xt7hmg7frz14 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hmg7frz14/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590414  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 14, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 14, 1959 1959 2013 true xt7hmg7frz14 section xt7hmg7frz14 Lionel Trilling Lectures In Lab Theater Tonight
Lionel Trilling, noted literary ing recently said that being a novcritic, lecturer and author, will be elist, not a critic, was his first
tonight's speaker in the English ambition.
Department Lecture Series.
"But it's like taking to drink:
His lecture, the series' third this you have one, and then you have
year, will begin at 8 p. m. in the one more," he commented. "I had
Laboratory Theater, Fine Arts one essay, you might say, then anBuilding. It is free and open to other and another and now it's a
the public.
habit."

y
A

In commenting on the American
He is presently on the Columbia
writing scene recently, the London University faculty, where his
Times Literary Supplement singled courses have been described as "a
out Trilling as "perhaps the most student mecea."
outstanding of the 'general AmeriHe formerly taught at the Unican critics today."
versity of Wisconsin and is a
Even with this reputation, Trill founder and senior fellow of the

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LIONEL TRILLING

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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

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Kenyon School of English, now the paperback edition.
School of Letters of Indiana UniHis other books Include "Mat
versity.
thew Arnold," a biography; "E. M.
In 1955 Trilling delivered the Forster," a critical study; "Tho
fifth annual Freud Anniversary Opposing Self," a collection of esLecture at Harvard the first lay- says; and 'Freud and the Crisis
man ever to be invited to partici- of Our Times."
pate in that series.
He Is also the editor ot "The
Born In New York City In 1903,
he received his Ph.D. degree from Portable Matthew Arnold" and
Columbia. His wife, Diana Trilling, "The Letters of John Keats" and
is herself a critic.
author of a number of short stories.
His critical articles have appeared
In 1947 he wrote his first novel,
"The- - Middle of the Journey," a in Partisan Keview, The Nation,
Review
and Harper's
book that won wide critical praise. Kenyon
It is soon to be published in a Bazaar.

.JW

Inter jaith Officers
New officers for the Interfaith Council were eVcted Friday afternoon. Seated from left is Henrietta Johnson, the new vice president, and Jane Wheeler, the new president. Standing are the retiring officers. From left Stuart (ioldfarb, retiring vice president,
and Emery Emmert, retiring president.

Traveling Photo Exhibit
To Be Displayed At UK

Vol. L

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, APRIL

Charles Cassis, Sigma Nu, has
announced his candidacy for the
Campus Party nomination for
president of Student Congress.
Cassis will be competing with
Taylor Jones and Phil Cox, both
previously announced candidates,
in the CP convention tonight in
Memorial Hall. He officially entered the race over the weekend.
A high source in the Jones camp
said last week that their forces
were claiming support from some
nine Campus Party organizations.
This same source listed five groups
ticas supporting the
ket and two uncommitted delegations.
The candidacy of Cassis has
caused some changes. The Sigma
Nu delegation, originally claimed
. by Jones,
will vote for Cassis tonight.
A source close to the Cassis campaign said the announcement has
received "favorable reactions"
several delegations. Some
of these groups had either listed
as
or pro-Co- x
late last
Cox-Perki-

Sig, Farmhouse. Theta and. KA. are said to be leaning to
the
The Cassis source added that the
ticket.
SAE's are uncommitted but leanThe entrance of Cassis into the
ing favorably toward the Cassis CP race for presidential nominaCox-Perki-

candidacy.
The Triangles are slated to support Cox for president and Bob
Perkins for vice president. Two
other groups, TKE and Alpha Sig,

