xt7rbn9x3g1p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rbn9x3g1p/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640922  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7rbn9x3g1p section xt7rbn9x3g1p Features Thanksgiving Vacation

Committee Proposes
By JANIE GEISER

Kernel News Editor
The University calendar committee has proposed a
calendar which Includes three-da- y
Thanksgiving
holidays and finals which begin the day after fall semester classes end.
and 1966-6- 7
The committee's calendar for 1965-5- 6
will be presented to the University faculty for approval
at Its regular meeting Oct. 12. An open discussion of the
calendar will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday In Room 206 of
the Student Center.
The proposed calendar differs slightly from the one
the University Is now following by having:
a three-da- y
Thanksgiving holiday rather than the
y
vacation.
present
fall semester finals beginning the day after classes
end rather than finals beginning the following Monday.
Labor Day and Fourth of July as official University holidays.
commencement being held two or three days after
spring semester finals rather than a week or 10 days later.
The calendar committee has recommended that a
new 1965 summer session be substituted for the summer
calendar which was approved by the University faculty on Jan. 14.
The new summer session would begin with registration Friday and Saturday, June 11, 12, and end Friday,
Aug. 6. Monday, July 5, would be declared an Independence Day holiday. The proposed number of teaching days
would be 46.
The previous summer calendar called for starting the
session a week earlier in 1965.
Under the proposed system, the fall semester of 1965
would begin on Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 30, 31, with
classification, registration, and orientation of students.
Classwork would begin Wednesday, Sept. 1. The University would close Monday, Sept. 6 for the Labor Day holiday and reopen at 8 a.m. Sept. 7.
two-ye-

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one-da-

one-da-

25-2-

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24-2- 7,

VK W.
A
JAA

One hundred and ninet
upperclassmen hecame
pledges of the I!) University fraternities following Sunday's
hiil ceremonies.

A

LI' II

GAMMA

It

HO (A)

Cyril Sheldon Dodge, Lexington:
Henry L. Hardy III, Winston; Mm roll
Dean Porter. Fern Creek; Robert Williams Koscbiounh, Grayslake, III., and
David Bruce Vickery, LexinKton.
ALPHA TAU OMEGA (IH)
Leon Lyceeiuus Calvert III. Lexing-

ton; Joseph Thomas Clark. Calhoun;
Terry Lee Davis. Louisville; Wallace
Lee Dryden, Frankfort, and Edmund
Harold Dunsmore, Versailles.
Michael
Greer. Lexington;
Lloyd
Richard Lee Hayde '. Owcnsboro; Harold C. Johnson Jr.. Lexington; Nor-be- rt
Walter Mack. Fern Creek; Manning Brooks Mahafee III. Louisville,
and James Ellsworth Mills. Lexington.

Charles Blakeman Neville Jr., Park
City; Jerry Monroe Oak, Bedford:
Robert P. Palmer, Brandenburg; Scott

B. Scutchfield. Lexington; John William Stir, Portsmouth, Ohio; Thomas

Anthony Verzino. Waterbury. Conn.,
and Xavier Juan Wahner, Ft. Camp-

I

Vol. LVI, No.

I

TT

11U

TTTfi
J.
J

University of Kentucky
SEPT.

LEXINGTON,

11

22, 1961

KY., TUESDAY,

Eight Pages

bell.

DELTA

TAU DELTA

115)

Charles Corum Ashby, Madison-vill- e;
John William Bates, Catletts-burRobert Thomas Blackburn Jr.,
May field; Randy Brown Embry.
and Jefferson Barnes Gate- wood. Mt. Sterling.
Edward Putney Guerrant, Winchester; Zachary Taylor Johnson III,
Terry Bailey Mobley, Lexington; Charles Delaney Rankin. Winchester, and Eric Preston Shaffer,
Nicholasville.
Jon Freeman Sipe. Indianapolis,
Ind.; Steven Howard Snowden, Nicholasville; David Allen Spivey, London; Robert M. Staib. Louisville, and
David Lynn Switzer, Lexington.
FAKMIIOl'SE (I)
Frank Edmnnd Riley, Dalton.
KAI'PA ALril A (II)
Kenneth Neill Alexander. Ft. Thomas; Philip James Bloomfield.
Lexington; Robert Ernest Carter, Lexington; Graham Brown Cooke, Louisville; David Deneen Coram, Paducah,
and John Stevenson Douglass, Lexington.
Kennel Ellis Johnson. Ashland; William
Thomas Kitchen, Louisville:

Continued On Page

8

51 Seek Posts Fritlay

Applicants File
For SC Election
Applications have heen filed hy
persons for positions
on the Student Congress election ballot, according to Steve
lleshear, president of Student Congress.
Election of 23 representatives
for Student Congress will be held
Friday. Beshear noted that the
Student Congress constitution
provides for 30 representatives.
He said seven of the representatives would be appointed by
bodies.
University
Beshear said that under regulations of the new constitution,
students will be elected on a
campuswidc basio, rather than
from colleges. Any number of
students may qualify to have
their names appear on the election ballot, according to Beshear.
According to the new constitution, a student must have attended the University for ut least one
lull semester und have a 2 3 overall standing on the 4.0 grading
system to meet the requirements
for PC representative. Beshear
said all persor.s with their name,
appearing on the election ballot
have met the qualifications.
The president announced that
lie had appointed a committee of
tluee to be in charge of the election. Beshear said 1'hil (irogau,

on Dec. 13. Finals would run from Wednesday, Dec. 14
to Tuesday, Dec. 20. The proposed number of teaching
days would be 86.
The final spring semester schedule for 1967 would begin with registration on Saturday, Monday, and Tuesday,
Jan. 7, 9, 10. March 9 would be spring vacation with
classes ending Saturday, April 29. Finals would begin the
following Monday and continue until Saturday, May 6.
Commencement is proposed for May 8. Teaching days of
this semester total 88.
The summer session of 1967 would include registration on Friday and Saturday, June 9, 10, and a July 4
holiday on Tuesday. The session would end Friday, Aug.
4. Proposed teaching days number 46.
Dr. William F. Wagner, chairman of the calendar
committee, said the committee has already discussed
several recommendations for the calendar. One of these
was to have a day break between the last day of actual
classes and final exams during the two fall semesters.
"This would call for some kind of compromise," Dr.
Wagner said, "with classes earlier starting in the fall,
or not having the Thanksgiving holiday, or having the
semester run a little later in December."
Dr. Wagner feels that this type of calendar easily
lends itself to the trimester system but "it is purely an
academic schedule. That is all we are responsible for.
There has not yet been any discussion at our committee
meetings about a trimester plan."
Dean Elton believes the calendar is a compromise
between three factions the administration, the faculty,
and the students.
"No matter what we decided, somebody was bound
to be uphappy," Dean Elton said.
Members of the calendar committee include William
F. Wagner, chairman A. D. Albright, Steven Beshear,
Stephen Diachun, William W. Ecton, Charles R. Elton,'
R. D. Gilliam, Kenneth Harper, Roy K.
Jarecky, E. d!
McDaniel, Doris Seward, and Warren W. Walton.

The Thanksgiving vacation would be extended from
y
holiday to three days under the proClasses would resume
posed calendar, from Nov.
at 8 a.m. Monday.
The fall semester of 1965 would end on Tuesday, Dec.
14, and finals would begin the next day continuing
through Tuesday, Dec. 21 to end the semester.
The proposed number of teaching days is 86 for this
period.
Dr. Charles F. Elton, dean of admissions and registrar and a member of the calendar committee, believes
neither the students nor the faculty will like starting final
exams the day after classes end for the fall semester, but
he feels that the student body will support the proposed
calendar.
The objections to the calendar, Elton feels, will come
from the faculty members.
Registration for the spring 1966 semester would take
place Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, on Jan. 8, 10, 11 under
the proposed calendar. Spring vacation would run March
Classes would resume at 8 a.m. March 21.
Saturday, April 30, classwork would end for the
spring semester. Finals would begin the following Monday, May
May 7. Commencement would be
scheduled for Monday, May 10. The proposed total of
teaching days would be 86.
Dean Elton said he felt students would enjoy getting
out in early May to give them better chances for finding
summer jobs.
The summer session for 1966 under the proposed
schedule would be similar to the summer session for
1965. Teaching days would total 46 with Monday, July 4,
being declared a University holiday. Registration would
take place Friday and Saturday, June 10, 11, and classes
would end Friday, Aug. 5.
The planned schedule for fall 1966 is similar to the
1965 calendar with a three-da- y
Thanksgiving holiday,
Nov.
and finals beginning the day after classes end

