt is a lifelong- proves of
If enhancement involving all of
us our physical, emotional, and
Intellectual capabilities." said the
Instructor and counselor.
She said love was a tough emotion, requiring an active concern
for the life and growth of what
f.

-

is loved and an emphasis on
giving.
"Sex is an outward expression
of an inner love, but the physical
act alone cannot create love,"
Mrs. Drucker said.
The current generation has
been sold a "faulty bill of goods"
on that point, Mrs. Drucker said.
"Those who dare to be human
find the greatest love," Mrs.
Drucker told the women.
Upperclass students Connie
Mullins and Stan Craig questioned Mrs. Drucker on points
covered in her talk before the
entire group was divided into five
discussion groups, led by upper-clas- s
women.
Later a panel of upperclass men
Joined each group for an additional discussion session.
A wrap-u- p
session gave participants an additional opportunity
to question the guest speaker.
An
Jam session
Saturday night, also sponsored
followed the
by the YWCA,
seminar.
Some 216 women btudents had
registered for the program.

SC Insurance

Student
Congress Insurance
policies will be available to students until Oct. 1. Information
is available at the Information
desk in the Student Center or
from Suiier Insurance Agency in
the First National Dank

I

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University of Kentucky
SEPT.

LEXINGTON,

KY., TUESDAY,

15, 1961

Eight Pages

Inter fraternity Council
Holds Two Rush Periods
This year the University's
Interfraternity Council, in or-

der to simplify the formal fall
rush, has provided separate
rush periods for upperclass-meand freshmen and extended upperclass rush for an
extra week.

n

The IFC registered 800 men for

fraternity rush this fall

190

and 610 freshmen.
Upperclass rush will be completed Saturday, and then the
mad dash for the freshmen begins.
Upperclass rush Involves first
acquainting upperclassmen with
the nineteen fraternities on the
campus. On two consecu've
nights bus trips are provided to
all the fraternity houses for this
reason.
After these parties, rushees are
invited to different houses for
dinners and smokers so that they
can "get to know the fellows in
the house."
Sunday is Bid Day for the upperclass rushees, and official bids
will be given and pledging done
at that time.
Since UK's fraternities are on
the deferred rush system, freshmen are given one semester to
become oriented to college life.
But, to give them some idea of
what goes on in fraternities and
exactly which fraternities are on
campus, a formal rush for freshmen will begin September 26, 27
and 28. After this formal rush,
there will be a three week period
of closed rush. Beginning October 14 fraternities can begin asking back for dinners and parties.
This week, the ire will start
putting letters from each fraternity to freshmen in the small
boxes in Donovan, Haggin, and
Klnkead halls. This is another
effort to familiarize the freshmen
with fraternities before the open
rush begins.
The freshmen who have not
signed up for rush can do so
Thursday and Friday in the
Donovan Hall Cafeteria or any
time in the Dean of Men's Office
to they will receive their letters,

and men who do not live in residence halls can get their information In the Dean of Men's
office.
Tomorrow the IFC is sponsoring section meetings in the men's
residence halls to answer any
questions the freshmen may have
concerning fraternities or the
procedure for pledging. The notices for the times of these discussions have been posted in the
residence halls.
To pledge a fraternity a man
must have a 2.1 overall grade

average or a 2.1 his previous
semester. This has been raised
from last year"s requirement of
a 2.0. Transfer students are not
Included in this stipulation.

Newman Club
The Newman Club is sponsoring a series of duplicate bridge
games every Friday night beginning at 7:30. Admission is 75
cents.

