xt7mkk94b779 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mkk94b779/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610105  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  5, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, January  5, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7mkk94b779 section xt7mkk94b779 Editor Comment
On Litter Hug;
Sec Pace Four

Today's Weather:
Fair, Warming;
High 27, Low 49

m mm mmm

University of Kentucky
Vol.LII, No. 48

LEXINGTON,

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-

KY., THURSDAY,

JAN. 5,

"

'

,

I

.

The Arts and Sciences Di- of Literature, Philoso- phy, and the Arts recommend- ed the abolishment of the pre- Vision

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..,.,.., r.l.,,. ;nl
1

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y
cation requirement for gradu- at ion at a recent meeting, it
was learned vesterdav

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Snow Fun
During the Christmas vacation, unidentified sculptors created in
the center of the Coed Dormitory Quadrangle an appropriate
emblem for the Quad. But the snow couple might out-lacord
living at IK which will end after this semester.

:
The division has made the rec- ommendation to the College of
and Sciences faculty.
Dr. M. M. White. Arts and Scl- ences dean, said the motion will
be brought before the Arts and
Sciences faculty when the faculty
is ready to discuss the Issue.
He said this would be at the

iZl!i

,tT?:nA

Sciences Faculty, the recommenda- -

VMyhetyinghedS.a,isdo

Profs Comment On Cuba
By BEN PATTERSON

Kernel Staff Writer

Amrv

Dr.

Vimlenlimcli

11 ot trie ii atterson
said
c

.1

if

c lhool ot
sc

Diplomacy,
yesterday that
the severin" of diplomatic re- .
.
..i"',.
lations with Cuba is not tanta- mount to war.
f
riinWrn,. Ho.
mians merely the removal of all
'.

.

cpv-ri-

the officials of a country and the
rlrwino nt th. -ho KM
It does not end the recognition
of that country."
The announcement that all dip- lomatic relations with Cuba had
bet-terminated was announced
Tuesday by James E. liberty,
presidential press secretary.
This action came as the result
of Castro's ordering all but eleven
of the American embassy officials
out of the country. Castro charged
that the remainder of the 87 mem- ber U.S. embassy staff "are noth- lag but spies."
Dr. Ross A. Webb, who teaches a
course in diplomatic history, was
puzzled by the action of the Eisen- hower administration only 16 days
before the inauguration of John F.
Kennedy.
Dr. Vandenbosch felt that the

mhv

Eight Pages

A&S Group Favors
No P.E. Requirement
By TEVIS BENNETT
Thursday News Associate

f

1961

action and any other retaliatory
measure would push Cuba closer
to the Russlan Rovernment and
Communism but he felt that the
severing of lelations was a neces- sarv stpP ,n order t0 Preserve
Ame,ican dl8nity- DrHerbert N. Drennon, who
teaches Latin American relations.
felt that it was a definitely bad
f ituation.
"Any action by Russia in an at- tempt to capitalize on it." he said,
"annlrt-h- p
mot. h nhvKlrnl intPr.
vention on the part of the United
States."
Dr. Vandenbosch disagreed. He
said "Any intervention by the
United States would be risking
total war. The Monroe Dictrinc is
'
outmoded in this day and age.
"America builds missile bases in
the countries surrounding Russia
such as West Germany and they
haven't intervened yet. We aren't
privileged," he said.
Dr. Vandenbosch didn't feel that
the United States would do any- thing because, he said, "We'd be
doing the sarr.e thing we accuse
Russia of subversion."
He felt that the situation would
continue the status quo until the
economic plight of t!ie Cubans
forced them to oerthrow Castro.