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CHARLES CASSIS

Festival Features
Readings, Speeches

UK Profs Book Published
By University Of Alabama

out-migrati- on

Rhodes-Livingsto-

ne

No. 93

Cassis Enters Race
For SC Presidency

The traveling exhibit of the 15th ever to be named Magazine Photothe grapher of the Year.
Year" photo competition, sponIn recent years the traveling exsored by Encyclopaedia Britannica. hibit has
become a
regularly
the National Press Photographers scheduled event at scores of instiAssociation and the School of tutions in the U. S. and Canada.
Journalism. University of Missouri, It is used as an example of the
is to be displayed in the foyer of the peak in photojournalism by teachUniversity Library from now until ers of photography, and it is a
April 28.
general favorite of the viewing week.
The exhibit features top prize public.
This same source listed some
winners in the 1953 contest the
seven delegations as uncommitted.
nearThis year's snow is touring
largest of its kind in the world to- ly 200 cities, including leading col- The seven are DZ, ZTA, ZBT, Phi
day. In addition, other prints, rat- leges and universities, public libraed tops by the competition judges, ries.
will be included.
The competition is judged in 11
In a prominent place in the ex- categories,
each of which is rephibition will be the pictures of
resented in the exhibit by a selectEarl Seubert, Minneapolis
group of the 87 pictures.
Tribune, named Newspaper Photo- ed
grapher of the Year for the second
One of the photographs was
time, and those of Lisa Larsen, made by Bill Hickey of the LexLife Magazine, the first woman ington Herald-Leade- r.
Approximately 570 high school
students are competing in the 39th
annual Kentucky State Speech
Festival. Started yesterday, it will
last through Wednesday.
Participants must have achieved
a rating of superior in the regional
contest to qualify for the state
The life and death of a remote gradual crumbling of tradition, festival.
neighborhood in East Tennessee is brought on by poverty and the
The festival is sponsored by the
described in a new book by Dr. Impact of contemporary civiliza- Extended Programs at UK. Each
Marion Fearsall, associate profes- tion.
high school represented is a memDr. Pearsall spent much of 1949 ber of the Kentucky Interscholastic
sor of sociology.
The book was published this and 1950 in East Tennessee doing League. Denver Sloan,
month by the University of Ala- fieldwork for her doctor's dissertaof the league, is in charge of
tion. She received her Ph.D. de- the speech activities.
bama press.
The volume, entitled "Little gree from the University of CaliYesterday's program was limited
Smoky Ridge," is a natural history fornia at Berkeley In 1950.
to debate. The finals are being
of the settlement, located In the
The book is the second for Miss held at 4 p. m. today in
Blue
Southern Appalachian Mountain Pearsall. She collaborated with S. Orass Room of the SUB. the
T. Kimball to write "The Talladega
Area of Tennessee.
Events beginning today and conMiss Fearsall, a social anthro- Story," published in 1954. She has
tinuing through Wednesday are
pologist, tells of the folkways, the also written more than a dozen
culture and other aspects of the articles for sociological or an- discussion, poetry reading, interpretive reading, public speaking,
thropological Journals.
community's growth and decay.
extemporaneous speaking, oratorBefore coming to UK last SepOther problems dealt with in the
book include the effect of isolation, tember, Dr. Pearsall taught at the ical declamation and radio speakof inhabitants, ex- University of Arkansas and the ing.
Judges for the final debate will
ploitation of the area's resources University of Alabama.
anthropolbe Dr. Gifford Blyton, University
by outside groups and the depleShe was a research
professor of speech; Emmett Bur-kee- n,
ogist at the
tion of all local resources.
1951
comdirector of speech and draThe author describes the
Institute in Central Africa in
social science resident at the ma, University School; Russell Mil-le- r,
munity as a place where "the and a
director of speech and drama
flood" and "the big snow" serve Russell Sage Foundation ia Boston
1956 until last year.
activities, Western Kentucky State
as the calendar. She traces the from

annual "News Pictures of

14, 19",9

College.
Dr. Paul Street, director of the
University Bureau of School Service and Don W. Zacharias, director of debate at Georgetown
College.
The KEA awards will be presented at 7:30 p. m. today in the
Blue Grass Room of the SUB. The
.

Phil Cornette Debate Trophy,
given by the Lexington Herald-Leade- r,
is awarded to the winner
and the University Cup to the
runner-u- p.

Medals are given the four debaters in the finals.
The individual trophy for exemplary conduct was awarded last
night to students demonstrating
ideal conduct in the debate.
Regional trophies for participation and achievement will be
at 7:30 p. m. today in the
Blue Grass Room of the SUB.
Schools receiving these trophies
are Bowling Green, Dixie Heights,
Owensboro,
St. Xavier, Ashland,
Paducah-TilghmaHenry Clay
and MiddlesborOt
Participants receiving superior
or excellent ratings will be given
pins by the Extended Programs.
KEA public speaking awards of
Continued On Page 3
n,