Zetas Meet Lynda
On Political Tour
JONES GRAY
Associate News Editor

Dy DAItBAKA

Tau Alpha Sorority members from UK and the
University of Louisville diapters greeted Lynda liird Johnson, elder daughter of United States President Lyndon 11.
Johnson, on her arrival at Standiford kid in Louisville.
Zeta

I

Pat Snoddy, president of U.L.'s
chapter, along with 50 other
Zeta's presented Lynda with a
dozen red roses and introduced
her to the various officers of her
chapter and to Kathy Manyet,
UK's ZTA president.
The U. of L. chapter has written earlier to Lynda to ask her

Itelulrd Story, I'ictures an
I'd lies

,

7

to appear at the rally, but they
had received no answer from her,
Pat said.
According to her press secretary, Lynda felt that going to
Louisville was something she
"really wanted to do," after she
received the eta's letter.
Lynda apologized to the group
for not writing a hasty reply to
their letter. Her press secretary
Mrs. Martha Hoss said that an
unanswered Utter means that the
White House staff was consid-eiln- g
the letter and that they
were going to accept the sorority's invitation.

Jeannine Miller, a member of
UK's ZTA's, who attended Lynda
Bird's arrival said, "I thought
it was a great idea." She described Lynda Bird as a very
h
person. "She was
really friendly, not like a President's daughter, and very easy
to talk to."

down-to-eart-

Lynda wore a sleeveless linen
fuschia dress which hung loosely. She carried a beige straw
purse and wore beige heels. She
also wore a blue metal badge
in the shape of the state of
Kentucky which said "Welcome
Lynda."
A Zeta of the Kappa chapter at her former school. University of Texas, she queried the
ZTA's if their rush had started,
found out that it had and said.
of
"I called the University
Texas) and found that their
rush is just starting, too." She
was initiated in l'JUJ as a Zeta,
one of the top sororities on

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept.

14

With The Candidates

f;j

Keeping

15,

Goldwater, Miller Hunt Votes
In South's 'Game Preserve9
By LARRY OSIUS
(AP)
WASHINGTON,

Sen.
Barry Goldwater headed South
today, hunting votes In what
once was the Democrats' private
game preserve.
In North Carolina, Goldwater
accused the Johnson administration of failure, mistakes and "unIn
believably bad Judgment"
handling the guerrilla war In
South Viet Nam.
He said the Democrats haven't
told the people what the United
States is doing in the Southeast
Asian nation or "what we hope
eventually to accomplish there."
The Republican nominee for
the White House hurled this
challenge at President Johnson:
"Set this record straight. Tell us
what is happening or whether we
even know what Is happening."
eight-staLaunching a four-daswing through the old Confederacy, the Arizona senator
said, "this administration seems
struck deaf, dumb and blind by
the mounting crisis in South
Viet Nam.
"Every morning,'" Goldwater
said in a prepared 6peech, "It
seems we awaken to some new
hint of diseaster, to a new mistake, a new policy or even a new
government.
"Tragically, we also awaken
each day to the probability of
te

y,

he
new American casualties,"
said.
Goldwater, who has said the
South Is essential to Republican
hopes this year, will hunt votes
in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee,
Alabama, Louisiana and Texas
before the week Is out.
Despite "the record of failure
...mistake and unbelievably bad
Judgment in Viet Nam," Gold-watsaid, the administration
"will not admit its past mistakes,
take open actions to correct them
or even admit that there Is a
war."
President Johnson, the Democratic nominee, also turned South
today, flying to Miami for a
speech at the International Association of Machinists convention. He returns to Washington
immediately afterwards.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
wings home to Washington,
packing a bright report for President Johnson on his first big
campaign swing for the Johnson-Humphrticket.
With the election seven weeks
off, the Democratic
nominee
has found
enough optimism in the ranks
that he Is warning the party
faithful against complacency-remind- ing
them how their own
Harry S. Truman upset the Re
er

