xt7pg44hqc2h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pg44hqc2h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650211  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 11, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 11, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7pg44hqc2h section xt7pg44hqc2h Inside Today's Kernel
Arts tditor reriews "Americanization
Of tmily": Page Two.

Sports Editor discusses UL't failing
football program: Poge Si.

Coed is also a professional
dresser: Poge Three.

Coaches Bradshaw and Rupp are both
"interested" in Negro athletes: Page

More on (hose

;1bl&

hair-

Seven.

Birds: Poge

The Political Union will hear debate
on the Vietnam war: Page Eight.

Four.

diet Huntley

.Tf-

7,000 Passes
Set Aside
For Students

News

commentator
Chet
Huntley will make a third attempt to lecture at the University
as a part of the Central Kentucky
Concert and Lecture Series.
Mr. Huntley's two previously
scheduled appearances last semester were canceled, one because of a conflict of schedule
and the other because of weather
conditions which interfered with
transportation.
The newsman will speak at

Mr. Huntley is a commentator
for NBC-Tand appears on a
news broadcast "Huntweekday
ley and Brinkley." He is noted
for coverage of the civil rights
struggle in the South, political
V

LEXINGTON,

CHET HUNTLEY

conventions and campaigns.
He began his career with a
Seattle, Washington station and
joined NBC in 1955 after some
experience with CBS and
stations.
ABC-affiliat-

Admission to the Founder's
Day Convocation Feb. 22, will be
by ticket only, the Centennial
Office announced today.
At present, 7,000 tickets have
been set aside for students on the
Lexington campus and at the
community colleges.
Centennial Coordinator J. W.
Patterson said, "It is our desire
to accommodate every student
who wants to attend the convocation. The 7,000 tickets we have
set aside just represents our estimate of the number that will be
needed."
Student tickets may be picked

Quiz Bowl To Begin Tonight;
36 Teams Will Participate

University student
teams are scheduled to particU
pate in the first annual UK Quiz
Bowl contest.
The teams, representing 19
Greek organizations, nine residence units and four independent groups, will oppose each
other in a series of elimination
contests leading to a final, televised match.
The first round of
matches will be held at 7 p.m.
today in the Student Center
Theatre:
Thirty-tw-

o

-

tc

Keeneland Hall I vs. Kappa Alpha Theta
7:15 Keeneland Hall II vs. Town X
7:30 Bowman Hall vs. Chi Omega
7:45 Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Delta
Tau Delta
8:00 Phi Sigma Kappa vs. The Academicians
8:15 Alpha Tau Omega vs. Patterson Hall
8:30 Delta Zeta vs. Phi Kappa Tau
8:45 Hamilton House vs. Sigma Chi
7:00

JUL

Faculty
Raps Cook,

KY.,

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cntuc Icy

THURSDAY, FEB. II, 19f,5

Eight Pages

Admission Tickets Required
To Founders' Day Conclave
J

-

To Lecture
On Saturday

8:15 p.m. Saturday in Memorial
Coliseum. Students will be admitted free with ID cards.