ns

tion has placed the
scene in a somewhat doubtful status.
Frank Schollett, seeking the .CP
presidential nomination, said yesterday that Jones and he had
started to run as a team, but have
now decided to enter the convention on a separate basis.
Schollett also said the two football houses are not committed to
any presidential candidate. They
will vote for Schollett for vice
president.
Cox, the third candidate in the
race, said he was in the race to
stay. He said he was encouraged
by early
soundings of various
Campus Party organizations.
Besides Schollett, Bob Perkins,
running with Cox, is the second
vice presidential candidate.
Bob White, Little Kentucky Derby chairman, who was considered
a potential candidate several weeks
ago, will keynote the CP convention tonight.
The outcome of the presidential
race may have a lot of bearing on
the vice presidential picture. .
When White's name was being
considered for president, Jones'
name came into the vice presidential picture. It is conceivable
that if Jones fails in his presidential bid, his name may be placed
in the vice presidential race.
Since Cassis entered the race,
the CP has been in a more uncertain position. Yesterday
forces presented a motion
in the weekly Campus Party meeting to reconsider last week's motion of membership for the varsity
football house. The motion was
presented by a representative of
TKE fraternity.
Bob Perkins, candidate for the
CP vice presidential nomination,
mentioned the possibility of a split
in the party "if two large organizations are allowed to dominate.
Perkins was referring to Schollett's
organized support from both the
football house and SAE fraternity.
on

Cox-Perki- ns

Continued On Page

3

Sunday Movie
"DIAL

'M

FOR MURDER

starring Grace Kelly, Ray

Mil-la-

nd

and Robert Cummlngs,
will be shown Sunday, April 19,
in the Student Union Ballroom.
sponsored
The
movie will be shown at 4:30 and
SUB-YMC- A

at 7:30
25

p. m. AdmUsion will be

cents.

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April H, 1959

2-- TIIE

ICE A To Run. irftii

on campus

MAfi

by Dick Oiblci

Dean Ginger
For NEA Post

MOyiE GUIDE

Mining Meet

ASHLAND "A Place In the Sun,"
2:00, 5:50, 9:40.
"Fraulein," 4:12, 8:02.
BEN A LI "I Want to Live," 12:01,
3:52, 7:44.
"The Defiant Ones." 2:00, 5:52,
9:44.
conference on coal CIRCLE 25 "Lonely Hearts," 7:30.
A two-da- y
problems and opportunities was
11:25.
held for UK mining engineering
"Oreat St. Louis Bank Robbery,"
students here Friday and Satur9:45.
day.
FAMILY "From Earth to the
Roland C. Luther, chairman of
Moon," 7:30, 11:00.
the National Coal Association's
"Man or Gun," 9:30.
committee on education, told the KENTUCKY "Rio Bravo," 12:47.
students that many opportunities
3.37. G:27, 9:17.
for employment in the coal in- LEXINGTON "Girl in the Bidustry are available. He said this
kini." 7:32. 10:3G.
was true despite increased mech"Girl in the Woods," 9:13.
anization and the decline in coal's STRAND "The Shaggy Dog." 12.
share of the energy market.
2. 4. 6, 8, 10.
lie discussed both the bright and
Rlooit.y sides of the coal picture in
1
the keynote address of the two-da- y

Hears Talk
On Industry

The Kentucky Education Association and related groups are spon
soring Dr. Lyman V. Oinger, dean
ol the UK College of Education,
for the post of treasurer of the
Notional Education Association.
Announcement of KEA's intention was made in the current issue
f the Kentucky School Journal,
official publication of the organization.

Lkrtion for the treasurer's post
be held at the national NEA

convention in St. Louis In July.
Lrngth of the term Is three years.
D.-aGinger is immediate past
pr sident of NEA, and was KEA
orrsident in 1953-5-

--

4.

Ballard County native has
..eit'ived degrees from Kentucky
y.
Wcsleyan College and the
He has served as a teacher
iid athletic coach at Winchester
Hih School, principal at Owings-ill- e
High School, director of the
nniversity School, and for two
ears was dean of the University
College of Adult and Extension
Education, now Extended Programs.

conference.
Sixteen .members of Luther's
committee visited UK's Mining
Engineering Department and discussed employment opportunities
with .students.
Other speakers on the program
included Frank D. Peterson, UK
vice president for business administration, and Dean R. E. Shaver
of the College of Engineering.

Doggone Crilic

r.
DUMP'S

Thomas Jefferson was an enthusiastic book collector; assembled
three extensive libraries.

The

Uni-Vf-fit-

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ANADARKO, Okla. (AP)
The
nacher could not get a dog to
e ive the high school room where
going 10 rei civic
ciud was
hearse a minstrel show. But when
he rehearsal began, the dog fled.