Dr. Webb agreed with him but
he thought that the United States
would surely intervene after close
consultation with the Organization
of American States If Russia pro- ceeded to build missile bases on
s many people report that
c"b
they have.
All were concerned about Guan- tanamo Bay Naval Base. Cuba has
been attempting to terminate the
lease but the United states wo,,,t

ReDrs-

Wcbb and Drennon WCren t
"re
vlu 0'ihft
y'
United States
They felt that
would leave if the Cuban Govern
ment made a good offer for the
"
'caoc
"'c
000 wortn ot Vperty therein.
Dr. Vandenbosch said that he
considered the Laotian situation
much more dangerous than the
Cuban one. He felt that it could
easily erupt Into another Korea,
D's. Webb and Drennon agreed
"lln nim

recommended the abolishment of
General Hygiene as a requirement
tor rraduation from the Arts and
Sc'enc" Co""- Dr. Don Cash Seaton, head of
the Department of Physical Edu- cation, when asked what he
thought of the proposed abolish- ment, said that reasons for having
a physical education program far
outweigh those for abolishment.
Seaton 8aic1,
PrlnclPal
purpose for a physical education
program at tne university Is to
provide the student with the fund-Ar- ts
amental principles and knowledge
,.
.vm
f titnoaa
e hlm to
tnat wU, he, p
come a better engineer, chemist, or
agriculturist
"One
.... objection to a physical edu- -

.,..

ors will be provided to take car
of the increased enrollment," ha
said.
"Some
Dr: Beaton continued.
people are of the opinion that wb
do not do enough in physical edu- cation. We feel like we are doing
enough,
"Is our program supposed
Continued on Pate 8

65 Coeds
Will Leave
Dmi7ninn Weill
DUWIIlclil II till
.

The coetls now residing in
Bowman Hall due to the lack
noi
P"ded enough to . meet of room in the women's rest- the dent halls will move to Keene- lnc"?i e"ro1 ment

h

"

Preclas,ificaUoPn.
This probiem has
come about mainly because pre- classification permits the enroll- ment of the students already en- rolled at the University." Dr.
Seaton 6aid.
Because of this, he said. 46 ner- cent Cf the physical education
EDaces were already filled when
freshmen entering the University
u icu
llJC
..i.j 10 ciiiuii
lul .w l'l!'' t!
m classes last fall.
Dr. Seaton said this "was discon- certing to many advisers who were
unable to find classes for the stu- dents.
-j. hope that additional instruct- -

spective sorority houses next
semester. Miss Dixie Evans.
.
director of women s housing
said.
There should be plenty of room
to accommodate the pirls next
semester. Miss Evans said. Last
year there were about 80 vacant
rooms in the dorms after the first
.
semester uiiu uiny oo K"1 are HI
j
Bowman.
Jack Hall, director of the men's
quadrangle, said "that if the girls
are definitely moving out of the
dorm the new applicants will be
allowed to move Into the dorms."

SC To Elect Officers

PJr At

Monday Night Meeting

Student Congress representatives
will elect SQ's four principal of- me
f .cers
ne new constitution Monday night
in Lafferty Hall.
A president, vice president, sec- retaiy. and treasurer will be elect- ed, Norman Harned, chairman of
the elections committee, said.

i'.. "'"

i

A slate of officers will be nomU
"t,-cu
mm
umiimiHi
mittee and other nominations will
from the floor' Harned

afep'ed

Harned said that the contests
for the final seats in Arts and
Sciences and Engineering were
won by Elizabeth Fox, and Dick
Coons respectively.

t:('M

2

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Intends To Keep
Naval Base In Cuba
U.S.

Ily JOHN M. IHGHTOWHK
A
Jan.

r cm Vf'Tnv

1

The sudden announcement by
President Eisenhower last niuht

that

h(i

(AT)- -1 he United Statis as- - formal ties with Cuba came as a
silted its intention today to severe blow to more than 53.000
Cubans who had applied for
maintain the br' naval ibase at American visas to leave their tur- n
Cuantanamo, Cuba, despite bulent Island. But the tate De-th- e
break in relations with partment Indicated today they
Castro could eome without visas'
Cuba's
"The United States," said Press
,
government.
Officer Joseph Reap, "has always
A statement issued by the White been very generous in opening its
House said the treaty allowing doors to those who are fleeing from
U.S. control of the base cannot be suffering and tyranny."
bt'uken by Cuba alone. The end- Heap said he had no idea how
ing of dip'omatic relations has no many Cubans, there are in the
effect on U.S. base rights, the I'nited States. He estimated that
when the break came there were
statement added.
Mate Department official.' said more than 3,000 persons with
American di.lo- - American citizenship living in
they expected all
mats and other official personnel Cuba plus gome hundreds of tour-t- o
gtt out of Cuba within a few ists. He said the total already is
days. At the same time, they ex- - declining.
Reap issued n new appeal to
pert more than Ul)0 Cuban official
Americuns to get out of Cuba.
in (hit country to depart.