the present

Fraternities Pledge
194 Upperclassmen
The naming of the new pledges
climaxed three weeks of intensive rush activities.
Freshmen were not allowed to
participate in this rush period,
but they will begin their own activities with bus trips to all the
fraternity houses next weekend.
Fraternities and their new
pledges are:

Calendar

1965-6- 7

a Junior in the College of Commerce, would be chairman of
the committee. Other members
are Suzanne Ortynsky, a senior
in the College of Education, and
Vickl Bcekman, Junior in the
College of Nursing.
The committee will be responsible for getting the voting machines for the election and getting workers for the polls, Beshear said. He said plans call for
voting machines to be in the
Journalism
Building and the
Student Center. The polls will be
open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday.
Persons
seeking election us
Student Congress representatives
are:
Sain Abell,
sophomore;
Brooks Alexander, sophomore;
Frank H. Bailey, junior; Kathy
Beck.
Junior; Vicki Beekman.
junior; Thomas Bersot. Junior;
David Besuden, junior; Terence
C. Black, Junior.
Michele Anne Cleveland, Junior; (Jary C'rubtrer, senior; Stanley "Skip" Craig, Junior; Charles
Continued On I'age 8

Chicago Symphony To Open
Concert - Lecture Series
The Chicago Symphony

a

will open the liMi
season of the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture
Association at N:l.r p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Coli- The Chicago Symphony,

liiiS
iif--

r

.A

V;

I

'

,ir'

1

tu

with

Jean Martinon conducting, will
perform Johannes Brahms'

"Symphony No. 3 in F Major,
Opus 90," Claude DeBussey's "La
Mer," and the Suite from "The
Miraculous Mandarin, Opus 19"
by Bcla Bartok.
Students will be admitted by
ID cards only. Season memberships may be purchased for $8
before the performance for students who do not have ID cards
or for those who have not renewed their memberships.
Student wives may secure
memberships for $5 if their husbands have ID cards. These
tickets must be bought at the
Graduate School in Room 367 of
the Chemistry Physics Building.
The Chicago Symphony was
founded in 1891 by Theodore
"to
Thomas, who determined
have the best." Thomas continued as its conductor until his
death in 1905 at which time his
principal violinist and assistant
conductor Frederick Stock, succeeded him.
Under Stock's 37 years as director, the orchestra began youth
concerts, popular concerts, tours,
and established a training school
for young musicians and the
Civic Orchestra.
From 1943 to 1953 the conduc-torshi- p
passed to Desire Defaum.
Artur Kodtinskl, and Rafael
Kubelik until Frltx Itchier
the post in 1953. Keiner
continued until 19C0 when his
health forced him to limit his
he was
concert work. In
musical adviser and conductor
for the orchestra.
After u guest apicarance iu
Jean Matinon
19J2, French-borwas selected to become the new
music director for the orchestra.
19G2-G-

n

3

rV

V'"'A

-

"

Chicago Symphony Orchestra
His associate conductor was Wal-

ter Hendl who studied under
Fritz Reiner.
Martinon studied violin in his
native city of Lyon, France, and
went to the Paris Conservatiry.
He studied composition with Albert Roussel and conducting with

j

Charles Munch.
Since 194G, Martinon has conducted throughout the world. For
two years he was conductor of
the Israel Philharmonic
and
served as associate conductor of
the London Philharmonic and
guest conductor in the Orient
and South America.

