xt7k9882kn1h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k9882kn1h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19600106  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7k9882kn1h section xt7k9882kn1h Second Part Of 'Graphics '59' Opens Today
F.Iizabeth Morgan, curator of
first portion of "Graphics '59,M
which ran from Not. 22 to Dee. graphic arts, National Gallery of
19.
Art, writes "I am delighted to have
Many comments have been re- It (the catalogue) for my files."
ceived from various artists, art
Art News, November 1959. Art
dealers, critics, curators, and art New International Section, writes:

Py 10NI I.F.NNOS
The Mcorul half of "Graphics
59," an exhibition
of Home 45
prints and drawings by well known
as well us young artists, will be held
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. today in the
Art Cillery of the Fine Arts Building.
AmiiiiR the proup of prints displayed will be "The Pieta D'Avin?-- .
non." a print by Adja Ycnkers. a
printmnkrr in New York who has
recently
awarded n Ford
Foundation Grant to further his
work.
Thi rrint alo appeared in the

directors of various universities,
concerning the exhibition and
especially the catalogue of the
display, designed by Federlck Thurz
c'. the Art Department here at the
University.
Dore A.shton, art critic, New
Yor Times, says ". . . bravo on
your catalogue and much good
luck with the show."

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"Graphics '59 and 60" have done
much to increase the prestige of
the University and Lexington in
art circles.
Artists und their prints and
drawings which will appear In the
display include
Lee
Chesney,
"Whammo";
John Paul Jones.
"Pieta"; Harold Altman, "Market
Study with Seated Figure"; Leonard Baskin. "Standing Figue."
Al Blaustein, "The Audience";
Edmond Casarella, "Breakers at
Lobster Cave"; Ralston Crawford,

today
catalogues
"F.xhibition
have many varied functions not
the least of which is instruction
and Interpretation. A particularly
effective application of this is the
brocure titled Oraphics '59, Issued
by the University of Kentucky's
drawings, organized by help of
IBM."
Dr. Richard Freeman, head of

W1

Cy-

cle of a Small

Sea: Woman";
Stanley Hayter, "Cascade"; Vincent Longo, "Sharp Curves";
Nicholas Marsicano,
"Standing
Figure."
Gabor Peterdl, "Vertical Rocks";
Abraham Rattner, "Moses: He
Broke the Tablets"; Andre Race,
"Geraniums."
This portion of the exhibition
will be on display until Jan. 20.
The gallery will be open dally,
noon to 4 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m., and Sunday, 3 p.m. to 5
p.m.

1

LA

University of Kentucky
Vol. L

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the UK Art Department, reels that "Sevlle"; Arthur Deshaies. "A

LEXINGTON, KV., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6, I9h0

No. 52

.

Center W ill Meed.
50 Cadavers A Year

M ed

About 50 cadavers a year will due to better information criticism
student instruction once heaped on the medical prowhen the UK College of Medicine fession is lessening.
is in full operation about 1963, said
Only 10 states had laws conDr. William Knisely. chairman of
cerning the bequeathing of bodies
the Department of Anatomy for to medical schools
in 1954. Today,
the Medical School.
24 states have such laws. In the
A $1,000 bond pledging to law1958 General Assembly, Kentucky
fully dispose of all bodies that revised its statutes on the submay "come into possession of the ject for the first time since 1834.
University or any professor thereKentucky's law says that bodies
of" was posted by the UK Medunclaimed within three days after
ical Center and recorded in
death may be given to a medical
County Court.
college for dissection and examinThe bond handled the legal ation "for the advancement of
aspects of the problem, but there science."
are sociological problems which
After preparation, bodies
are more important, Dr. Knisely held 30 days before they are are
used
said.
in case the next of kin makes a
Because of our nation's attitude
late claim on the cadaver.
toward death and burial, many
A person may will his body to
peopie are not receptive to the
the College of Medicine by executidea of using human bodies for
dissection and study, he explained. ing a special form.
But a medical school does not
But the use of cadavers is a
necessary part of the study of buy bodies, said Dr. Knisely, addmedicine, stated Dr. Knisely, and ing that several persons have
called UK offering bodies for sale.
He said if a person wants to sell
his body he will do so because he
ID Cards
needs the money. That is the type
Late registrants and students of person who will probably leave
who have lost their ID cards the area, causing the medical
hay have their picture made by school to pay to have the body
the University photographer shipped back. Dr. Knisely added.
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in
It costs about $100 to prepare
Room 213 of the Journalism
a body for study, transport it to
Building.
the school, and bury it, Knisely
be needed for