1

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Splndlvtop Ground llrvuliing
for the administration
of

Ground was broken recently
building at the Spindletop Research Center. Par- ticipating in the ceremony were, from left, Floyd
I. Fail man, president of Kentucky l lilitics and

chairman
the board of the research renter:
Lt. Gov. Wilson W. Wyatt; I'niversity President
Frank G. Dickey; and Gov. Kert T, Combs.

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERN EL, 'Thursday, Jan. 5,

1I

Scholarships Available
In Five Overseas Areas

Committee Members
TVUnrl Ft Fnnnlfv

The Committee on Committees appointed various stand

ing committees to fill vacancies on the University Faculty
for 15)61. These committees, effective Jan. 1, 1961, will lc
as follows:
COMMITTEE OS COMMITTEES
Term to Expire Dee. 31, 1962
Term to Expire Dee. 31, 1961
A. Lee Coleman
Maurice A. Hatch, chairman
Arthur C. Olamer
Herbert N. Drmnoa
Charles P. Graves
Keller J. Dinn
Herbert Sorenson
Joe Logan Massle
Frederick W. Whiteside
Robert Straus
ELECTIONS COMMITTEE
Annie R. Brownlee
Stalejr F. Adams, chairman
William W. F.cton
Maurice A. Ctajr
Frank Kodman, Jr.
Don Richardson Jacobson

'''

RULES COMMITTEE
Ralph E. Pickett
Leonard Raviti
II. A. Romanowitz
M. M. White
Ralph F. Wiseman

R. D. Johnson, chairman
Charles F. Elton

Howard Hopkins
Alan Ross
William C. Survant

LIBRARY COMMITTEE
C. Frank Buck
chairman
Charles Thomas Maney
Henry II. Jack
Malcolm E." Jewell
Walter H. Pearce
Bennett II. Wall
George I. Schwert
ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS, SOCIAL
James W. Gladden, chairman
Jacqueline P. Bull
Oliver W. Gard
Virgil L. Christian
Frank A. LoefTel
Maurice Stanley Wall
Suzanne Protigh
Ex Officio Members
L. L. Martin
Doris M. Seward
President, Student Congress
'

Prof. Gels
One Year

Five special overseas scholarships aril summer school
.
sessions are available to American students during
Tin?
Center of the University of Hawaii has
grants for as long as two years in Asian studies and related
fields. Application must le made by March 1 for scholarships
e ffective in
SeptemlxT, 19(51.
particular subject and period of

Fellowship

1961-62-

East-We-

Under this progiam Juniors and
seniors tnay major in Asian and
Pacific Studio. Graduate students
may work In Asian Studies cither
In an interdepartmental
program,
individual fields, or in the overseas operations program.
Scholarship applications may be
obtained from the Director of the
East-We- st
Center, University of
Hawaii, Honolulu 14, Hawaii.
Four 'British and two Austrian
summer schools are offering special
courses from July to
August, 1961 to American students.
Under the British University Summer Schools progiam students may
apply for study at one of four
schools, each concentrating on a

English history.
The Salsburg 8ummer School
stresses the German language and
requires that all students enroll in
a language course.
Rumanian and Polish universities are presenting fellowships for
Apgraduate study from 1931-6plications must be filled by Jan.
15, 1961. The governments of these
two countries are giving fellowships on exchange arrangements
with the United States.
Applications for the above programs may be obtained from the
Information and Counseling Division. Institute of Internation
Education, East 67th St., New
York 21, New York.

Abby L. Marlatt,

HONORS PROGRAM COMMITTEE
'William F. Wagner, chairman
Loren Carlson
Robert O. Evans
Carl Cabe
Vincent Cowling
Betsy W. Estes .
Robert W. Rudd
Holman Hamilton
J. R. Ogletree
Douglass Schwartz
W. Walton, Jr.
Charles A. Walton
W'airen

Medical Center Displays
Old Psychiatry Volumes

The Medical Center Library has placed on display a selection of works entitled "Landmarks in the History of Psychiatry."
One of a scries of selections which the Medical Center
presents periodically, the display traces the development of
theory in the field of psychiatry.