Vol. LVI, No. 75

University

Mary Wooton, Blithe Kunsdorf,
Forris. Vul Volhard and Cindv
EldridRe.
t'hJ Omera Ginger Sable, Elaine
Brite, Jcannlc I.andrum. Donna Albright, Janet Kington, Susan Pillans
and Mlthele Cleveland.
Delta Delta Delta Jeanne Powell.
Pat Moynahan. Carolyn Cramer, Katie
Clay, Frances Fowler and Chcrvl Benedict.
Delta Gamma Stacia Yadon. Martha Kandler, Nancy Robison. Patty
Harkin. Gretchen Sandbach and Catherine Curry.
Delta Tau Delta Howell Brady.
Steve Beshear, Larry Kclley, John
Polk. Herb Ligon and Bob Youmj.
Delta Zeta Kathy Adams, Judy
Wiseman, Kaye l'olkers, Betty Pattlllo,
Salll I) ran and Joyce MacDonald.
FarmHouse Ron CofTinan. Frank
Talley. Dewey Clay, Darrell Hazle.
Dennis Liptrap and Art Znancewic.
7:00 Team No. 319 vs. Delta Delta
Hamilton House Jane Duvall. Gail
Delta
7:15 Trojans vs. Blazer Coeds
Mayer. Susan Newell. Barbara Benny.
7:30 Alpha . Delta Pi vs. Weldon
Patty Jo Foley and Judy Crumbaker.
Holmes Hall I Sarah J. Prnther.
House
Janice
7:45 Holmes Hall II vs. FarmHouse
Bobbie Allphin.
Arbaugh.
8:00 Kappa Delta vs. Alpha Xi Delta
Kathy Peterson. Madeline Kemper and
8:15 Pi Beta Phi vs. Delta Gamma
Kayo Caumisar.
Holmes Hall II Deniesc Wlssrl, Tain
8:30 Alpha Gamma Delta vs. Phi
Gamma Delta
Bush, I.aura Muntz, Linda Crautree,
8:45 Zeta Tau Alpha vs. Holmes
Suzanne Duke and Barbara I. ebbing.
Hall I
Kappa Alpha Theta Ginny Austin.
Martha
Ellie
Teams and their members are: Martha Johnson, Grcr.orv Fades, Julie
and
Chaffee, Sally
The Academicians Keith Burchett,
Wells.
John Simpson, Tom Reed, Ben WilKapna Delta Toni Barton, Paula
liams, Jim Clark and John Cole.
Clarke. Daryl Scott. Karen Ellis.
Alpha Delta Pi Ann Dickenson,
Suzanne ZieRler and Ophelia Speip.ht.
Vicki Beekman. B. J. Addington.
Kappa Kappa Gamma Kathy Kcr-leLuckett Jones, Pat Graff and Brenda
Barrett Prewett. Marty Minogue,
Patton.
Amy Lenz, Barbara Considine and
Alpha Gamma Delta Kathy Illston,
Bonnie Johnson.
Kathy Kelly, Mary V. Dean, Martha
Keeneland Hall I Pamela Tarvln,
Gordon, Kathy Goodman and BarCora Tapp, Jane Hopes, Barbara Engbara Berend.
land, Karen Paul and Barb Batch-eldeAlpha Tan Omera Ken Green, Gary
Mike Krur. Marjan
lluddleston,
Keeneland Hall. II Kathryn
Cbnck Neville and Bob Palmer.
Melissa
Bradley. Anne Marie
Alpha Xi Delta Mary Lee Gosney.
Scott. Sue Thomas and Marie
Jane Atkinson, Mary Lain Grosscup,
Linda Allen, Cheryl Miller and Mary
Patterson Hall Vicki Knight, Brenda
G. Goodlett.
Anderson. Emily Keeling, Mary Rach-forBlazer Coeds Mary Ellen Scharff,
Carolyn Clowes and Mary Lou
Caroline Haase, Nedra Keepers, Rusty
Irie.
Maly. Charlotte Foy and Beverly Hen-soPhi Gamma Delta Dave Mathews,
Ed llastie, Don Kleler. John It oath.
Amelia Franklin,
Bowman Hall
Wally NorrU and Ken Carpenter.

Questions for the Quiz Bowl
.have been writtennd ..selected
by a secret committee. Judges
will have the final binding decision in determining the validity
of answers.
UK's Quiz Bowl modeled after the television College Bowl
series maintains similar rules and
requirements for teams and
members.
The second group of
matches is scheduled for
February 16 and pairs:

Mar-fiar-

ct

up in the Memorial Coliseum
ticket office from 8 a.m. to 5p.m.
Friday, 8 a.m. tol p.m. Saturday,
and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday.
Students must present their
ID cards to obtain tickets and
they must also have an ID card
to be admitted to the Coliseum
on Founder's Day.
Dr. Patterson said that no student tickets will be available after
5 p.m. Monday. Seats in the
student section will not be reserved after 1 p.m.
Special tickets will be given
members of the Centennial class.
Other ticket allocations include 2,000 for UK faculty, 1,000
for staff personnel, and 300 for
press, radio, and TV (this includes the White House press
corps, that will accompany President Johnson) and 80 for the
White House party.
In addition, some 3,500 delegates from colleges and universities, learned societies, founda- tions, educational organizations,
and government have been invited.
Dr. Patterson said that no
tickets were being made available to the general public at this
time. "We won't know until after