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Prescription

* TII

Cassis
Continued From Page 1
rumor started
The third-part- y
earlier yesterday and the Terklns
Matement was
the first public
mention of such a possibility.
It has been rumored for some
time that Triangle fraternity,
with some other groups In
hnth parties, might be Involved In
men a setup.
The CI convention will convene
at 7:30 o'clock tonight. The CP
nominees will face Hob Wainscott
and Leroy McMullan of the Students' Tarty In the May 6 general
tiV flection.
r.g

UK Teams Debate
Western Michigan
UK and Western Michigan University debate teams will discuss
"Further Use of Nuclear Weapons,"

today In the Fine Arts Building.
Arguing negatively will ze Ronald Polly and Deno Currls at 11:00
in Room 216, and Rich Roberts
teams with Tex Fitzgerald at 2:15
inRoom 218. Polly and Curris will
take an affirmative stand at 2:00
in Room 218.

UK Campus Social System

Being Studied By Seminar
sociology seminar
A special
without college credit has been
Maying the campus social system
jit UK.

participating in
The students
this seminar are primarily freshmen and sophomores. They were
hosen on the basis of demonstrated ability in sociology classes, according to Daniel Claster, Instructor in sociology and advisor for
the seminar.
The problem of carrying out
their project Is more Important
that the findings it will produce,
Claster wild. The main purpose
of the seminar Is to acquaint the
Mudents with research.
After the current class was pick

AYLQ

ed, its members set up their own
area of study of student habits and
decided on its principal aspects.
They narrowed down this area
and selected specific questions for
questionnaire.
a multiple-choic- e
The finished questionnaires were
tested on friends of the class members and the questions found to
be confusing were rewritten.
The questionnaires used in the
project were administered to about
one out of every 10 undergraduates, mostly freshmen and sophomores. The data is presently being
analyzed and, according to Claster,
a fairly good estimate may be
made for all lower classmen.

YflftE

Engineers

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

Festival Fealuro

IFC Installs
Jane Wheeler

Win 3 Spots

14, l'J59- -3

Continued From

rate

Jane Wheeler was installed as $50. $30, and $20 will be prescnti c.
president of the Interfaith Coun- at 7:30 p. m. today.
Election of student officers wni
cil last night. She succeeds Joan
be held immediately after the
Stadelman.
in the Music Room of the
won the
Other officers installed at the

In Contest
UK civil

cif-bat-

engineers
first three places in a speaking
contest between UK and the University of Louisville Thursday.
The winners and their topics
were Fred Ellis, "A Good Question," first place; A. L. Colley.
"The Development and Use of
Models in a Study of Current Performance," second place;
and Walter Hoskins, "Pulling a
Bang in Your Job" (using explosives), third place.
The contest look place at Mhe
I'niversity of Louisville at a meeting of the I K and l'L student
chapters of the American Society
of Civil Engineers.
Richard Howe was chosen outstanding UK member and presented a one-yeJunior membership
organization.
in the

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annual installation banquet were SUB- Honorary officers are electee
Henrietta Johnson, vice president; from the participants in the state
Betty Clay Renaker, secretary and festival for the next year. Duth?
are presiding in certain lestiv;,
Pat Dolwick, treasurer.
events.

Incorporated

2-71-

1

SAltM.

K. C.

I

* Inflation Is No More
Friday the people of Lexington did
a wonderful thing they worked a
miracle that the nation's top economists have been trying with much
blood and tears to accomplish for
the last decade.
They stopped inflation. Or so they
say.
And we arc forced to bow our
heads in abject and utter shame,
condemned to wear sackcloth, cover
ourselves with ashes and gnash our
teeth continually. For we completely
missed the crux of the campaign
raise in
against the
school taxes.
In our naivete, we thought the opponents of higher taxes were looking
out for their own selfish interests.
Questioning their motives, we even
pointed to desires for second cars,
new houses or color TV's as their real
reasons for stumping against additional taxes and neglecting the education of Lexington's tots.
now-defeat-

ed

In reality, however, these enlighforming the
tened citizens were
avant-gard- e
of this movement of
radical idealism and noble purpose.
Tired of exorbitant prices, sick unto
death of the high cost of living, they
united to stop that heinous force
which is paralyzing the nation's eco-

nomyinflation.
So today inflation is no more. With

one blow of their little ballots,
killed it dead.
We throw up our hands in ecstasy
at the portents of this dynamic action. Lexington will becomf a veristeak dinners,
table paradise:
ciganickel coffee at the Grill,
haircuts, less than 200
rettes,
on used books. It
per cent mark-up- s
staggers the imagination.
cigar, the
Back to the
gasl
movie and
Back to. the Charleston, the Stanley
Lcx-ingtonia-

ns

"They Insist On Surrendering. 99

50-ce- nt

15-ce- nt

The Readers' Form

25-ce- nt

Steamer,
Back to the

one-roo-

m

school?

might corrupt whole generations of
youth. It would perhaps even precipitate a wave of nudism that would
engulf the nation, thereby causing the
deaths, from pneumonia, of half the
citizens of the northernmost United
States.