Books In the exhibit are from
the collection of the University
Medical Center library and the
Transylvania College medical collection.
Volumes, together with explanPROGRAM COMMITTEE FOR UNIVERSITY FACULTY MEETINGS atory text, were prepared for the
Vernon A. Musselman
John Kulper, chairman
display by Dr. Wilhelm Moll, asWilliam S. Ward
sistant medical librarian, and
Ralph JI. Weaver '
Wayne C. Williams, chief medical
Illustrator at the Center.
Works exhibited range from the
writings of the Dutch physician
1
to
Johann Weyer
).
and a
Freud
W illiam H. Ennis, former assistant director of Hackley leading American psychiatrist of
the twentieth century, Adolf Meyer
i.
Hospital and School of Nursing at Muskegon, Mich., was

James P. Lafferty, assistant
professor of nuclear science in the
College of Engineering, has been
fellowship to
granted a one-yethe University of Michigan for
further studies In nuclear science.
Prof. Lafferty said the study,
financed by the National Science
Foundation, was set up to improve
teaching efficiency und capabilities.
Head of the nuclear science program in the College of Engineering. Prof. Lafferty said the fellowship will aid him in setting up
a master's degree program in
nuclear engineering. The program
will be under a new engineering
science department.
The grant gives Prof. Lafferty
full salary, tuition, and an expense allowance. He said the study
would virtually complete his requirements for a doctor's degree.
The study will begin In September. 1961.
First God created Idiots. That
was for practice. Then he created
school boards. Mark Twain.

P

PHONI

NOW SHOWING!
WALT

DISNEY'S

"Swiss Family Robinson"

Commonwealth Life
Insurance Company
Insuring More
Kentuckians Than Any
Other Company

NOW SHOWING!
True Movie Fun
For '61
VM mm biput

ininuiiiuiii

William Ennis Chosen
For Hospital Position

assistant administrator for the University Hospital by Dr. Moll noted that Weyer was
among the first to regurd as menthe Hoard of Trustees Tuesday.
tally ill those who were

accused

group
approved
Angclucci. Lexington; Richard
thought to
tract to Gilbert E. Brown to serve Cooper, Somerset; and Whayne of witchcraft and those evil
spirit."
as part of the Eastern Kentucky Priest, Hartford, as nominees for be "possessed by an
has been called the father
The

also

a

Resource Development Program.
The work, under the direction
of the College of Agriculture, will
ebneern market promotion for
lumber produced in Eastern Kentucky.
Ennis, holding a master's degree in hospital administration
from' the University of Chicago,
has served In similar positions in
Chicago and at Chapel Hill, N.C.
The trustees certified Dr. Ralph

Placement Service
Announces Schedule
The University Placement

vice announced today that the

the alumnus to the Board to suc- Weyer
ceed Dr. Angelucci, whose term ex- of scientific psychiatry.
pires Dec. 1.
Gov. Combs, who presided at the
meeting, customarily appoints one
of the three certified by the board.
The Board agreed, upon request
from the Student Congress, to alNOW SHOWING!
low three members to serve on
the University Faculty. Currently,
tPCIli-- E
OB
only one member may attend the
meetings.
BAL- I..PANAMA 1 FRANK

Serfol-

tuclid

DAILY

Anu

Chvy

402 First Federol Bldg.

FOR THE FINEST IN
REFRESHMENT TRY

ChM

t

s

olijLei.

I

J

RESTAURANT

--

I

A

CASUAL

FfclENDLY

I

ATMOSPHERE"

DINING

For Any

Tfi
YJa2

Bord en s
Very Big On
Flavor

I

f?

fUiii'JJSQlX'
DANCING

DRINKS

Closed Sunday

1

1

1

Block from University
820 S. Limestone St.

LIVE MUSIC N1TELY

,j;

One of Kentucky's Finest
Steak Houses
OPEN 11:00 A.M. TO 1:00 A.M.