p.m. Monday just how many
tickets we might be able to make
available to the general public,"
he said.
Distribution of the faculty
tickets will be handled through
the college deans and will operate on the same schedule as
distribution of student tickets.
Dr. Patterson said no plan for distribution of the staff tickets has
been worked out at this time.
Dr. Patterson pointed out that
the tickers were admission tickets
rather than seat tickets. The doors
to the Coliseum will open at
12:30 p.m. on Founder's Day and
ushers will show ticket holders
to their sections. Students will be
seated on the East Bank and on
the North Side.
5

Chemistry Lecture
Dr. D. L. West of the Savannah River Laboratory and Dr.
V II. Elliot of St. Louis University will lecture in a Chemisprotry Department-sponsoregram at 7:30 p.m. tonight in
Room 139 of the Chemistry
Physics Building. The lecture is
open to the public.
d

-

te

80 Alumni To Get
Medallion Awards

Distinguished alumni of the University will receive Centennial
Medallions at the Founders' Day convocation Feb. 22.
University President John W. Oswald will present the recently
revealed bronze medallion to 80 alumni.
Depicting the Brioschi sculpture, symbol of the University's
Centennial observance, the token pictures John Bowman, the
school's first regent, and James K. Patterson, the first president.
The Latin motto "Sic Itur Ad Astra" means "This is the pathway to the Stars."
The awards will be made at the Memorial Coliseum following
the convocation speech by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Of

r.

iwrrtu4r

Vi uVm

r.

Cowger
BULLETIN

Dlz-da-

May-lan-

d.

Rau-beso-

LOUISVILLE (AP)
of Louisville faculty
members have strongly taken
issue with comments by Louisville Mayor William Cowger
and Jefferson County Judge
Marlow Cook expressing concern over the faculty's
that football be
from the school's sports
dropped
program.
The faculty called for Judge
Cook to retract his statement or
resign from the Doard of Trustees.
Students demonstrated outside the administration buildtoing on the Belknap Campus
They placed a black armday.
band on the statue of "The
Thinker" outside the building.
In the arms of the statue they
placed a plastic football.
University President Philip
Davidson issued a statement
noting that Cook and Cowger
"have repeatedly shown their
support of the University and
their goodwill toward it."
-Un-

iversity

recom-mentatio-

n

d,

,

n.

Pollard Relates Science, Religion

By Kathy Powell
Kernel Staff Writer
"Science reintroduces in us a
feeling of great mystery. . .it contributes to us an awakening of a
profound religious sense," said
Dr. William Pollard, executive
director, Institute of Nuclear
Studies, last night.
Science opens up questions
only the theologian can answer,
stated Dr. Pollard in the first
lecture of the UK and the Lexington Theological Seminary
Joint Centennial Program.
He said that there has crept
into science a wonder and astonishment that is in direct contrast
to nineteenth century concepts.
'Until now," continued Dr.
Pollard, "people thought that

little by little, science was divest
ing nature of all her secrets and
that eventually, a key formula,
explaining all, would be found.
Dr. Pollard said that now we
know that science is limitless and
that each discovery leads to new
questions. He compared science
to a crystal capable of endless
growth.
The mystery of science, he
said, comes from its limitless
openness and this fact is, indeed,
its character.
"Consider our present viewol
s
the universe, its incredible
and its unimaginable quantities. Science involves phenomena that are new and puzzling tc
us," Dr. Pollard said.
"Each question or problem
vast-nes-

L
DR. WILLIAM A. POLLARD

answered or solved becomes the
occasion for other questions and
problems, opening up still further
questions and problems to be
solved."
Quoting Dr. Ophenheimer, he
compared the universe to a vast
mansion. Each room entered contains delightful and exciting furniture, but it also has many doors
which enter new rooms with
other doors equally exciting.
Everything in the observable
universe is breaking down and
exploding, but we trace both the
history of the oldest stars and of
the universe back ten to fifteen
billion years, he said.
If we go back in time,
On

Vi

7

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb.

