xt7j9k45t75w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j9k45t75w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640408  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  8, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  8, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7j9k45t75w section xt7j9k45t75w Board Approves Retirement Plan
By SUE ENDICOTT
Kernel

A new retirement system for tlic
University was approved yesterday
by tlie Hoard of Trustees at its regular quarterly meeting.
The new plan will become effective
1 and will
replace the change of as- nent provisions In Section 13 of the
rning Regulations of the University.
Jndcr the new system employees of
me University will make contributions to
the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association and the College Retirement
Equities Fund.
Contributions will be based on a percentage of the basic annual salary. On
tiie amount of salary subject to Social
Security (PICA) tax 3 percent will be paid
by the participant and 7 percent by the
University. On the salary above the
amount subject to Social Security tax the
participant will pay 5 percent and the
University 10 percent.
The plan has been divided Into two
parts. Group I and Group II. Those
eligible for participation In the Group I
plan are all regular fulltlme persons In the
following categories: the president, vice
presidents and assistant vice presidents,
cleans, professors, associate and assistant

'v

said that no bids were accepted from Insurance companies. TIAA was selected
because faculty members could come from
one school to UK or go to other schools
from UK and not lose their retirement
benefits since 80 percent of the colleges
and universities In the country use this
plan. He said a plan such as this aids
in faculty recruitment.
Dr. John W. Oswald, president of the
University, called the recommendation an
"historic document" because it would enable the University to do a better Job of
recruiting and retaining the kind of faculty members needed.
The board also approved the general
outline of the 19G4-'j- 5
internal budget.
The University expects and estimated
$39,325,000 In income and funds available.
This Is an $3,534,000 increase over the last
fiscal year. Appropriations have been estimated at $39,321,000,
an Increase of
$8,971,000 over last year.
was also given to the reviApproval
sion of the original bond agreement for
the construction of four small dormitories
to be used for four fraternities and sororities. The construction of one of the buildings requires $1GO,000 instead of the originally alloted $150,000. In approving this
the board agreed to put up the additional
money which would be paid back after

professors, Instructors, lecturers, the hospital administrator, and directors of research and professional units of the University.
Group I plan does not apply to employees In University positions covered by
the United States Civil Service or other
Federal retirement programs other than
Social Security.
The Group II plnn applies to all University employees not eligible to participate In Group I.
The retirement ape qualifications were
established as follows:
1. All employees of the University employed on or after July 1, 1964, and thone
employed prior to thnt date who attain
age 56 after June 30, 19C4, shall retire at
the end of the University's fiscal year in
which the employee attains age 65.
2. All employees employed prior to
July 1, 1964 and who were 56 or older
on that date shall retire at the end of
the University's fiscal year in which the
employee attains age 70, or completes
10 years of service after July 1, 1964,
whichever occurs first.
3. All employees on change of assignment as of July 1, 1964 shall be retired
on that date.
Clifford Smith, board member from
Frankfort, In presenting the new system

the government bonds had been repaid.
an interim
Dr. Oswald presented
progress report on the parking study. Ha
announced that a questionnaire had been
distributed to all members of the faculty
and staff to determine the number of persons In each building requiring a parking classification.
It was pointed out that the need for
assessing faculty and staff members for
parking is caused by the fact that state
funds should not be used for staff parking facilities when there Is a definite classroom shortage.
In other business, the board:
1. Accepted
the financial statement
and audits of the fiscal year 19C2-6- 3 compiled by Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and
Company. This is the first time the book!
for the entire University
have been
audited by the same company. Areas included are the University, the Kentucky
Research Foundation, the Athletic Association, and the Thomas Poe Cooper
Foundation.
2. Confirmed action already taken ta
enter Into a contract with the Commonwealth of Kentucky, the Department of
Highways, for a Highway Technician
Program to be conducted by the University from June 8 to July 31, for a sum
of $10,688.