ey

publicans and tne polls in 1948.
Humphrey Is stepping off the
campaign trail briefly after delivering one of his sharpest attacks on the Republican presidential
nominee, Sen. Barry
Goldwater.
Helping Missouri Democrats
launch their state campaign
Humphrey declared In a speech
Monday night that Goldwater
6truck a new low In his campaign of slander and smear" with
his allegation, as Humphrey put
it, "that President Kennedy deliberately manipulated the Cuban missile crisis for partisan
gain."
Goldwater's tour will take him
to eight states ones he terms
vital to Republican hopes of victory In the Nov. 3 election.
and his running
Goldwater
mate, Rep. William E. Miller of
New York, were In Washington
Monday. Miller also was preparing for a new vote drive on Tuesday that will take him through
the Southwest and the Midwest.
Miller's first stop: Austin, Tex.,
Johnson's
close by President
ranch.
Sen. J. W. Fulbright,
who Joined Goldwater In opposing the civil rights bill, said
Democratic
programs have
brought "new hope, new growth
to the
and new opportunity
South.

Acriol PllOtO

AIR TRAVEL
RCSfUVATIONS
INFORMATION
STEAMSHIP RESERVATIONS
"NO EXTRA CHARGES"
JS1-41WILCO TRAVEL
f
$04 Vj Euclid at Woodland Ave.

Seminars
Scheduled

hn

Central Kentucky's Largest

Splndletop Research and the
University Department of Civil
Engineering will sponsor three
evening seminars on the applications of aerial photo interpretation, announced David Blythe,
chairman of UK's civil engineering department.

USED BOOK STORE
(Other Than Text)

DENNIS
BOOK STORE
Near 3rd

257 N. Lime

Ted R. Broida, manager of
Spindletop's
Research Division, said two color
to
films entitled "Introduction
Photo Interpretation" and "Aerial Photo Interpretation for the
Discovery of Soil Resources" will
be presented, followed by a discussion period.
Techno-Economi-

WED. Thru SAT.
Award Performances
Sidney Poitier in

Two Academy

The first two seminars, which
are open to the public, will be
held October 12 and 13, in the
UK Student Center Theater.

"LILLIES OF THE FIELD"
And

Nea! in

Patricia

Time and place of the third
meeting have not been anounced.

"HUD"

GIURGEVICH SHOE REPAIR
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CALL US FOR SPECIAL ORDERS
HAVING A PARTY

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. Sept.

Student Teaching
Applications Available
Application for student teaching during: the spring semester
must be made immediately, according to James H. Powell, director of student teaching.
Students should report to their
adviser In the College of Education and complete their application as soon as possible, he said.
"We expect more than 325 students to apply, which is an increase of approximately 30 percent," Mr. Powell said. "We will
as
process these applications
soon as they are received and
make placements as soon as possible."
However, he added, an attempt
will be made to place all applicants by October 15.
Other students whose applications were formerly approved but
who did not do their student
teaching at that time must reapply.
After his application has been
processed and approved, the student will be directed to a coordinator in his field who will be
responsible for placing the student.
English and social studies ma- -

Film Center
Changes
Location
The University's

Motion

Pic-

and
Jors are quite numerous
present some problems in placement, according to the director.
are
However, If applications
made early, and the student has
all his records In order, the difficulties will be minimized, Mr.
Powell said.
A meeting will be scheduled
later In the current semester to
introduce the student teachers to
their supervisors.

Mal-phur- s,

--

Men's Residence Halls
By BARBARA GRAY

Larry Westbrook, new director of Men's Residence Halls,
gained li is job while taking a graduate course under Dr. Mar
tin, then Dean of Men.
in policy he said no. Diswork in
Counseling and Guidance Westbrook hopes that this will help
him in working with the boys
living in the dorms, "besides following the guide line of Jack
Hall," his predecessor.
Under him are 52 advisers and
two graduate head advisers whom
he describes as "very competent
for whom I have nothing but the
highest praise." With 950 freshmen boys and overcrowding in
Donovan Hall having three men
in a room there are that many
more problems.
Asked if there would be any
Now doing graduate

Tennis Tryouts

Coliseum Courts.