11, 1965

'Emily' Film Nears
True Classic Comedy

SCOTT NUNLEY
Kernel Arts Editor
MGM's "The Americanization of Emily" is James Garner's best
series for fulltime
comedy since he left the "Maverick" television
film work. Quite likely, too, besides being hilarious and very warmly
American-mad- e
antiwar films.
human, "Emily" is the finest of the
director's nightmare to whole senselessness of death with
It is a
be faced with a motion picture elegies and tears.
James Garner portrays the exlike "Emily." A movie that inon presenting philosophies pounder of the "new philosophy,"
sists
Dy

7

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Mil

and making points has two strikes
against it before it ever reaches
the box office.

methodically destroying today's
"glory of war."
American audiences used to
the typical James Garner-Dori- s
Hollywood-orientemoviegowill be surers simply do not like bitters with Day type comedy
prised at Julie Andrews' warm
their tea. They want sugar, and a
of Emily. It is a pleaslot of it. "Emily," however, is a portrayal
ant surprise. The great Classical
fine film as well as a great comewriters of comedy knew that
dy because its director Arthur theirs was one of the best means
in blending
Hiller has succeeded
the two elements in a superb to attack the really important
questions.
balance.
"Emily" remembers this in a
Of course, there are many condelightfully fresh evening of
testants in the antiwar category. laughter and deep thoughts. The
Gregory Peck's "On The Beach" two are not incongruous, but frewas a startling picture.
quently separated in Hollywood
British author Neville Shute productions.
Not since Peter Sellers' epic
had written a tense portrait of
the end of mankind, and the "Dr. Strangelove" has the glory
of modern war been so devastated.
screen reflected this view.
And "Strangelove" did not reach
But "Emily" is another matthe believable heights that "Emiter. Bound to the premise that
ly" is able to attain.
words such as "courage" and
"nobility" are merely excuses for
TO SENIORS
manipulating nations, "Emily"
attempts to show that cowardice
AND GRADUATE
can be a virtue.
and
This is a difficult task in toSTUDENTS . . .
day's world of the noble sacrifice,
Have you ever wondered how to get
the gallant hero. It this attitude,
the important story of you and your
talents in front of companies who
declares, that causes
"Emily"
do NOT send recruiters to your
man to enjoy war, to throw himcampus?
self eagerly into it. But even
large and
companies
from all over the U.S. use
small
worse, this attitude causes mothQ E D to help them find
ers and wives to glamorize the
seniors and graduate students
,

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Folksingers Here For Greek Week

Canadian folksingers Ian and Sylvia will appear for
a performance sponsored by Greek Week this
Friday at 8 pjn. in Memorial Coliseum. The pair,

l.,iJ.

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.

recently married, will be in Lexington for the even
ing only. Appearing on the program with them will
be Odetta, world famous contralto and folk stylist.

Authenticity And Professional Polish
Combine For Ian And Sylvia Tyson

By ELIZABETH WARD
Rural authenticity and professional polish combine to form
a happy paradox called success
for Ian and Sylvia Tyson.
While maintaining a high level
of professionalism as musicians,
Ian and Sylvia manage to conethnicism
promote
sistently
selection of songs and
through
mode of presentation, creating
what may best be described as
a carefully disciplined casualness.
Their arrangements of the
numbers they sing cannot correctly be termed "arrangements" in
the customary sense of the word.
They seem' to strive to keep
these songs in the purist form
possible, with the addition of
only occasional instrumental innovations and minor melody and
lyric changes to facilitate their
particular sort of
One of their albums, "Northern Journey," is rich in original-forballads peculiar to Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and British Columbia.
Although often reminiscent of
familiar Appalachian themes and
melodies, this collection of songs
definitely has a flavor which is
unique and ethnic to its locale.
Such collections are characteristic of the Tysons.
If in search of folk music in
the commercial vein, beware of
Ian and Sylvia. Their aim is not
pleas-ers- ,
toward being
though their simple, direct
presentation has gained them
wide acceptance.
Their voices, although always
implicitly correct in pitch, expression, and inflection, are not
beautiful and their performance
is not engaging and in short,
their main purpose is to sing, not
amuse. An overworked adjective
which might best have been saved for them is geniune.
The repertoire of lan and Syl- duo-harmon- y.