CALL

DIAL

Consultant

THE

ItSO P.I

"SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER"
Eliiabeth Taylor
Monty CM?
"ALL THE YOUNG MEN"
Alan ladd
Sidney Poiricr

I

MICIILEK FLOWST

DAVID NOYES

For Information Call

NOW SHOWING!

lowing companies will be on campus this week to interview interested students.
Cincinnati Milling Machine Co.
Students in mechanical, electrical,
electrical engineering, mathematics, and sciences.
The Metal and Thermit Corp.
will Interview students In chemical, mechanical, metallurgical engineering, chemistry, commerce
graduates.
j

Occasion

a

HOPE

OPEN

FLOWERS

Ptltt

WE ALSO INVITE PRIVATE PARTIES
Dial
HAROLD MICHAEL, Manager

417 East Maxwell

7"

944 Winchester Rd.

* THE. KENTUCKY.

.Santa Brought Gifts

Social Activities
RESEARCH CLUB
The University Research Club
have a luncheon meeting at
noon Thursday, Jan. 12, in Donovan Hall Cafeteria. Dr. A. D.
Albright, Executive Dean of UK
Extended Programs will speak on
"The Frontiers of Educational Research."
will

CWENS

RECENTLY PINNED
Ann Chamberlain, a Lexington
sophomore in the College of Arts
and Sciences and a member of
Alpha XI Delta, to Al Lawton,
a Junior from Lyndon majoring
In agriculture and 'a member of
Phi Sigma Kappa.
Lois Snow, a Louisville Junior
majoring in education and a member of Delta Delta Delta, to Burks
Brown, a Junior from Russellvllle
majoring In agriculture and a
member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Janet Carol Simmons, Pratt,
Kansas, to Robert C. Baker, a
Junior from Madisonvllle majoring in engineering and a member
of Lambda Chi Alpha.
RECENTLY ENGAGED
Judy Jett, a Lexington sophomore In the College of Arts and
Sciences and a member of Delta
Delta Delta to Jack Goodwin, a
Junior in the College of Arts and
Sciences and a member of Pi
Kappa Alpha from Chevy Chase,

night at the chapter house.
Little Orbit and the Pace Setters will play.

row

PHI DELT PARTY
Phi Delta Theta will have a
costume party from 8 p.m. to 12
p.m. tomorrow night at the house.
The theme for the party Is "Suppressed Desires."

LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
Cwcns, sophomore women's honLambda Chi Alpha will have a
orary, will meet at 4 p.m. Monday
in the basement of Keeneland Jam session after the game SaturHall.
day night at the chapter house.
ROTC DANCE
DUTCH LUNCH
The ROTC Cadet Brigade will
Dutch Lunch Club will meet at
rponsor a tea dance from 3 p.m. noon today in the SUB Ballroom.
to 5 p.m. this afternoon in the Mrs. Claude Sullivan will be the
SUB Ballroom to entertain the 54
speaker. Dutch Lunch is a lunchfinalists In the election of spon- eon club for
Lexington girls and
sors for the brigade. All cadets are commuters.
rncouraged to attend. Admission
LAW WIVES
is gained by wearing of the uniThe UK Student Bar Wives
form. An election by the entire
tomorrow will select eight Auxiliary will have its monthly Md.
brigade
sponsors from these finalists.
meeting at 7:30 tonight. Room 128
Kathy Lewis, a Louisville Junior
of the SUB. The program will in
PANIIEL MEETING
clude a beauty demonstration. All
Panhellenic Council will meet wives of law students and faculty
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Chi are invited to attend.
Omega house.
CAMPUS AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
The Personal and Campus AfSI B TOPICS
Dr. Malcom Edwin Jewell, as- fairs Committee will meet at 5
sistant professor of political sci- o'clock this afternoon in the
PRESCRIPTION
ence, will speak at 4 p.m. tomorof the SUB. Every memSERVICE
row In the SUB Music Room. Dr. ber of the committee Is urged to
Prompt
Jewell's subject for the SUB attend.
Reliable
Topics program will be "LimitaPHILOSOPHY CLUB
tions of the Kentucky ConstituThe Philosophy Club will meet
DELIVERY
tion.
at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon
SERVICE
TI KATPA ALPHA
in Room 128 of the SUB. Dr. Lewis
RAPID
Pi Kappa Alpha will have a Cooke will address the club with
Winter Wonderland party tomor a speech on "Aristotle Was Right."