We're glad to see the alertness of
the postal officials, their maturity,
their perspective. Besides being nude,
the maja painting was done by a
foreigner, and we don't need such
things when we have such excellent
magazines in our own country, featuring clean, healthy American girls
in all their clean, healthy nakedness.
Matter of fact, we can hardly wait
for the postman to arrive with our
latest copy.

Kernels
A University coed, doing a term

paper for a journalism course, proposed to study the operation of a local
home for unwed mothers. She wrote
the home's officials for information
last week, and received by return mail
an application form for admission.

fool some of the people all of the

How's That?

20-ce- nt

5-ce- nt

The Vile, Wicked Nude
Francisco Goya, the cognoscenti
and critics avow, was one of the
world's greatest painters, a man who
rose from an humble birth in a Spanish village to the ultimate peak, in
1789, of court painter to the king
of Spain. On his way up he acquired and discarded several mistresses,
the last and most famous of whom
was the Duchess of Alba, a woman
of considerable beauty and fiery
temperament.
Among Goya's more famous paintings, though not his best, is one
called the Nude Maja, a work that
has become renowned because it is
popularly believed that the Duchess
of Alba posed for it. And, for 250
years, popular belief has held that
it is art.
The United States Post Office Departmentthat omniscient arbiter and
guardian of the public morality disagrees, however, and has just barred
reproductions of the painting from
the mails. It is not art, says the department, but obscenity. As such, it
is therefore nonmailable because its
presence in American mailboxes

Kfrotl CarUaa By Bab Herndan

To The Editor:
Whats all the noisee about drinkbng
on campus- - Thatp all I read about in
your papr and nobody has the righh
idea. EVERBYODY fooled up. Whys
dont thos want to drink drink, and
thoes dont watn to drnk dont drink???
Thast what I say, and I got to does
now and go study. Love,

George

Vanishing Loincloths

time."

The Herald, which made such a
"thorough study" of the proposal, completely duped the public. It turned to
a "dirty" word, inflation, which, like
Communism, is handy when needed
to scare the ignorant. Did the editorial tell the voters the referendum
might have lessened taxes in the long
run? Certainly this is a possibility,
because assessment of property in the
next two or three years probably will
make school taxes surpass those which
would have been paid under the referendum.
I seriously btlieve the chairman of
LHO really meant it when he said the
voter would votQ intelligently if confronted with the real facts. The only
discrepancy is that all the facts were

To The Editor:
That such inequalities can exist in
our own "Land of Opportunity" continues to amaze me. I am shocked,
and what's more, I intend to do something about it.
Application will soon be made for
not revealed.
.,
the proper charter for the
Yes, the Herald and the LHO chairand it is my hope that
your newspaper will give full support man should receive a nice pat on the
in our fight. Young men and women, back. By downing inflationthey have
helped foster it.
too interested in being charter memBill Neikirk
bers may address:
Society for the Procurement of the
Students And Spindletop
Everlasting Right for Males to Drop
the Loincloth in Artistic Assemblies; To The Editor:
I notice the Students' Party proBox Y, Baretown, Kentucky.
P.S. Baptists need not apply for poses to attempt to obtain use of
membership.
We are expecting recently purchased Spindletop man(them) to give us full support when- sion for student use. I was fortunate
enough to visit the mansion recently,
ever it is needed. and it made quite a lasting impression
Cezan B. Anthony
so much so that I am prompted to
say that any student use, with the
'Inflationary' School Tax
possible exception of a worship servTo The Editor:
ice, of the mansion would be a defileschool-tareferThe defeat of the
ment of the highest order. The house
endum Friday perhaps may not hurt is of such magnificence that even stuUniversity students too much, but dent receptions, teas or formals, not
the methods used to influence Fri- to mention something as unrefined as
day's voting were too disgusting to an after-gam- e
open house, could only
leave without comment.
result in marring a thing of beauty.
An editorial in the Lexington Herald
I don't know exactly what the Stuon Friday said defeat of the proposal dents' Party meant by suggesting that
would help curb inflation here. A students have access to Spindletop,
statement by the chairman of the Lex- and I have no idea what useful purington Home Owners, after the pro- - . pose the University can put the manposal was defeated, also said the prosion to. But better to let the house
posal would help curb inflation. He remain empty and idle a year or two
also said defeat of the referendum was until some good idea is decided upon,
a "public indictment" of the presenrT than to let a spilled drink or a loose
heel-taLexington educational program.
make one mark on that house.
The Herald and the LHO chairman
Readers can vote for the Students'
to be congratulated. They both Party if they like, but I hope not for
are
have done something Ben Franklin that reason.
said could be accomplished: "You can
Gurney Norman
S.P.E.R.-M.D.L.A.A-

x

Other Editors Speak:

The Real Trouble In Harlan
Unless or until other information
is forthcoming, it must be deduced
that the request to President Eisenhower for troops by the attorney for
some Eastern Kentucky coal operators was largely a play to call public attention to an
unsettled
strike. Gov. Chandler declares he has
received "no' reports of any incidents
which would warrant sending troops
there" that state police have the situation in hand.
Not that violence has been absent.
as-y-

et

The strike center is Harlan County,
made famous in the 1930s as "Bloody
Harlan," lying in a region where,
traditionally, men tend to settle their
own quarrels, and dependent upon
an industry with a history of militancy
centuries-old- .
But even operators say
that today is not like the bitter days,
of 20 years ago.
The significance of the Harlan situation lies in the extent of the economic distress and the inconsistent
role of the United Mine Workers. Before the strike, 13,000 of the county's
56,000 residents were receiving fed

eral surplus food; 4,000 had exhausted
their unemployment benefits. Yet the
UMW is striking for a wage increase
of $2 a day.

The UMW has helped raise the
status of the coal miner enormously.
Its welfare activities are considered
outstanding. It is said to have deposited $1 million in local banks to
aid its striking members in the present
situation. And, knowing something of
how hard it is for a union to restore
wage rates once lowered, one can
hardly expect the UMW to volunteer
a wage cut as a first move.
But to demand an increase in the
face of the coal fields' unemployment
and then to throw more men out of
work by a strike makes no discernible
sense. That appears to place the
UMW pointedly under the onus of
which labor economist Sumner II.
Schlichter recently warned the whole
union movement: of simply "getting
more and more for the best-paiworkers in industry." The Christian

p

The Kentucky Kernel
Eotrfd at the

Putted

University of Kentucky

Leington, Kentucky aa aecond clasi mailer und.r th Act f March 3. 1879.
fou, tunc, a
Z&
YEARU"

Post Office at

Jim Hampton, Editor-in-ChChief Neas Editor
Larhy Van Hoose, Chief Sports Editor
Ferry Ashley, Business Manager
Nohman McMuuin, Advertising Manager
Billie Rose Paxton, Society Editor
Cohdon Baeh, Ptuytocrapher
Hank Chapman, Lew King, Skip Taylor And Bob Hekndon, Cartoonists

Bill Neikirk,

d

Science Monitor.

TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
MitKEDA

Davis, Associate Editor

Dan

Millott,

Editor

Stewart Hkdcer,

Sports Editor

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

11, 1939- -5

Bright Rainbow Colors Get In The Swim
Tropics Key
Color Tints
New Styles

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'Mil.

fl

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There's a rainbow on tho
beach these clays, and it's duo
to get brighter by summer.

w

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f

The new swim wear parade, first
aired on Southern beaches and,,
scheduled for a return engagement
all over the country, is a riot of

A

color.
New tropical colors include hit
coral, yellow, tangerine, tropic red,
deep turquoise and sea blues, in
addition to the perennial black
and white.

"i
-

S

Practically all major swim-su- it
designers are dipping into the
tropical palette these days, secure
in the knowledge that new techd
niques in
fabrics will
keep the garments bright ind
through a summer of sun
and salt water.

1

color-locke-

:

'

A
v.

un-fad- ed

v
:

Biggest news on the swim wear

front is the return of the
"

'

83.

Sheath Look
Bold plaid In bright bloc, black

and white makes this striking
suit.

This

TicO'Price Look

swimsuit has the new two-pielook without undue
exposure. A contrasting cummerbund joins bra and trunks of tand
gerine
acetate and cotton, jacquard weave.
1953

ce

By JUNE ALLEN BEYERS
she said.
UK coeds marked the first warm
Polly also upholds this theory
days of April by. heading for the but she speeds the process by lynearest roof to sun bathe.
ing on a sheet of aluminum foil.
Polly Ledford and Kate Hark-re- ss
She feels