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Lances Members
f)fn mm were initiated into Lances, junior men's honorary, at a banquet at 5:30 p.m. yesterday. Front row, left to right,
Warrrn Wheat. Donald Drey fuss, and Jim Hill. Back row. left to
right. Fifd Sehulti, Kenny Rosenberg, Bill Sprague. and Bill
Fortune.
Thei--e

Solutions Offered

For UK's 'Queens9
Advance AFROTC students
a number of solutions for
campus problem of
the
many queens" yesterday at
"too
UK.
The Air Science III cadets were
sug-gest-

ed

oit-cit-

part and unrestricted record their
ideas.
After
gestions
leached,
and an

pre-snumber of sugor time limit has been
the "brainstorming" stops
evaluation of suggestions

a

et

"brainstorming" follows.
g
The group discusses each sugunder
method of
Capt. gestion and adapts the one the
the dilution ci instructor
majority of the group agrees would
Jane Donovan.
One mtpestion stipulated that a be most practical.
practicing

the

problem-solvin-

king, a queen, and a royal court
be fhown throughout the year.
Instead of each organization
having a quttn, a princess would
be choitn.
A contct toward the end of the
fprin; sciiicster would select the
"Kine, Cutrn, and Royal Court of
the UK Campus."
Judsinf would be based on
poise. campus
Mnial
grades,
achieveme nt, and neatness of dress.
Of course, beauty would be a qualification Icr the queen.
The court would be the princesses selected throughout the
school year possibly by popular
vote.
Other mveestions Included, having one queen a year; each organization having a sweetheart and
doing away with "queens" altogether. A lew bitter souls even
eliminating women.
"Ilraimtcrming" Is a problem-solvin- g
method employed by military pervnne! and business leaders as well. When applying the
method to a problem, a (roup or

said. Laws require colleges receiving bodies to keep complete inon
formation
them, including;
burial records.
Most cadavers come from prisons, mental hospitals, and other
state institutions, but many come
from the public at large.
Many students become squeamish at the dissection of a body,
due to the social attitudes toward
death, said Knisely, but most get
used to it the first week.
"You can always spot the
troubled students they're the ones
who wear rubber gloves after the
second week," he said.
By using the bodies, students will
learn to transplant living tissues;
to dissect the body; and, later in
their studies, will use the cadavers
to study surgical techniques. The
bodies will be studied also by

dental and nursing students.

Art Club To Show
'Color Lithography9
The Art Club will present a film,
"Color Lithography," in Room 208
of the Fine Arts Building at 1 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 8.
The film, produced at the University of Mississippi by Reginald
Neal, won an award at the Golden
Reel in Chicago.

Law School's

Final Trial
To Be Today

The final trial to be held in
Lafferty Circuit Court this semester will take place at 1:30 pra.
today in the Law School courtroom.
During the first half of the semester law students argued civil
cases during the latter half, criminal cases.
The case of the Commonwealth
vs. Goodman will be heard by a
Lexington attorney who will act as
Judge.
The defendant Is charged with
violation of Kentucky Revised
Statute 435,170, concerning malicious and willful shooting. He will
be represented by James Deacon
and James Prater.
It is charged that Goodman shot
r printing the organizapanel
Wally Worthless after Worthless
tion lets its imaginatiou ruu rani- allegedly molested the defendant's

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Pitkin Club

The ritkin
noon today

at
Mawell

lub will meet

at the
Street lTebterian Church. The

Kev. 'Iny K. F.slaiger will speak
on "An Authority for Life."

Attorneys for the prosecution are
Perry White and C. Dal IJunliett.
Jury will be impaneled from interested courtroom sp.Utor: immediately prior to th? trial. Commonwealth vs. Goodnnn is a public

trial.