Dunn Drugs

I

Kennedy's Inaugural Dress

i

Will Include Silk Top Hat
Although Mrs. John F. Kennedy's Inaugural wardrobe Is still
a secret, her husband's tailor has
announced what the Presidentelect will .wear to the inauguration
ceremony Jan. 20.
Going back to the traditional
silk top hat (instead of the hom- -

J&jQ

The Diamondscopc

1

1
WHIN PWY1MS A DIAMOND H It
r ft
impartanc t camulr
fruit
Omw
mi4
tin pmttmntl
jJity earn, it, n yeu will
matter
twnHi pm4 .
hat
trie may

ylr.

by Carl Heinz

v

f
'Ml

wyr

nn nit wn mmi
Amaricm

102 W. Short

wain

Phone

Look Better

SELL YOUR BOOKS

with

j

55

Eliminate

FRI. & SAT.

2:30
7:00

0

10 :00

p.m.--

1

for your
USED BOOKS

LEXINGTON
OPTICAL CO.
133 W. Short St.

Kennedy
Book Store
OPEN FRI. NITES TIL 9

J

SALS

MOST EVERYTHING Vi OFF!

.

DRESSES

p.m.
p.m.
2:00 p.m.

$1.00 Adult
75c Children

. . . Now Open

JUNIOR MISSES AND HALF SIZES
COCKTAIL AND CASUAL
REG. 14.95
REG. 17.95
REG. 19.95

30 p m.

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Restaurant
For Your '
Convenience

eiptJckmt

THE DOOR TO FASHION
819 EUCLID AVENUE

JANUARY
CLEANUP

Crystal Ice
Club

t

CASH

Phone
For Appointment

SUNDAY

1:00 p
4:30 p
8:00 p

pm.

MORNING SESSION
Adults
Children
OTHER SESSIONS

SOc

Eyeglasses

that Chic Look

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r

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CONTACT LENSES

Hi

DRUG COMPANY
Lime and Maxwell

t a rt r

10 30 o

10:30 o.in.-l:0- 0
p.m.
2:30
p.m.
7:30 p.m.-1- 0 00 p.m.

MARRIED
Nellie Taylor, a senior psychology
major from HaddonAeld. N.' J.,
and a member of Delta Delta
Delta, to Jim Bishop, a West Point
graduate front Arlington, Va.

WILL DUNN

Ice Skating Indoors Or Outdoors

THURSDAY

Betty Jo Shotton, a Louisville
senior majoring in education and
a member of Alpha XI Delta, to
Fred Haas, a senior commerce major from Ft. Thomas and a member of PI Kappa Alpha.
Lois Jones, a sophomore education major from Lexington and a
member of Alpha XI Delta, to
Scott Matthews, a former student
from Covington and a member of
Pi Kappa Alpha.
Kay Kuster, a Paris senior majoring in home economics and a

Fountain Service

GARDENSIDE PLAZA
SHOPPING CENTER

THRU

MONDAY

s

Pins, Rings

Journalism and a member of Delta Delta Delta, to
majoring
member of Alpha Xi Delta, to Alex Ed Thomas, a senior engineering
Chaykoskl, a University of Louis- major from Paris and. a member
ville senior from Akron, Ohio, and of Delta Tau Delta.
a member of Lambda Chi Alpha.

Sandwiches and Short Order
Open 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

COME AND VISIT

wXv. r u Y

Of

3

5,Il-- 3

fn

I

Eisenhower
burg as President
chose) the next President will wear I
an Oxford gray lamb's wool cutaway coat, a pearl gray waist- I
coat, white shirt with turned-dow- n
collar, a
tie, and
dark pin Swiped trousers.

KERJSEU .Thursday, Jan.

11

UP TO

OFF

2

AND UP

ICE SKATE!
COATS AND SUITS
OUR ENTIRE STOCK

Are You Planning?

REG.

DINNERS
BANQUETS
JAM SESSIONS
COCKTAIL PARTIES
PARTIES
DANCES

Why Not

5

Tr- y-

Just Past th

Bcltlino

atmosphere for any type of occasion awaits, you at the Congress Inn. Student
at the University of Kentucky are discovering the convenience of having their functions at this new and different establishment. Visit us soon , . .
NOW
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS

See or Coll Dick Wallace at

Fowl at Its Finest

PANTS, SHORTS, BLOUSES.
UP TO Vi OFF

ACCESSORIES
JEWELRY, BAGS, HATS, SCARVES,
REG.