-

UK Trustees Approve

Board Of Publication

The Board of Trustees yesterday approved the establishment of a Board of Student Publications at the University.
The board will assume its duties Sept. 1.
It will be composed of approx
for the student members of the
lmately six students, three fac-

and three
drawn from the
administration,
alumni,
faculty,
and professional journalists. The
board will be responsible for the
editorial and financial policies
of student publications and will
also, appoint the personnel operating the Kernel and the
ulty members,

In approving President John
W. Oswald's recommendation for
the establishment of the board
it was necessary to rescind the
1937 ruling
of the Board of
Trustees that the professor of
would be responsible
journalism
for the editorial content of the
Kernel.
Dr. Oswald said that the board
would be appointed this spring
but would not be activated until
fall. The School of Journalism
will maintain responsibility for
the publications until that time
and will also appoint next year's
faffs for both publications.
olirations will be accepted

board and several key people
from student leadership would
make the final decision, the president said.
The change in the organizational structure for student publications was proposed by the
Student Personnal Advisory
Council after studying both the
current organization at the University and the methods used at
other universities.
The president said that this
new system would "insure a
broader representation of the student body." It would also give
"the maximum opportunity for
the students to express themselves.'
Once the board is activated,
the School of Journalism will no
longer be responsible for the
Kernel
and the Kentucklan.
However, continued use of student publications as a basis for
a joint journalism practicum is
planned.

--

Vol. LV, No.

T
9!)

1L
University of Kentucky
WEDNESDAY, APRIL
KY

LEXINGTON,

8,

Keith I lagan, prcmedical
major, Louisville, has been
elected president of the Arts
and Sciences Centennial
Class.
Other officers, elected yesterday, are Lois Baumgardner, vice
president; Marty Minoque, secretary i and Walt Maguire, treasurer.
Martin Noojin, elections chairman, said approximately 80 Arts
and Sciences juniors cast ballots
in the election.

Keith

Hagan

is president

of

Interfraternity Council and has

m

been president and
I ,Ln"
vice presiaeni oi
Phi Delta Theta
yi fraternity. He is a
1 member of Phi Eta
jVV J I
Sigma, Alpha Ep- silon Delta, Keys,
Lances, Lamp and
Cross, ODK, the
HAGAN
Centennial Committee, and the Men's Award
Night Steering Committee,

Iff"''
?

f

km

Lois Baumgardner,
Louisville,
has been Rush Chairman and
President of Zeta Tau Alpha so- -

Votes

On Newly Revised Constitution

Student Congress was expected to approve a new constitution at its meeting last
night.
If approved, the proposed constitution will be submitted to a
campuswlde election April 21.
Student Congress officers will
also be elected at that time.
The proposed constitution was
given final approval by the Constitutional Revision Committee at
a meeting Monday night. Committee chairman Steve Beshear,
Dave Clark, Jim Cockrell, and
Catherine Ward voted for the
constitution. Committee members
Ben Williams and Keith Burchett
are expected to submit a dissenting opinion.
The major dissent on constitutional revision came on the
The
matter of representation.
proposed constitution
provides
for 25 students elected from the
studen body at large. The current constitution originally provided for a congress of 100 members elected by colleges. That

was amended last fall to 50 members elected by colleges.
Both Williams and Burchett,
members of COUP, are known to
favor election by residence units.
Williams said, "The new method
will be even worse than the old.
Election by residence units would
more remake representatives
sponsible to their constituents."
Beshear, a likely choice as candidate for SC president on the
Student Party ticket, has expressed the feeling that election
units would not
by residence
more
make the representatives
responsible and would tend to alto the
low more representatives
groups. Presumably, he meant unaffiliated students in Town Housing.
The constitutional
provision
providing for 25 students in the
was expected to be
assembly
amended on the floor last night
to provide for an assembly of 23
students with seven representatives chosen from
groups.
Monday night's meeting saw
disagreement on the point of who
could vote for the congress officers. The proposed draft of the

Of i

1

Eiht

Page

Keith Hagan Selected Head
Of A&S's Centennial Class

student Congress Casts
By BILL GRANT
Kernel Daily Editor

1

constitution
submitted by Beshear for final committee approval limited voting to members of
e
student body. Wilthe
liams raised the point that this
would eliminate graduate students doing research and carrying less than 12 hours.
Beshear said that removing
would althe phrase "full-timlow any person carrying hours at
the University to vote. Miss Ward
called for the committee to find
a system that would allow graduate students to vote but would
eliminate "every little Lexington
lady who is taking two hours of
arts and crafts."
The committee voted to elimwith
inate the phrase "full-timand Miss
Williams, Burchett,
Ward favoring the move and
Cockrell and Beshear opposing.
(Clark had not arrived at this
point.)
is
The proposed constitution
changed relatively little over the
constitution. The major
present
besides decreasing
differences
the size of the congress are:
1. Increasing
the size of the
Judicial Bourd from five to seven.
2. Changing
the method of
selection of the Judicial Board