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Euclid Underpass
Tlio thawing for the I'nivmiiy underpass at Eudiil Avt'iuie has hct'ii approve! by Ixtli
city and I'nivtisiiy offiiiaK. The plan (alls for rahing Liuliil at the area near Harrig
son Avenue. Pievious ohjettions to the undeipavs were caused hy the inadvisahility of
under Euclid with the diainage prohletn that would have lesuheil. The piesent dan
avoids that hy leaving llaiiion as it is and raiding Eudid in that one aiea.
dig-giii-

* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jin. 6,

TIIE

19fiO

LITTLE MAN ON. CAMPUS
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steel girder and a
motor saved the life of Donna
Lawson. a UK senior and Ken- tuckian editor. Wednesday. Dec. 30.
The accident occurred on the
Ice -- covered Jeffersonvllle - LouLs- ville Bridge.
Miss Lawson gave this account:
"Fred Pfarrer, a Purdue graduate student, r.nd I were going
south across the bridge. About
midway across the bridge, the car
went into a skid.
"I knew there wasn't anything
I could do to get the car under
control. The first thing I thought
of was that we were going to
plunge into the river.
"The ear skidded across three
A

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75-pou- nd

lanes of traffic. I don'l know bw,
but all the other ran manafed
to keep from hitting n.
"The car Jumped the sidewalk
and crashed through the guard
railing. The back tire caught
around a steel girder. That saved
us from falling into the river.
motor
"Fred had a
In the back of the car. It gave
the back enough weight to lessen
the skid considerably."
Miss Lawson said the police told
thrm if they had been a minute
earlier or 13 minutes later, the
accident would not have happened.
She said the bridge had Just
froen over when they started
across. About 15 minutes after the
nd

Retired UK Professor,
Charles Anderson, Dies
"Ho

fowr ewM

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a lockup pom

mum eoxu for your- -

Charles Herbert Anderson, 94. a
retired professor of engineering
desimi at UK. ditd Dec. 30 after
lie was stricken when he emerged
from a ci'y bus ne.ir his home.
Prof. Anci'Ton was taken by police ambulance to Good Pimantan
Iln pit al whore lie was pronounced
dead or. arrival at 1:2') p.m.

(

3 Neiv City Officials

1

Tliirvcs Change Likes

Are UK Graduates
Lexington's new mayor and two
of the four city commissioners
sworn in recently are UK graduates.
Mayor Richard J. Colbert grad-Uftt- d
in 1S40. and Commissioners
Frank G. Trimble and Morris W.
Beebe, graduated in 1939 and 1948
respectively.

Mayer Colbert received an A.B.
in economics and was a member of
the Sigma Chi fraternity. He received his M.B.A. degree from New
York University.
Commissioner Trimble majored
in political science before entering
LaW school where he received his
L.L.B. in 1939. Trimble was a memUniversity debating
ber of the
team and Phi Delta Phi, professional law fraternity.
Commisisoner Beebe graduated
with a B.S. degree in Commerce.
He was a member of Keys, Lances,
and Lamp and Cross. He was also
in the Student Government Association and a director of the Student Union Board.
In 1955 Beebe was named Lexington's "Outstanding Young Man"
by the Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Generous Thieves
A
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP
store detective said the three
women were shoplifting.
The
women readily told police that the
detective was right but. they said,
they were really going to send
the loot to others as gifts.
Police were unimpressed by the
generosity, and charged
them with theft.
wo-ren'-

s

There's

A

When
carrying
police
three teenagers, they found five
shotguns and a revolver.
' I'm a bug on guns," said one
N. Y. iAP
stopped a car

of

The
SALMON. Idaho AP
chain saw has replaced the saddle
as the item most coveted by
thieves in this timbered central
Idaho country.
Sheriff Bill Baker says 20 of
the lightweight saws vanished in
Lemhi County this year.
He adds that authorities across
the nearby Montana border also
report the compact saw is their
most frequently stolen item.
Time was, says Baker, when
saddles were most frequently
stolen. But the gasoline-powere- d
chain saws, which have replaced
n
crosscuts in logging and
land clearing, weigh less than
.saddles and bring $75 in a quick
sale.

Pnrit--

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be seen of

THE SCENE II
COFFEEHOUSE
S4

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CKjm Villjge

CHev

yellow-fev-

Evtry TiMi.-Sy7:30 p.m.-- l a.m.
n.

Now Showing!

o
Color

Filmed in 70 mm

Wrap-Aroun-

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Sound
Of

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MNtVIHON

or.M

DAILY

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NOW!
To 100

p.m.

From

Euclid

Dr.