m

mass-audien-

via is not chosen on the basis of
what is popular, but rather on
the merit of a song with regard
to its solid tradition as a folk
melody and its durability in maintaining its original form amid the
constant modification by those
engaged in the chaotic creation
of the "modern" folk sound.
Two noteworthy exceptions to
the general rule of authenticity are
"You Were On My Mind," an
original composition by Sylvia,
and "Four Strong Winds,"
written by Ian.
Although of contemporary harmonic and melodic structure
these songs are styled in the traditional manner; Sylvia's after
the jazz and blues form, and Ian's,
by virtue of its theme based on
the unstable environment of the
Canadian migrant farm worker,
in the folk idiom.
Most of the attitudes and intentions regarding the interpretation of folk music which seem
inherent in the work of the Tysons are also applicable to Odetta,
who will appear in joint concert with them here Friday night.
However, Odetta has a certain special talent which is hers
alone. In her voice are encompassed all the spectra of the human emotions.

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to be embarrassed at the inhumanity of this world, but she does
all this without actually putting
these feelings into words.
They are all ensconced in a
paradoxically
voice that knows no limits in
ugly-beautif-

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ABANDONED"
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'THE WRONG ARM
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She makes you laugh, moves
you to tears, and commands you

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Henry Fonda
Lauren Dacall
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Action! Actionl Action!

JAMES BOND 13 '
BACK IN ACTION !

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40500. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky,
four times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary.
liegun as the Cadet In 1894, became the hecord In 1B00, and the Idea
in 1'J8. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1815.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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KERNEL TELEPHONES
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expression.
Though her material is wide
in scope and excellently chosen,
there is no need to discuss specific
songs in detail. It simply does
not matter what she sings it
always comes off well and precisely as she intends it.
One of the first noncommercial folk artists to attain popularity, Odetta is a professional's
professional and may always be
counted upon to give a memorable performance.
Unless Ian and Sylvia and
Odetta do a complete about-facFriday's concert should be an
introduction if you do not know
good folk music and an inspiration if you do.

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Story by Henry Sleur
Produced nd Directed by William Conrad

PANAVISION

FROM WARNER

BROS.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Teh. II, !:--

Coed's Profession Is
Interesting Sideline

The Merry

Go-Rou-

nd

Linda Toon, elementary education
sophomore, already has one
degree that's made her one of the most sought-afte- r
girls
at lilazer Hall. Linda is a graduate beautician.
"When I was 16, 1 didn't know what 1 wanted to
do," said
Linda. "I loved to work with hair so I decided to
go to
beauty school in the summers."
It took Linda three summers to complete the
required 1,500
hours of study. "I missed a lot of fun," she
sighed, "but, I'd
do it again.
As for the harried coeds who head for Linda's door:
"I spend most of my time giving advice," she said. "Girls
complain about
permanents, or they come to me for
help after cutting their own hair."
What are the latest hair fads among college girls?
"Well, frosting, of course, and blunt cuts," said Linda. "According to Vogue, curls are back; but according to college girls,
the straight look is in."
Linda is sensitive about her work. If she doesn't like a hair
style, she will not set it. "If I'm not satisfied, how can I expect my customer to be?"
Although you might think the field of beauty is a woman's
world, not so, according to Linda. "A male beautician has the
advantage because of his ability to charm and flatter a woman.
Women love to be complimented and will be happy with anything a man says looks good."
A beautician must be
something of a psychologist. "You have
to prepare a customer for the shock that comes when she changes
her hair color. Most girls almost cry when they first see the results
of frosting."
"You also learn to be a good listener," Linda said. "People
will tell a beautician anything, and you have to be sympathetic
without getting involved."
Linda is a sports enthusiast. She plays right
on the
girls hockey team, enjoys bowling, and
She is social
chairman of Blazer Hall and a member of the Newman Club.
Linda intends to put her beautician's degree to work. She
hopes it will help supplement the elementary teacher's salary
she plans to earn some day. "I also get a lot of satisfaction from
that work," she said.
Linda shook her shiny red curls and laughed, "I only have
one complaint I never have time to do my own hair."
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This is Greek Week, the one
week in the year when the Greeks
pause as a group to take stock