from presidential
appointment
with congressional
consent to
screening by a committee appointed by the president that
shall submit to the president
twice the number of names as
places available. The president
shall make his appointments
stufrom this list. Interested
dents may apply for the Judicial
Board.
3. The
of two
appointment
Judicial Board members to two-yeterms assuring a continuity
on the board.
4. Changing
approval of the
from the Faculty
constitution
Committee on Student Affairs to
the President. (President John
W. Oswald has indicated
that
such a change will also require
trustee action in removing such
responsibility from the Faculty.)
5. Changing
the number of
congress advisers from four to
two, eliminating the automatic
apponitment of the den of men
and the dean of women.
6. Providing for election of officers In a campuswlde election.
Previously they had been elected
by the assembly. An amendment
to the present constitution includes a similar provision.

rority. She has served on th9
High School Leadership Conference Steering Committee and the
Hanging of the Greens Committee. She is a member of Links
and Mortar Board and is cochalr-ma- n
of the Cancer Campaign
and secretary
of Panhellenic
Council.
Marty Minoque, Louisville, is
vice president of Kappa Kappa
Gamma sorority, a member of
the AWS Senate, Links, vice president of Cwens, and president of
Alpha Lambda Delta. She was
also the president of Holmes
Hall and the vice president of
Junior Panhellenic Council.
Walt Maguire, Somerset, is a
member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and was chairman of the
Christmas parties for underprivileged children given by UK
Greeks. He participated in the
Washington Seminar, and Is a
member of the track team. Keys,
Young Republicans, and the UN
Seminar. He serves as secretary
of Lances.
Other nominees for senior class
offices were: Sandy Brock and
Sam Burke for president; Larry
Kelley and Ann Gregg Swinford
for vice president; Natalie Allen
and Jeanne Landrum for secretary; and Kathy Illston and
Peggy Parsons for treasurer.

Staff Applications
For Kernel Available

Applications for positions on
next year's Kernel staff are now
available at the office of the
of the
editor in Room 113-Journalism Building. They should
be returned no later than Friday.

Horizon '64
The last lecture In the Horl-to'64 Series will be at 4
p.m. today In Room 206 of the
Student Center. Today's will be
Dr. Herbert Drennon, associate professor of political science in the Patterson School of
Diplomacy. Dr. Drennon's topio
will be "Alliance for Progress;
An Appraisal."

i

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, April

2

8,

11

Thousands Of New Yorkers
Pay Tribute To MacArtlmr
By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY
Associated Press Writer

NEW YOHK-T- wo
abreast
a line stretching four
blocks, people by the thousands paid solemn and dignified last respects yesterday to
General of the Army Douglas
MacArtlmr.
in

The stilled, yet majestic figure
in simple suntan uniform lay in
a steel casket in a history-lade- n
armory, a magnet for Americans
conscious of their heritage.
When the doors swung open
to the public at 10 a.m., waiting
were an estimated 7,500 persons
soldiers in uniform, elderly
men and women, children with
their parents.
They had stood behind police
barriers on Park Avenue, under
a sky gray with fog and threatening rain.
For an hour before the public
opening of the Seventh Regiment Armory, limousines arrived
bringing diplomats and generals
to privately honor the general.
Some 250 dignitaries attended the
religious service there.
As they entered the armory,
the mourners wore channeled toward the room with the casket

between red velvet ropes.
Passing the bier, some paused
briefly to look at MncArthur's
face. Its expression was calm, utterly peaceful.
the
Army officers, wearing
Army blues a dress parade uniformdid not permit anyone to
remain long beside the casket.
Tears came into the eyes of
some of the spectators but there
were no overly emotional scenes
in the first hours of the morning.
A woman, as she left the hall,
murmured to the man beside her,
"I didn't know him, but I certainly admired him."
A nun. Sister Mary rhilnmena,
of the Sisters of Charity, came
up the steps leading 34 children
her entire eighth grade class
from St. Paul's Catholic School.
"Our pastor sent us the carfare this morning and told us to
be sure to come," she said. "The
carfare was an Important item.
we
have
couldn't
Otherwise,
come."
Many of the women wore black
veils.
Today his body was taken by
train to Washington where it will
lie in state in the Capitol ro-

tunda.