Avenue

Cnevy

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Pat Boone, James Mason, Arlcnc Dahl, Diane Baker
IN

Now Showing!
"IT STARTED WITH A KISS"
Glenn Ford Debbie Reynolds

344 West Main

"TEN SECONDS TO HELL"
Jack Balance

Jeff Chandler

certain

Iltatrri

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CUrk
GABLE

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The Official University off Kentucky
RING and PIN Design

INDOOR Srati

THURSDAY

Carroll

BIKER

l.3tf p.m.)

I.ec J.
COBB

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"BUT NOT FOR ME"
ALSO

GREGORY PECK

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Ctculed and Munutuluii'il Inj

X'tW

(H;4H)

"PORK CHOP HILL"
WATCH FOR
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folk. Va.. in 1835.

TUXEDOS RENTED.

Police, realizing that there are
to hobbies,
limitations
booked the trio for illegal posses- sion of weapons.

gold-dredgi-

Encil Deen. connected with thr
Department of Entomology
and Botany, stresses the importance of studying the tags thut
are found on seed bags.
He assists with the educational
to impre.ii
program designed
and others who purchase
farmers
seed that they should read and
understand the information on tha
seed tag before they buy.
Mr. Deen and othrrs in the department possess the ability to
talk in the language that their
listeners can understand.
The services of the UK ftaff
member are being sought by agriculture teachers in hUh sch h
in this section of the state He
has already suoken before civ.c
organiz.iti nagricultural
and
clubs, and
women's clubs.
FFA chapters.
UK

epidemic wiped
population of Norout half the
A

Alteration Service. Tailors for SO
years. Clothes refitted altered and
restylcd for men and women.

the boys.

ship-loadin- g

Deen Says Slmly
Seed Bag 'lags

two-ma-

Limit

CARMEL.

native of Hirmingliam, England and educated In Canada. Prof.
Anderson came to I K in 1919 as a
specialist in research on motors.
Before coming to the University,
he designed ar.d built a variety of
mechanical devices and held nuin-nru- s
patents. From IH'.iO to 1R98 he
was engaged in building steam
equipnmches and
ment under his own patents.
From 18P8 to 1903 he worked in
equipdeveloping
ment under Russian sponorship.
Later, Prof. Anderson was associated with the Westinghou.se
Corporation and the Cincinnati Car
Co. in developing railway equipment.
He retired from UK in 1939.
A

accident, workmen came to snlt It,
she said.
Pfarrer was treated at tha Louisville Oeneral Hospital for cut.
Miss Lawson received a slight back
injury. The car was demolished,
Miss Lawson said.

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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Lexington, Kentucky

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IT

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wctlncsriay, J.in.

, l'K(l- -3

Med School Teacher Hawaii Wants Tourists, Grad Student
Receives Fellowship But Puts Ban On Skunks Will Speak
Dr. Alfred D. Winer, who will
tefcln teaching biochemistry in the
UK Medical Center in September
19f.O. recently received n
Fcr.ior Research Fellowship.
Twenty-on- e
such fellowships
wre h warded by the Public
Halth Service to scientists in 18
universities and schools of med- Icine in 13 states. Cost of the
awards for the first year will
mmint to $260,562.
Dr. Winer received hit B.S. de- gree in 1946 at Northwestern t'ni- ive-ye-

crlly,

M.S.

derree In

ar

1948

at

Purdue, and his Ph.D. In 1937
at Duke t'ltrrerslty.
Dr. Winer did' poxtdoctorate
wr.rk at Duke in 1957-5He re- a postdoctrate
fellowship
ffived
from the Public Health Service
!
year and worked with Dr.
Hugh Theorell at the Medical
Nobfll Institute in Stockholm.
He is .ending the current year in
io--- t
doctorate work at the psychi- Mrir Institute at Maudsley Hos- jital at the University of Lon- ic n, Enpland.
8.