1.00-10.0-

& BOUTIQUES

UP TO Vi OFF

0

-

LINGERIE

A pleasing

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INCLUDING CARCOATS
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* The Kentucky Kernel
of

THE READERS' FORUM

SIX DOLLAHS

A SCHOOL

Dob Anderson,

fT

YEAH

Editor

Newton Spencer, Sport$ Editor
Managing Editor
Bobbik Mason, Assistant Managing Editor
Axics Asm, Society Editor
Stuart Goldfarb, Advertising Manager
THURSDAY NEWS STAFF
Tevis Bennett, Associate
Norris Johnson, Newt Editor
Newton Spencer, Sports
Mixe Wenninger,

Campus Litter Bugs

As the recent snows melt and the
grassy expanses of the campus are
relieved of their uniform white mantle, the paper, cigarette butts, and
otlkT litter dropped there by students
become visible again.
Yet, as unsightly as the University
grounds now are, they are relatively
clear of refuse. It is during the spring
and fall that trash deposited by slovenly students becomes so heavy that
Maintenance and Operations must
dispatch several men to do nothing
but go about and pick up paper.
Inside the University's classroom
buildings, however, the flow of litter
never ceases. One merely has to enter
any building at the end of the day to
find halls littered from end to end
with cigarette butts, stairways scattered with candy wrappers and paper,
and classrooms with crushed coffee
and soft drink cups under nearly every
seat.
Such sights are common to slum
areas and athletic arenas where great
unhibited masses gather for recreation, not a university campus where
supposedly mature young men and
women gather to acquire knowledge.

The University must spend thousands
of dollars each year to hire men to
go around and clean up after its students just as if they were infants

whose every move makes for more
mess. It has also spent considerable
money to provide trash barrels, waste
baskets, cigarette urns, and ash trays
for the campus.
It's a shame students still don't
know how to use them.

After 2026, What?
isn't

With the decennial census out of the
way and certain cities left miserable
by an actual decline in the number
of their residents it might be logical
to look for a respite in the
plosion
headlines. Not so. Out
at the University of Illinois some engineers have been applying the laws
and formulae of progressive mathematics to world trends, starting back
at the year 1 and working forward
to infinity, the point at which there
will be too many people to count.
Their cheery announcement is that
(suffocation, or at least surfeit)
will be along in 2026 to be more precise, on November 13 just 66 years
hence. That day, the computations
show, the world's population will
"approach infinity" and extinction.
No worry on the part of these experts about food resources; their
projection is in terms of simple,
elementary breathing space. "Our
will not
starve to death," says Dr. Heinz von
Foerster, "they will be squeezed to
death." The picture, as in early
science fiction, is that of the blob
of protoplasm which grows and
spreads and expands until there's
nothing else around.
The claustrophobe is left, however, with one resource other scientists, other headlines, even apart from
the possibility that the Illinois mathematics is fallible. Life on the planet
population-ex-

Kernels
"A human being: an ingenious as1
sembly of portable p u m b i n g."

Christopher Morlcy.
"We shall never understand one
another until we reduce the language
Cibran.
to seven vords."-KW- n7

Busy ISr'ing Husy

Kentucky

University

second clM matter under the Art of March 3, 1879.
Catered at h port office at Leiington, Kentucky
Published lour timet a week during the regular K hoot year
pt during holidayi and eiama.

quite all that tranquil and foreseeable, not by a long, loud shot.
Even ruling out the fusion bomb and
the fission bomb what's the latest
rumor on that impending further
horror, the neutron bomb?