President Johnson, Representatives of Congress and of many

f,

I

nations will pay their respects to
MacArthur's memory there.
The funeral has been scheduled for Saturday morning in St.
Paul's Episcopal Church in Norfolk, Va. The church is 225 years
old.

W

V I;

W,

Retired Teacher,
Z
Karraker, Dies
A retired University Agriculture professor with nearly
50 years teaching experience
died Monday night.
Prof. Perry E. Karraker, 77,
died at 7 p.m. after an illness of
several weeks.
First appointed to the faculty
In October 1914, he later became
a professor of agronomy, specia-lzin- g
in soils. He taught and did
research until he received until
he received a change of work
status in December 1956.

Unscrupulous trappers conduct
a black market in orangutans,
to
selling the rare primates
Amerjcan and European zoos for
as much as $3,000 each.

Sudha Sankaran, an Indian graduate student, is playing the sitar, a
classical instrument. Miss Sankaran is working on her
master's degree in electrical engineering and she has a 4.0 overall
in graduate school

Annual Speech Festival Here April
About 700 students

from

141 Kentucky high schools are

cvpected at the University
April 16, 17, and IS for the
41th annual High School
Speech Festival.
Seventeen high schools have
qualified to participate in the debate portion of the tournament.
The preliminary and semifinal
rounds of debate will be held
April 16. The final debate will be
at 10 a.m. April 18 in the Student Center Theatre. The two
finalists will debate this years
topic, "Revived: Social Security
benefits will be extended to include complete medical care."
Schools that will send debate
teams are Angela Maricl, Covington; Belfry; Bowling Green;

Tau Si fi m a

Tau Sigma will hold a business meeting and rehearsal, tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Euclid
Avenue Building.
The annual Tau Sigma Dance
Concert will be held on Sunday,
April 19.
Two performances will be
given at 3:30 and 8:30 p.m. in
the hue lid Avl'nue Building.

Covington Catholic ; Daviess
Harrods-burOwensboro;
County,
Hazard; Henry Clay;
Murray College Hiph;
Pudacah Tiljrhman; Paintsville,
Pnvis: St. Patrick. Mavsviile: at.
Xavier, Louisville; and Westport
High, Louisville.
In
Students
will participate
nine individual speech events-discus-sion,
prose,
Interpretation,
poetry, original oratory, analysis
of a public address, public speaking, extemporaneous
speaking,
and duet acting.
In the
Students participating
discussion event will speak on
"What should be the role of the
federal government in providing
medical care to the citizens of
the United States?"
Individual speech events are

held In two division. Junior high
and senior high. All junior high
events are scheduled for April
17.

Twenty professional people in
speech work will serve as tournament Judges. According to Dr.
Denver Slone, director of the
Kentucky High School Speech
League, judges are assigned to
Judge events in which they have
particular compet ency. Each
event will also have a presiding
office and timekeeper.
festival will be
The three-da- y
concluded with an awards program at 10:30 a.m. April 18.
Awards will be presented to the

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Selection changes each day
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tival.
To qualify for participation in
the state festival, the students
had to gain a "superior" rating
at the regional level. For speech
purposes, the state is divided into 10 regions with headquarters
at Bowling Green, Covington,
Henderson, Louisville, Morehead,
Richmond,
Murray, iPikeville,
Hazard, and Barbourvllle.

UJKTI&

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schools

those

SPECIAL LUNCH
For Students and Staff
Opposite
Med
Ccnlor

WED. - SAT.