Wendell Berry
Writer, Poet

Returns To VK

University alumnus Wendell L Berry, whose novel
"Nathan Coulter," was published in I960, has returned
to the campus this year as an
assistant professor of English.
"The Broken Ground," a volume of poetry by Berry, was
published last week.
Berry Is teaching a beginning
fiction writing course and conducting classes in introduction
to literature.
While discussing the fiction
class, Berry said he plans to aswork,
sign some
such as character sketches of real
and real situations in
people
which the students have participated.
A native of Louisville, Berry
received an A.B. degree from UK
in 1956 and a master's degree the
next year.
Berry then was an instructor
at Georgetown College before going to Stanford University where
he was an E.I I. Jones lecturer in
creative writing.
al

YWCA To Beg

Membership Drive
The YWCA membership committee lias announced that
its membership drive will beg in this week.
Applications for membership
"The purpose of the Y is so

may be obtained in Room

the Student Center from

202 of
12 a.m.

to 2 p.m. Thursday
through
Tuesday.
Sophomore Martha Varney,
chairman of the committee said,
"We plan to expand our Y program to reach more students
with varied Interests. Membership Is Inclusive open to all
women in the University. No one
is excluded because of race, color,
or creed."
The YWCA has chosen its
"Face to Face" theme In an effort
to establish communications on
such a large campus between
students and students, students
and acuity, and students and
foreign students.

I

Computing Center Seminar
will meet at 4 p.m. in Room 220
of the Commerce Building.
It deals with the special problems in Computer Science and is
intended to introduce the participants to the concepts of information processing and computer programming for developing models of complex human
behavior.
The seminar lecturer will be
Dr. Nicholas V. Findler, computer scientist and visiting associate professor of mathematics.
A

Larry Westbrook Heads

ture Film Processing Center has
Tryouts for the Wildcat tennis
moved from locations in the team will be held at 4 p.m. everyJournalism Building and McVey day this week at the Memorial

Hall to 136 Graham Street.
The move was made, according to lab supervisor Aubrey
to larger quarters in order to expand the services now
offered by the Center.
"We hope, in the near future,
to set up an Animation Depart-- ,
ment concerned basically with
creating animations of experimental projects for various departments on campus," he added.
The Graham Street house behind the Funkhouser Building
Houston
now houses a three-to- n
film processor which was moved
In three sections from the Jourton
nalism Building, a one-ha- lf
Bell and Howell printer, and an
animation
stand which was
moved from McVey Hall. This
equipment, which is hoped to be
operational this week, Is being
set up in order to accomodate
the forthcoming football season.
in
Phil Bacon, cameraman
charge of filming athletic events,
explained that one of the main
functions of the Center is to
film, process and print every UK
football game and many of the
spring and fall practices. Coach
Bradshaw uses these films on his
television program as well as for
training aids.
Each student In Radio, TV,
and Films is assigned two hours
of lab work In Cinematography
which is done In this lab.

Computing Center
Seminar

broad!" said Martha as she
pointed out the activities sponsored by the Y. They include
the twin sisters programs, foreign
btudent relations, committee on
social problems, volunteer work,
a "clearing house" whereby campus organizations may find places
to do service work, and a planned
trip In November to New York
for a UN seminar.
The Y holds monthly meetings
in which various programs such
as speakers, panel discussions,
and films are presented. The
YWCA works with the YMCA on
Freshman Y, UN Seminar, Hanging of the Oreens, and World
University Service.

change
ciplinary actions Westbrook noted
would be either handled by the
counselors or the Dean of Men.
He said that everyone is an individual and every problem is
treated as an individual.
Few upperclassmen live in the
boys' dorms. Besides freshmen,
scholarship students are reserved
places in Kinkead Hall because
"the University wants as many
good students as possible."
at
Before entering
college
Union College at Barbourville,
Westbrook served three years as
a Marine which might account
for his mature attitude and being
chosen for his job which requires
a man with a firm knowledgeable
direction of boys.
Majoring in history and genhe graduated
era 1 business,
summa cum laude, in his class.
During college he served as a
in
counselor and participated
dramatics, a field that always interested him, usually playing the
role of an old man.
Married only three months,
Mr. and Mrs. Westbrook had
planned to live in Lexington so
the Job has fitted well into their
plans.