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This is the fourth year of
five-yefederal program to In- create manpower for research in
the preclinical wiener.
Te projrram is administered by
the Division of Oeneral Medical
sciences of the Public Health
service's National Institute of
ar

Health.
Tne awards are designed prin- cipally for the partial support of
Promising young scientists. They
arc sponsored by preclinical de- Prtments in the period between
the completion of their postdoc- toral research training and their
rllglbility for permanent academic
appointments,
The fellowships are approved
initially by the Senior Research
Frllowshfp Seleetion Committee,
hlch Is composed of
experts.
The awBrd, arc made then by
Gcneral on the basis
tne
of final recommendations by the
National Advisory Health Council.
non-Feder-

al

Surn

HONOLULU (AP)
The 50th
to welcome all
kinds of tourists from the other
49, but it turns its nose up at
skunks.
Its attitude was disclosed recently when Robert C. Garland
broached the possibility of raising
skunks in Hawaii.
They make wonderful honse-ho- lJ
pets, he argued, are "intelligent and they'll rid you of cockroaches and Insects. Turn them
loose In the fields and they'll eat
up mice, rats, and maybe even
mongooses."
Garland, a commercial photographer from California, has kept
two pet skunks in his mainland
home. Hawaii's Board of Agriculture remained unimpressed.
If Garland wants to, he can
import a skunk or two, says acting board president Ernest Willers,
but it won't do him much good.
"Skunks generally are prohib

State is eager

Historical Survey of Fduca-txnrDevelopments in Vietnam."
h.n
bren published by the UK
Pureau of School Service.
The study surveys Vietnamese
duration under the old system of
r&pm influence; both the French-ror- .t
rolled and missionary sponsor-i- d
system, and the comparatively
nnr one operated by an independent Vietnam.
The author, Yu Tarn Irh, is a
iftnamrs who has taken graduate
i Indies at the University.
Kditor of the publication is Dr.
W. Paul Street, director of the
bureau A preface Is written by Dr.
Fliis F. Hartford, chairman of the
Division of Foundations of Education.
The earliest education in Vietnam was Buddist inspired, and
thfn. a.s the religion of the peo-;- .:
changed, the character of their
duration was changed to follow
Confucian principles. "As such, it
liii!- a moral significance," the
r states.
the teaching of
It Mressed
moral precepts and the imparting
ef Confucian formulas for regulating social and human relation-hips.- "

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au-tl- ic

-

Public schools were set up for
ndvanced studies, although private
n heels did exist. Education of the
masses was through the family,
t.uiids. and youth groups, Ich
writes.
The French maintained an educational system in Vietnam patterned after their own. but it was
not universal, and simply did not
pass an examination after three
yei:s of schooling, and did not
( mplete their education.
Catholic missionary schools in- -

eluded moral and religious instrur
tion and the ( hristain communities, with a total of three million
persons which arose as a result of
the schools have become "steadfast
islands of loyalty in the encircling
tide of Communism," the author
states.
Communism became powerful
because of the influence of Western philosophies, the author writes,
because the French government
failed to grant the positions of
responsibility which the Vietnamese wanted.
This hi turn created unrest, and
eventually the Communists took
over half of the country, as a result of an agreement reached at
the Geneva Conference.
The free portion of Vietnam now
offers a more universal system of
education, based on moral and
civic values, and greatly emphasizing literacy for all. Greater efforts
must be made to improve the
standard of living, the author concludes.

Popular

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Dr. Koppius
A

UK

physics

listing of all students who have
graduated from the I'nivcrsity and
(AP) Traffic their accomplishments since
TOLEDO, Ohio
engineer Paul Robinette ordered
g
Among the guests expected to
project
a massive
efter a crew of city street paint- attend the dinner will be several
ers pot carried away in painting of his former students.
Tickets for the dinner are availlines on
ytJlow
painted right on able at the Physics Department
Broadway and
River Road to subur- Office. Reservations must be in by
out
Jan. 7.
ban Maumee, 10 miles away.

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professor,

will be given by the Department
of Physics at 6 p.m.. Friday, Jan.
15 in the SUB Ballroom.
Dr. Koppius. who has taught at
the University for 35 years, will
go on a change of work status at
the end of the semester.
He will continue as a staff professor working on a special project,
which will consist of preparing a