RI

BIG WEEK

to

the most points during the

Served weekdays

mam
HELD

runner-u- p
teams
championship
In debate. Debaters participating
in the final debate will each be
awarded keys, and the individual
debater selected by the judges
as the most outstanding in recognizing rules of debate, will be
given the Exemplary Conduct
Trophy.
Finalists for the extemporaneous speaking and orginal oratory events will be awarded plaques. Plaques will also be given

18-1- 9

ii

.atiitit SMii

every day

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL; Wednesday, April

EDITOR'S NOTE:
America's
first venture at a world' fair in
1853 failed.
Bat In 1876, the
Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia was a (lingular success.
How much did the women's executive committee hare to do with
It?
By JOY MILLER
AP Women's Editor
NEW YORK (AP) The Civil
e.
War was over, a dozen years
The bitterness was not.
Could the reunited nation get
behind a world's fair to celebrate
Its 100 years existence? Would
the South contribute
In Its first annual report, written two years before the fair
opened, the Women's Centennial
Executive Committee said:
"We have before us the raising
of the value of woman's work,
and, dearer to us than that, the
assurance that even now our
Southern sisters are one with us
in our work and the hope that,
ithrough it, peace may be a
dweller with our borders . . ."
More than eight million visitors clicked through the turnstiles in 1876 to view the "Mighty
Cosmos" spread over 236 acres in
Fairmount
Park
Philadephia's
and to marvel at Alexander Graham Bell's
contraption called the telephone.
The fair's supporters insisted it
had unified the country. There
was no debate that the fair was
a huge success, as far as attendance was concerned.
The women's commission start-'e- d
with 13 Philadelphia women,
headed by Mrs. Elizabeth Duane
Gillespie. They sent out appeals
to women in other states, who
rallied to raise money for a
Women's Pavilion.
In Boston, for example, they
held a tea party, made $800. A
Montana women went to that
territory's legislature and got
$5,000.

Eventually the ladies got toto build their
gether enough
contribute
Women's
Pavilion,
to the general fund and
money
the opening chorus
provide
:which was composed for the occasion by a thousand schoolchildren. They also so strongly
the creation of a Depart-Jieof Public Comfort that an
entire building was devoted to
It.
Mrs. Gillespie's second annual
report quoted a letter to the
editor of the Cincinnati Gazette.
Jt advocated pa'nting on china
"as an agreeable and renumera-tiv- e
occupation to the woman of

KEKTUCKY
TYPEWRITER
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culture who must utilize her
talents for the support of herself and those dependent on h?r."
It went on to suggest engraving and woodcarving as suitable
occupations for women, and ended with this stirring example
of a Cincinnati girl "who studied
the art of stenography to support
herself and her mother. For a
long time she struggled to obtain employment because it was
thought that men alone could be
successfully employed as shorthand writers. We are prqud to
say that she now has an office
in New York where she obtains
plenty of work and has made $50
In a single day. She is respected
by all who have the pleasure of
knowing her."
At the north side of the ornate, wooden Women's Pavilion
stood the engine house, with a
portable engine of six horsepower that supplied power for
the michinery in operation in
the
frames, power
looms, a cylinder press on which
an entirely female crew put out
New
a weekly Journal, "The
Century for Women."
was In
The
engine house
charge of Miss Emma Allison
of Grimby, Iowa. About Miss
Allison a masculine contemporary said admiringly: "If she did
nothing else, she offered an example worth following to the
engineers of the male sex in the
neatness of her dress and the
perfection of cleanliness exhibited in bbth engine and engine
room."
In the pavilion one exhibit presented women's inventions, mostly designed to help with housemachines for washing
work:
blankets, a system of
patterns, a barrel cover- that
could be locked, a machine that
cleaned and dried dishes, a combined traveling bag and chair.
Then there were pictures executed in human hair, a whistle
made from the tail of a pig, and
flowers and toilet articles and
Jewelry fashioned entirely from
fish scales.
The art object winning highest
praise was an exquisite head

The Air Force Sponsors
sporisor a jam session from
5
p.m. today in Barker Hall.
The Temptashuns will play.
Admission is 73 cents per person for either performance.
- t' .
r
WATCH BANDS
,' JEWELRY

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

DODSON
WATCH SHOP

April
April
April
April
April

April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April

April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April
April

.