Non-Cred-

it

15,

lOfi-l-.-

Luncheon Honors
20 Freshmen
Twenty outstanding freshmen,
studying under six different four-yewere
scholarship
plans
honored at a luncheon today in
the Student Center after the
Board of Trustees' meeting adjourned.
UK president, Dr. John Oswald,
said that the scholarship luncheon will become an annual affair.
Dr. Oswald and Dr. Elbert
Ockerman, chairman of the UK
made
committee,
scholarship
brief remarks which were followed by a response from Mary Virginia Rachford in behalf of the
scholarship group.
An appropriation made by the
trustees last October upon the
recommendation of Dr. Oswald
provided money for 16 scholarships. Established through this
action and made available for
the first time this fall are the
President's, Board of Trustees',
and Merit Scholarships.
Linda Sadler summed up the
feelings of the scholarship group:
"I felt honored to go to the
luncheon and had been looking
forward to meeting President
Oswald." James Beam also had
been looking forward to meeting
the president and the other members of the board.
All of the 20 students were in
the top 10 per cent of their high
school graduating class, 17 having finished in the top five per
cent.
ar

The recipients of the Trustees'
are:
James W.
Scholarships
Beam, Bardstown; E. Martin
Bottorff Jr., Ravenna;
Linda
Crabtree, Mt. Sterling; Thomas
W. Graler, Cincinnati;
Patricia
A.
Granacher,
Brandenburg;
Robert L. Heffelfingcr, Owens-borDonna L. Hogg, Elizabeth-towNolan D. Jordan, South
Fort Mitchell; Jennifer J. Kelley,
Bardstown; Joseph M. Osborne.
Louisville; Joyce Quan, Louisville, Ann R. Randolph, Princey
ton; Jan Sweatt, Maysfield;
L. Wade, Louisville.
The Merit Scholarship winner
is Linda K. Sadler of Charleston,
West Virginia.
Alumni Loyalty Scholarship
recipient Is Carol Ann Strange,
Bardstown.
"K" Men's Scholarship went to
Harold K. Bell, Cynthiana.
The General Motors Scholarships went to James Wayne Bennett, London, and Beverly C.
Henson, Muldraugh.
Jef-fer-

Student Center

Applications for membership
on Student Center committee
will be available starting Monday in the Student Center Building. They are to be returned to
the program director's office,
room 203, no later than Sept. 18.

Heading

it
Students interested in a
class In reading comprehension may enroll now in Room
Build201 of the Administration
ing. The course will be offered at
either two or three o'clock in
Room 205 of the new Commerce
Building.
non-cred-

?

;

J

Madison
11.98

m

--

Health Service
Announces

j

No Encephalitis
While the disease has reached
epidemic stages In parts of Central Kentucky, no cases of enhave been reported
cephalitis
among University students.
Dr. John Mulligan, director of
the University Health Service,
said Monday that no complaints
of the sleeping sickness have
been received from members of
the UK community.
W. T. Vincent, supervising
sanitarian of the Lexington-Fayett- e
County Health Department, reported that no cases of
encephalitis have been reported
in Fayette County. Vincent said
the City of Lexington began precautionary measures for the disease Saturday by spraying known
breeding places of mosquitoes,
the carriers of encephalitis. He
reported that spraying of storm
water drainage ditches was continuing this week.
Spraying for mosquitoes in
Fayette County began Monday,
according to Vincent.
Dr. Mulligan noted that colder
temperatures in the Central Kentucky area over the weekend
could affect the mosquitoes, but
added that it would probably
take a frost to rid the area of
the pests.
has report wily
Encephalitis
reached epidemic proportions in
Danville and Boyle County. Four
were reported
cuses of the
Clark
last week In near-b- y
County.