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Dinner
To Honor

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Vietnamese School Study
Published By University
"A

ited," Willers explained. "And If
allowed In, they have to be
and neutered. The purpose is to prevent bretd'ng."
Claude C. Sturgill, a graduate
Only two or three animals have
been admitted in the past 20 student in history, will speak to
today's meeting of the UK chapyears.
ter of Phi Alpha Theta, history
In Germany honorary, on Marechol Villars and
the Camisards.
NEW YORK (AP)
The most
Villars, a field marshall under
popular play in Germany during Louis XIV, became noted for the
1958 was "The Diary of Anne role he played in suppressing
the
Frank," according to the German Camisards. The Camlsards were
Tourist Information Office.
a protestant revolutionary group
in southern France during the
early years of the eighteenth cenRecalling his poor days as a tury.
Mr. Sturgill received his MA.
university student, former U. S.
degree In the summer of 1959 and
Sen. Josh Lee says he and a roomsoup and beef's is currently studying for his I'll. I),
il
mate ate
under the direction of Dr. Shelby
tongue:
"This was to make both ends T. McCloy, professor of history.
meet." Associated Press dispatch.
The meeting will be in the SUB
A likely tail.
Music Room at 4 p.m.

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* Closing The Gap
The appointment of several committees by the University president
to aid in I'K administration has the
distinct ring that UK is Incoming
mure interested in student understanding of administrative problems.
Since the degradation of Student
Congress and the Faculty decision
not to grant a holiday after the
victory over Tennessee, a deep gap
has been cut lctwecn students, faculty, and administration. The relationship was impaired even more when
pn registration was initiated.
Now, one of the quickest road to
recover) and to surpassing the
former weak relationship between the
three groups seems to be extensive
communication ami representation of
all three in allowing active participation in University affairs. Student
government in no measure can accomplish this and neither can a facorganization.
ulty
policy-makin-

g

committees, however, mi'cht serve to restore good feelStudent-facult-

y

understandings at UK. A first-haning of how the administration operates and an opportunity to affect
the policies and programs of the
University might have astounding results to students in teims of morale
d

and educational atmosphere.
The appointment of a student committee to help in planning the UK
Health St r ice is indicative of this
participation's worth. Students will
have no reason for distiess over a
health program if they aid in planning it themselves. The responsibility,
however, of allowing tli' student committee to advise the health program
lies with the Health Srivice director.
And, any tendency to take the
committees lightly on the part of the
administration, faculty, or students
would only increase the gap between
them further.

A New Year Is Born
Un progressive Progress
manusciipts foi all its chain itir

By BOBBIE MASON

result nt subversive
celebrations, a new
activity at holiday
year is brn. Anil we telebrate it like
Mich a thing tame along only onte a
vear or something. Another annual
lor a party, the New Year tomes
and Rots, void of meaning, and liaught
with hHxritial intentions, rationalizations in the lorui ol mass purges. Or,
in our escapism, we go to the sock Imp
at 'I'inies Sepiaic. Wildly, we cling to
the last moments of the old year, lor
they ate never to be seen again. Nor
any other moments ol any other year,
once thev aie past. Auld I.ang Syne
would nun over in his grave at the
sight ol such thoughttul anniwisary
celebrations. Hut he will never be
(Whoever he is.)
Unless somebody tonus up with a new
interpretation ol the calendar and our
whole time svsttni is icvantpcd so that
the New Year becomes a loi (nightly event,
he will.
But the New Yeai's I ve touiudowii
begets purgation and liesh conceptions
ol universal goodness and sterling honesty. It is a time to look ahead, lost in
infinite perspectives and loitilied with
There's nothing like icsolu-tionto statt out another vittuous New
Year. The blessed Day arrives, bringing
order out of thaos, and we wipe our
slates clean and begin all over again to
pervert our good intentions. It's like
starting the semester out with a 1.0
As the inevitable

Cartoon

by Skip Taylor

Trend To Withhold
Newsmen and the public in general
are becoming more alarmed at the
tendency of some agencies to withhold from the public information that
should rightfully be considered as
news and as of interest to the public
that is paying the salaries and the expenses of the men who have a tendency to suppress it.
The latest such glaring indication
of this trend comes from the policy
of the Air Force which must give
clearance, according to their own
policy, of any news emanating from
the training program for apes at the
University of Kentucky for possible
space flight. Last week a picture
showing the face and shoulders of
one of the chimpanzees and a man
helping in the project was released.
The picture had been sent to the Air
Research and Development Command
at Holloman Air Force Base, N. M.,
on Oct. 1. UK sources said the picture, one of many submitted, actually
was cleared for publication on Oct.
15, but added that the delay could not
be explained.
There is nothing particularly secret
about the work being done in this
program as the animals' training inprinciples
volves the
of reward and punishment. For instance, a chimpanzee that fails to re
well-establish-