The Baltimore Sun

To The Editor:
In reference to the last letter of
Mr. Wes Morris, I would like to
congratulate you, sir, for you have
truly uncovered a major element in
our student Iwuly makeup, that being
the demon apathy. Your last Utter
was without a doubt the closest that
you have come to hitting anywhere
near the nail. I would like to develop
a mite further your discovery . . .
with your permission.
All during this extended holiday
I, boy reporter, have probed, peeked,
dug, delved, and grubbed into many
many campus organizations trying to
come upon a truly efficient, worthwhile group. I was in search of an
order that is being led by something
or someone with more than a title and
that is functioning with any degree
of effectiveness, and this, Mr. Morris,
is what I found.
There are levering within the
bounds of this university more groups
of people than you or I could shake
an adjective at. We have academic
groups, eating and drinking groups,
political groups, religious groups,
Greek groups, bird watching groups,
cheating groups, people watching
groups, athletic groups, a "how to
fix an election" group, bridge groups,
eight ball or rotation groups, and
even a leading group (composed naturally of the leaders of the other
groups, Gad!!).
I have found that no matter what
a student might be interested in from
and including Charles Goren to Karl
Marx, there somewhere on this campus is a small or large (depending
upon the popularity of one's interest )
clan ready to offer said student either
a delayed or immediate membership,
"in good standing," complete with
paddle, sickle, or extra ballots, also
depending upon the group chosen.
In fact, I have just alxuit decided
r
that anyone that attends the full
vigil here and graduates without being a member of some organ
four-yea-

ized campus group is either a genius
or a victim of Ixxly odor or both.
Yet, Mr. Morris, when these avid
members are pressed to answer exactly what their groups are accomplishing we become disheartened.
Answers such as, "Well, we did beat
North Carolina," or "Every year we
Sing," or
sponsor the
"Last Sunday we and our housemother

all went to church, en masse," were
typical, and all too often we heard,

"Well, I'm not sure exactly what we
do but we're pretty busy."
Yes, Mr. Morris; we all are very
busy at being very busy and this is
indeed a pity. Through this true accomplishment has liecome practically
a stranger to us. It would seem, however, that with a campus that houses
close to 10,(KX) partially educated
people someone would take the bull
by the horns and either create or
recreate an outstanding working organization here at UK (we can't even
have a successful riot). Hut it will
never happen, Mr. Morris, it cannot,
everyone is just too, too busy.
Doi'C PiOHKMS

Break In Cuban Relations Inevitable
By HAROLD K. MILKS
HAVANA
break
(AP)-T- he

in

diplomatic relations between the
United States and Fidel Castro's Cuba
was long in coining but many here
for a long time believed it was
inevitable.
Observers said it appeared the
bearded revolutionary had.no intention of getting along with Washington almost from the time he came
out of the hills of eastern Cuba' two
years ago to take power.
Why Castro took this aggressive
stand is disputed here, but a majority
of foreign diplomats in Havana agree
that the Castro regime never opened
the way for normal diplomatic relations with the United States.
After he flew to the United States
early in 1959, Castro is said to have
expressed resentment to intimates
over his failure to meet either President Eisenhower or Secretary of State
Christian A. Herter.
He expected
Eisenhower and Ilerter to make overtures to him, telling his associates
he could not seek such meetings himself and "still face my people."
Nearly a year after this visit, two
American reporters were booted out
of Cuba after reporting Castro had
expressed willingness to meet Eisenhower or Herter in the interests of
peace.
Castro said he could not have

made this overture because it would
have hetn misunderstood as a sign
of "weakness" on his part. Veteran
reporters interpreted this as a sign
Castro wanted relations with the
United States only on his own terms
-iat all.
Castro's seizure of the billion-dollAmerican investment in Cuba
was pushed vigorously, accompanied
by violent propaganda blasts at American "monopolists" and "economic imperialism." Attempts by the U. S. government to discuss compensation were
brushed aside or ignored.
U. S. Ambassador Philip Bonsai
a veteran career diplomat with a reputation for getting along with Latin
American leaders found himself completely stymied.
It took Bonsai months to arrange
a meeting with Castro in an cffoit to
smooth' relations and then nothing
came of it.
When
activity broke
out in Havana, the rift in U.
relations grew into a wide breach.
That breach has been widening since.
For most of 1960 the United States
and Cuba had diplomatic relations in
name only.
Castro blamed the United States
for the bad relations, charging Washington committed repeated aggression against Cuba and supported
forces.

f

o

o

The LTnitcd States said Castro was
at fault, claiming he and his regime
wire engaging in an
propaganda campaign that shamed
the