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The True Campus Loafer

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with Double leather soles and leafher heels, with
seam. Handsome vamp devertical straight-bacRich dark antique calf or cordovan calf.
tailing.
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Downtown, 381 S. Limt, 433 Southland Drive
9:30 a.m. 4 p.m., Tuai.-Sj- t.
p.m., Men.
Ccmput Hn., 9:30. m.--

* "Well, Back To Work"

Splinter Still Stands
For years the Kernel has called on
the University to condemn the Social
Sciences Building, commonly called
"Splinter Hall." And, despite this extended period of pleading, the University has left the building alone.
It is difficult to imagine anyone
giving a reason to continue using
Splinter Hall, but it is quite easy to
cite many reasons to condemn it,
It is a dangerous fire trap, and,
as such, should be destroyed before
disaster strikes.
It is ugly, while the rest of the
University campus is beginning to
assume an air of beauty.
It is an old,
building,

incongruous with the modern buildings now going up on campus.
It is overcrowded, and thus inadequate for the number of students
who use il each day.
These are only some of the many
reasons which might be advanced in
favor of its condemnation. The Kernel
has perennially recognized that Splinter Hall represents a danger, an eyesore, and a problem.
The University is moving closer
each day to its goal: academic excellence; but, academic excellence comes
hard when the students study in a
building that must be classed as

out-date- d

A Certain Delicacy
Three or four Negro children were
playing on the grass of Colmbia University. A Negro policeman was shooing them away.
"Isn't that like America?" said a
passerby, who happened to be a
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist on
campus for the afternoon. "We have
all this beautiful green grass pressed
right up against the slums of Harlem. Naturally the kids want to play
on it. And naturally the police have
to chase them off." A brief pause.
"I think it shows a certain delicacy
on the part of somebody that the
policeman is a Negro."
That episode occurred two years
ago. Following the Harlem riots this
year, New York has shown a certain delicacy in appointing Capt.
Lloyd Sealy as the first Negro policeman to head a Harlem precinct.
He tries to explain the policeman's
side of things to people who have
not been led to think of the policeman as a friend. "Many of the Negroes
here are just up from the South,
where traditionally they do not feel

that the police are there to protect
them."
And he tries to encourage white
policemen to make contact with people beside lawbreakers. The essence
of what he says, it seems to us, has
meaning for anyone trying to build
relations across the gulfs of race,
status, or locality.
"I try to explain the community
to them a little," says Captain Sealy.
"Mostly it's the little things that
bother many of the Negroes, like the
profanity of the oliterers and the dice
games.
"I try to show them that if they
stop this sort of thing, then they show
to the decent folks that the police
feel that this is a real community, not
just someone else's community, where
profanity is expected. . . .
"You try to show the police that
this is a commuity of decent people
with the same values and standards
as any other community, people who
strongly resent any implication that
they don't have these values."
The Christian Science Monitor

Power Politics, Not Ideology
Pravda's latest blunt charge against
the Chinese Communists further confirms what was already apparent. The
struggle between Moscow and Peking
is more an old fashioned great-powe- r
struggle than an ideological schism.
When one great power accuses another of coveting real estate which is
what Pravda now, in effect, accuses
Peking of it means that they are
getting awfully dose to the kind of
thing that has caused international
disputes and wars since the beginning
of human history. It is not dogma. Il
is not doctrine. It is simply a conflict
of material interest.
of course, that
ot calling the kettle black.
Mr. Khrushchev certainly puts the
national interests of the Soviet Union
before those of the world Communist
movement whenever lie has to make
a choice. In that, he behaves like the
conventional leader of any great power, not as the champion of a woi
ideological movement. Hut given
the fours at woi k in Asia (indeed
throughout the woi Id), in terms of
Mwcr politics Mr. Khiushdiev probably his moie to fear limn the Chinese in t