ed

spond to a signal gets an unpleasant
electric shock. When lie does respond,
he gets a tidbit. But the Air Force
has inserted a clause in its University
contract that prevents UK from giving
information without Air Force approval.
If the men conducting the training
are capable of carrying on the program they are certainly qualified to
rule on the Air Force's "deep dark
secrets" from the public that is paying the bill. We believe that the normal newsman and the normal worker
in the project at the scene is more
qualified to keep the public informed
than some brass that sits hundreds of
miles away and takes more than two
months to decide whether or not a
picture of a monkey is or is not a big
military secret.
We are encouraged to note that the
public is getting pretty well fed up
with some of the high brass decisions
that attempt to tell the public what
should and should not be published.
With diligent disclosures by newspapermen he public would not have
tolerated the lag in our missile program that is now "history" but could
have been "news" months ago without agencies that were set up to maintain secrecy. The public wants to
know and is entitled to know. The

Danville

Advocate-Messence-

r.

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

clus mattrr undi-- r the Act of March 3, 1879.
Entered at the Pott Office at LrUDirtoa, Kentucky m
Wrrk during the regular school year ecrpt holiday! and claim.
F ublubed tifut tunrl
MX DOLLARS A SCHOOL V EAR

Bill

Neikihk, Editor

Stewart Hedcer, Sports Editor
Anderson, Managing Editor
Paul Zimmerman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editors
Dick Ware and John Mitchell, Photographers
Alice Akin, Society Editor
Coldfahb and Paul Dykes, Advertising Managers
Stuart
Beverly Cardwell, Circulation
Ft khy Ashley, Business Manager
Bob Herndon, Hank Chapman, and Lew King, Cartoonists
Bob

Staff Writeri: Jerry Rtngo. Jim Phillip. Bobbie Mason. Linda Hockentmith. Robert Wenninger,
George Smith. Robert Ferkiru. Edward Van Hook, Rod Tubb, Lawrence Lynch, June Byeri, Ann
Harris, Beverly Cardwell, Diane Cupehart. Al Hotter, Jan Berry man. Bob Jobe, Mary
Miller, Herb Steely. Nom Johnaon, Bob Kraser. Emajo Cocanougher, Michele Fearing. Fat Hulker.
Curlist Smith, John Kitiwater. Garnelt Brown, Richard Hedlund. Christa Klnley, Allen Travis,
Sue McCauley, Phil Cox. Robert Radford, Beverly Pedigo, and Maxuie Cates.

WEDNESDAY'S NEWS STAFF

Mereba Davis, .Veuj Editor

Hex

Bailey, Associate

e

lor-gottc-

s

standing.
Resolutions should be revolutionicd,
more imaginative. Something worth remembering would be worth keeping. Instead, we tack up an old list of stereotyped resolutions and convince ourselves of our sober intentions. The New
Year is full ol bright prospects, though,
despite our degenerate characters. Then,
being next in sequence, will no
doubt be the most progiessive of our
years til progress. Rockets and IBM machines are expected to be awarded Good
Housekeeping seals, and education will
enjoy new prosperity even mice and
monkeys are becoming well traveled.
It will be another year of levolutiouary
pnw esses at UK semesters, exams, textbooks, teachers, as well as liots and other
unspeakable joy s. A Univeisily piolcssor
predicts that UK. students will walk a
total of L'i,f13 miles in the Student
Union caictcriu this year. His staitling
conclusion is based on statistics letaiued
lioni last year when he spent every day in
the SUB observing and counting the students as they walked in and out. He has
allowed for a iioimal deviation lioni last
yeai's liguies.
Advertising will compter iisell with
eleeeptiveness. TV will have illuminated

10,

piodue-tion-

s.

people will be dying this ytar
that nt vet died before.
to m t
pmmisi
Politically.
eleiils with ultimately jnogtessive
piece
elet lions. ( I his is the- kind l election
in whith the vottis timing the tourse
of an evening plotted lioni house to
house- on li.it inity low when' thev ate
e nte
1. line il with a propag.imli oigv .md
(hey cast tl.tii ballots at cub plaee lT
atxlitl.it'. This way
the liattinitv's
Ian he tans'.- all the Votes
eveivthiiig
camel e.ith olhci out am! iiohodv loves.
l the evening
all
it- end
Likewise