of themselves, their goals, and
where their system is going.
They have recognized their
leaders and honored the most outstanding of these at the
Banquet.
And the Creeks have done a
lot of thinking this week. During the discussion-dessert- s
Wednesday night, the following
problems pertinent to fraternity
and sorority life were discussed:
How effective was the Creek
Unity Convention? Did each
organization and each individual
profit from the ideas brought
forth at the convention?
Some questions were even
more personal and
all-Cre-

in scope.
Are Greeks responsible for any

moral image the University may
have with students on this campus and people outside UK?
Would it be feasible for fraternities and sororities to plan their
social functions so that each
organization is responsible for the
conduct of its members only?
The Greeks this year have had
what some consider the most
honest evaluation of their purposes and many anticipate further progress from the areas of the
retreat last fall and
the Greek Unity Committee.
Now the Greeks are in a festive mood and Friday night will
set the pace.
The Greek Week Concert will
present Odetta, African folk singer, and Ian and Sylvia.
The annual concert, generally
the "sparkplug" of the weekend's
activities, may not set the mood
this year. Fraternities have not
bought their seats in the usual
"blocks" and may be looking
for seclusion in the far corners
of the Coliseum.
Most fraternities are entertaining after the concert with
open houses, indicating the quiet

trend in preparation for the Creek
Week Dance Saturday.

J

The DuToncs provide the to speak at Founders Day, Feb.
22 and if you feel like you're
music for the four hour
dance in the Student Cen- being watched, you probably arc
ter Ballroom, while Pat and Pres. . . .by the Secret Service agents.
. . .So if the birds will abate
ton, local folk duo, play and sing
in the cafeteria.
and the weather be with us, we'll
While Sunday is the accept- be in good shape to begin the seced day of rest, several residence ond hundred years better than we
hall open houses are planned. seem to have ended the last
Dillard House and Patterson Hall hundred!
invite all their friends from 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
At 3:30 that afternoon the
Faculty Brass Quintet will entertain in Memorial Hall as part of
the University Musicale series.
Junior Panhcllcnic Council
will present the spring semester
Higbee Mill Road
pledges at a reception in the Small
at Clays Mill Road
Ballroom of the Student Center
at 2 p.m.
a.m.
Continuing its program of art
films, the Student Center Theater
is showing "The Swindle" at
6:30 and 9:30 p.m.
The Cats are idle this weekend in preparation for a big
game at Vanderbilt on Tuesday
SUNDAY, FEB. 14
but campus life will begin tc
s
pick up speed as both
Speaker . . .
and Centennial weekend celebrations are in the offing.
Dr. William Reed
semi-form-

al

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

10:45

Service and
Church School

mid-term-

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NATIONALISM:

J

Folk

Musician

Coed Is Professional Hairdresser

Will Dunn Drug
Maxwell
Corner of S. Lime and

7ie College

historian, Prof. Henry
Steele Commager, discusses its effects
on the emerging nations
BOBBY

Store

SINGING
A

Hosts
WLAP's
(630 Radio)
Folk Music
Show
Seven Till

Midnight
Sunday

GIFTS AND CANDIES

OR CURSE

The eminent

BEN
STORY

Linda Toon, elementary education sophomore, puts the finishing
touches on Carlean Gaunce's hair. Linda has a degree in cosmotology
and spends her spare time fixing the hair of many girls in Blazer Hall.

VALENTINE

President Lyndon B. Johnson has accepted an invitation

BLESSING

V

7

by Gay Gish

..

By MARGARET BAILEY
Kernel Staff Writer

degree- -a

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DYLAN:

SPOKESMAN

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needs and the job that meets them

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KENNEDY BOOK STORE

* The Birds A Real Problem
Hopefully the University will
soon be rid of its multitudinous
number of birds. We have beard
loud noises during the evening hours
presumably some device to scare

m

Snfr

lor

Mr To (mi In Now?"

additional problem of unsightly
sidewalks. With so many birds
roosting in the trees around campus,
the walks have been ratherdisgust-in- g
to look at in the past few weeks.