AFROTC sponsors Jam Session
p.m. Burl! Armory".
English Department Lecture, G. B. Harrison, Guignol The8 p.m.
atre,
9
Young Democrats election of officers 7 p.m. Student Cctncr.
Bayanihan Dance Group 8:15 p.m. .Memorial Coliseum
10
TGIF
10
Research Conference, Chemlstry-Thyslc- s
Building
Cancer Teaching Lecture Series, Medical Science Bldg.,
8:30 p.m.
Spinclletop Hall Dance, 9 to 1
10 Coxmorama, 7:30 p.m.. Memorial Hall
Lambda Chi Pushcart Derby dance
1
Central Kentucky Faculty Conference, Student Center
11
AFROTC Honors Day Parade, 8 a.m.
Pushcart Derby
Army-Ai- r
Force Military Ball, 8 p.m.
12
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra 3 p.m.
13 Mnsicale, Norman Chapman, Pianist, Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
12
Concert, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Memorial Coliseum, 8:15 p.m.
15
Theta Sig dinner
15 Musiea.l I K Choristers, Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
English Department Movie, "Hamlet," Laboratory Theatre,
4 and 7:30 p.m.
Art Gallery Talk and Reception for Carl Holly, Fine Arts
Bldg., 7:30 p.m.
16 Kernel Dinner
16 Audubon Film, "Kiwi Commonwealth,"
Memorial Hall,
7:30 p.m.
17
LKD
18 LKD
President's Review, b a.m.
24 Old South
25 Old South
Delt Formal
Army ROTC Honors Prade Day, 8 a.m.
25 Spindletop Hall Dance, Spring Formal, 9 to 1
27
Blazer Lecture, A. Hunter Dupree, Guignol Theatre, 10 a.m.
28 Inauguration,
Dr. Oswald, Memorial Ciloseum, 2:30 p.m.
29 Musieale, Symphonic Band and Chorus, Guignol Theatre,
8 p.m.
28 Classes end at noon
Inauguration of President Oswald 2 p.m.
26 Musieale, Men and Women's Glee Clubs, Memorial Hall,
3:30 p.m.
8

9

Eli Walluch Honored

()

Eli Wallach
NEW YORK
has been awarded the annual
citation of the American Jewish
Congress for outstanding creative
to
and dramatic contributions
American culture.
n
The veteran
star,
,"
last seen on Broadway In
has recently been at
work in London on the film
"Moonspinners."

Student Tour

m

387 Rosa St.

Fine WatcTi Repairing
110 N. UPPER ST.
Phone 254-126- 6

DERBY WEEKEND

eten

IT'S

Lamp and Cross
Lamp and Cross initiation will
be held at 5 p.m. Thursday in
Room 209, Journalism building.
A banquet will follow at Levas
Restaurant. All members are
urged to attend.

f
f.

Everybody enjoys farm work in Europe

EUROPE
THREE

mm

Initiations

Canterbury

This Sunday, Dr. Ross Webb,
professor of history will be the
at Canterbury
guest preacher
House at 10:30 a.m. Everyone is
welcome and is urged to attend.

FOR

WEEK TOUR

EUROPE

YOUNG ADULTS

f

...
Countries -- V Compters Sightsee-InFlref Class Hotels with
All
Bath, Meals, Tips, Transfers, Hotol
Taxes, Baggage Handling, Parties.
All Transportation
from Lexington
Tour Guide.
INCLUDES
11

ESCORTED

FROM LEXINGTON

MAY 14, 1964

Complete Price $960
DEPOSIT

SERVICE

LITTLE KENTUCKY

All Grad Students
Registration of resident graduate students for the fall seIs scheduled for the
mester
4
in Room 367
period April
Chemistry - I'hysics Building.
Registration will be limited tu
these four days with no cards
being issued prior to April 21
or accepted after April 24.

Campus Calendar

Air Force Sponsors
will

AND RENTALS
Phong

called Dreaming lolanthe carved
in butter by a Mrs. Brooks of
Arkansas.
Carved bedsteads, a case of
etchings by Queen Victoria herself and a quilt by an Alabama
women with 1.500 roses and rosebuds embroidered
on it were
other highlights.
Near the Pavilion was a little
cottage in which 18 small youngsters from the Northern Home
were
Children
for Friendless
put through the; regular daily
exercises of a revolutionary education approach called the
system."
Here the schoolroom opened
a garden where the chilupon
dren
and cultivated
planted
flowers and vegetables, and indulged in games and exercises
devised for use in the course. The
system, said a book of that time,
encouraged kindly treatment and
was not yet introduced into the
public schools in - the United
States.
Mrs. GillesThe
pie, who he.tJtS the Women's
Executive Committee through the
trying years, had her greatest
moment on Nov. 7. There in a
reception room at the pavilion,
with the stage ornamented with
and the
flags and banners
Guard College band playing in
the gallery, she received guests
starting at noon. At the reception's end she addressed words
of welcome and thanks to the
group.
There was only one flaw. A
mans' publication describing the
said, a bit cattily:
reception
"This being election day a very
much larger assemblage of ladies
tlian gentlemen were present."