the feathered visitors away.
A report from Dexter, Mo., emphasizes the importance of actually
getting rid of these winged sojourners on the campus. The Associated
Press account concerning a roost of
several million birds there notes
that the birds constitute a health
hazard.
Mayor Melvin Gainer said Monday there have been seven reported
cases of histoplasmosis a lungdis-eas- e
in the Dexter area. The disease is thought to be transmitted
by the starlings.
Nor is the possibility of an outbreak of histoplasmosis the only
point to be considered. There is the

"You Think ll

After all, as we pointed out
earlier, this is the beginning of the
Centennial Year, and the campus
should look its best at all times.
Also, there is the real and pres-

ent possibility that students walking under the trees at night might
encounter a most unpleasant experience.
Until the University administration persuades the birds to leave,
we can only continue to pray for
rain for the sidewalks, wear
hats or carry unbrellas to
protect ourselves, and hope that
there is a quick cure for
wide-brimm-

ed

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

THURSDAY, FEB. 11, 1965

1834

William Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

ef

Sid Webb, Managing Editor

David Hawte, Executive Editor

Linda Mills, News Editor
Kenneth Green, Associate Neics Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Gat Gkh, Women s Page Editor
G. Soott Nunley, Arts Editor
Blithe Runsdorf, Feature Editor
Business Staff

John Dauchaday, Circulation Manager

Tom Fixxie, Advertising Manager

Editorial Page Staff

Thomas Bersot, Arthur Henderson, Claudia Jeffrey, Robert Staib, James Svara

Language Chairman Discusses Kernel Stand
true, but there is a certain irony course: nine to twelve months, five
here, for the government agencies days a week, with compulsory study
that are supposedly doing such a on weekends. Results: very good to
superior job are generally staffed excellent. (The Modern Foreign
by university professors. The lat- Language Department at the Uniter have been lured away from versity of Kentucky could do as
the campus temporarily by the well if it could duplicate the aforechance to do what they can never mentioned conditions.) Even so, no
do in their everyday job that is officer became a fluent speaker of a
foreign language in that length of
a connection it is generally alleged, teach language under ideal conditime. What he did do was to learn
tions. I am not intimately acquaintas it was in your editorial, that
the basic patterns of speech, to acsome agency is doing a far better ed with the details of the Peace
in their use, and to
Corps language program, but quire facility
job than the colleges. This may be
e
them with
during the war I well knew the pronounce the
As
commander said:
work of the Naval Intelligence fluency.
"All we can do is give them a
Language School at Anacostia, solid
foundation, no more. A couple
whose work as regarded with simiof years of practice will do the rest."
lar awe by the university students
As for present programs, Peace
I was then teaching. Here are the
Corps and other, I have met in the
facts: The Director was Comdr.
foreign service and the Peace Corps
George B. Raser, USXR, Ph.D. in
few persons with the linguistic
Romance Languages, formerly of very
that your editorial assumes
Union College. The student body fluency
as the result of government lanwas composed of junior naval ofThe fact is, by
ficers chosen for their academic guage programs.
whatever method, by whatever proexcellence, with particular referis a hard
ence to linguistic aptitude. The gram, language learning
class size: two students per class. job.
Now as to the first question:
The time: four hours of instruction
Why study languages? This quesdaily, with assignments requiring tion can be
paraphrased in other
six additional hours. The staff: the
ways: Why study chemistry, literabest that money could buy, for the
ture, psychology, etc? or, Why go
commander paid salaries from two
to college? The answers to these
to three thousand dollars more than
questions are long and philosophany university. The equipment: also ical in nature. In brief
summary,
the best that money could buy.
judging by the proliferation of new
Motivation: the of ficers had already
uniersities, the expansion of old
been assigned toa country speaking
ones, and the steadily expandingen-rollinent- s
the language they were studying
at all of them, the Amerand had good reason to look forican people appear to have decided
ward to a promotion if they proved that education is
worthwhile. And
themselves linguistically and otherin our shrinking globe, with our
wise in the new job. Length of
increasing world role as a nation,
To the Editor of the Kernel:
Your recent editorial on languages asks what seem to be fair
questions: Why study languages?
and, if we must study languages
why aren't they taught better? Let
us tackle the second question first.
When the question of language
teaching methods comes up in such

near-nativ-

we will need more languages, not
less. The curric