-3

Edited Iy
Nancy Lou;liridge

KERNEL WOMEN'S PAGE
Women's Executive Committee
Played An Important Part
In The Centennial Exposition

8,

OF

$100

Information

WILCO TRAVEL
AGENCY
504 Euclid at
Woodland

Lexington
Ky.

thousands of summer jobs
available

in Europe to every

'registered student. No experience or foreign language igi
required and travel grants aro

given to all students. Wages'
range to $400 a month. For a'
complete prospectus with plio?
tos, job and travel grant applications, a ?2 cash book cou-

pon, handling and airmail'

DUE NOW

For

Call

Resort, sales, lifeguard and
dice work are examples of

charges send t'Z to Dept. He
American Student Information Service, '22 Ave. de la
Luxembourg City, Grand-Duchof Luxembourg.

...

Warm

W2&

Tickets are almost gone. Don't wait another minute.
KENNEDY

BOOK STORE AND GRAVES,

$2
COX

* The Legend
Will Live On
The corn cob pipe, dark sunglasses, and
cap are
gone, but can we truly say that Gcn-rof the Army Douglas MacArthur
is gone, too?
Kidney and liver failures caused
the death of a man who, as President
Johnson said, "fought his last right
with all the valor that distinguished
tim in war and peace."
But Douglas MacArthur will live
ri in the hearts of all of those who
remember World War I, World War
II, the invasion of Manila, and the
Philippines, Guadalcanal, and the
Korean conflict in China and Manchuria. He will also be remembered
lor his
personality, his

commanding flare for public speaking, his sometimes overbearing egoism, and especially for his brilliant
mind.
The youngest to be named brigadier general in World War I, the
youngest to be named superintendent
of the United States Military Acad- -'
emy at West Point, and the youngest
to be named chief-o- f staff of the Army
is dead.
The United States has not only
lost an old soldier, but has lost an
able politician, administrator, diplomat, organizer, and an exceptional
statesman as well.
There is no substitute for victory," MacArthur said, and now the
world must claim that probably there
is to be no substitute for MacArthur.
"Duty, honor, and country. These
three words should dictate what you
want to be, what you can be, what
you will be," MacArthur told West
Point's 1962 graduating class.
own life and his long Army
career were marked by his straight
forward integrity, honor, duty, and
profound loyalty to his beliefs and
to his country.
MacArthur wrote his epitaph 13
years ago in 1951 in his
speech to the General Assembly after
his dismissal by President Truman
when he said that "old soldiers never
die, they just fade away. Like the old
soldier in the ballad, I now close my
military career and just fade away. . ."
The five-sta- r
general is dead, but
as President Johnson remarked, the
legend of his "courageous presence
among us and his valiant deeds for
us will never die."

The Kentucky Kernel
The South' Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky
Lmrinirt
Cnterrri t tnf poit offlc
wk d
Published lour timi-- i
Subscription rates:

Kentucky
7

before the Senate.
The article was concerned with the
rnutitude of letters which various Senators were receiving the majority of
them vehemently against the bill. And
they were not, as one might expect,
primarily from Southerners. In fact,
the civil rightists Sen. Kenneth Keating, Paul Douglas, Hubert Humphrey
and Frank Church were receiving
from 200 to 400 letters a week from
their constituents, and many were
similar to the following letter quoted
in the Observer:
"The white voter is tired of dems
and
onstrations; he is tired of
he is tired of the invasion
jf public buildings and places by the
freedom fighters and their
disruption of public buildings, and
the humiliation of cringing public officials whose fear of the loss of the
colored vote is so great that they permit their offices to be taken over by
linrulv mobs. . . .'"
The article also cited other
of resentment in la