Power Change Wins
Council's Sanction

VATICAN CITY (A I') ll.isit ideas in the concept ol the
Pope and his bishops sh.uiiig power in governing the Roman
Catholic Chinch won oei whelming approval Monday at the
Vatican l.cuincnu.il Council.
Council fathers in St. Peter's
authority known
as collegiality is based.
Basilica were told that the
papal-episcop-

r
concept opened the
possibility of "enormous intensification of the life of the
Church throughout the world"
without diminishing papal supremacy.
The prelates voted approval of
to 191
the first measure 2.01
and the second by 2,106 to 53.
The first declares that bishops
are successors of the apostles
and the Pope is the successor of
St. Peter. The second says bishops
represent a college, or body, with
the Pope.
By then balloting, the bishops
accepted the very foundation on
which the concept of shared
shared-powe-

Conservative
prelates have
fear of the collegiality
concept, contending it has insufficient foundation in Scripture
and could weaken the Pope's primary over the Church.
Pope Paul VI told the bishops
at the stall of the third session
of the council a week aio Monday that they must decide how
they share ower with him in
governing the Church. He, too.
stressed that sharing would not
lessen either papal infallibility
on doctrine or primacy in administration.
Both were proclaimed by the last F.cumcnical
Council, in 1870.
voiced

* 2--

KENTUCKY

TIIE

1I

KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept. 22,

Strike In Saigon
Appears Resolved

Keeping Up With The Candidates

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The general strike in
SAKION, South V ict Nam (AT)
.1
leaders claimed a "om- ve.it etl scit Icil Unlay,
j
Siagou
r a mped In front of the building
plctc it ton.'
as rain poured down.
Communications were restored.
Electric power and water came
on
Petroleum
Monday night.
plants, tobacco factories, most
dock facilities, textile factories
and municipal buces were still
idle but were expected to be
back to normal Wednesday.
Government sources said the
still out had boen given
the re.t of today as a holiday.
Premier Nguyen Khanh's government announced striking
workers fired by a leading textile plant would be reinstated.
The general strike of 20.000
workers Monday started in support of them but produced other,
more sweepin demands.
Some labor leaders conceded
the Communist Viet Conp apparently was seeking to manipulate
the strikers. A number of unidentified persons not connected
with the labor leaders urged
strikers on to demonstrate Monday, and some railed for a charge
on the premier's office building.
Several thousand strikrrs had

SOUTH KOREAN KILLED
A
SEOU. South Korea AP
South Korean soldier was killed
and another wounded today when
five men believed to be North
Korean Communist agents fired
on three South Korean soliers
near a guard post on the eastern
front, an Army spokesman announced.
It was the second such incident in four days.
He said the attackers, wearing
South Korean army uniforms,
d
opened fire when sentries
them, then fled into woods.
AUSTRALIAN RESIGNS
CANBERRA. Australia (AP
Capt. Ronald John Robertson,
who commanded the Australian
aircraft carrier Melbourne when
it collided with a destroyer last
Feb. 10, has resigned from the
navy.
The destroyer. Voyager, sank
with the loss of 82 lives. Primary blame for the collision off
New South Wale-- , was placed oi
the destroyer.
chal-le&e-

CLASSIFIED
LOST

FOR SALE

LOST Black moccasi
shoes at the Sports Center. If
found, return to 211 Kinkead
Hall. Reward.
22S4t

FOR SALE '56 Chevy. 6 cylinder .standard shift, excellent
condition. $325. Phone

LOST

1956 black MG-FOR SALE
sports car. Top condition, new
top and recently overhauled.
Call Ron Gruneisen. ext. 8011
or 8021.
22S4t

Personal checkbook. Gary
Bank of Alexan-

Lee Lederer.

'''

dria.

7942.

22S2t
VoR RENT

TO SHARE room with college
student. Available Sept. 22. $35 a
month. Includes clean linen, kitchen privileges and all utilities.
Four blocks from University.
22S3t
Call
1.

decorated

NEWLY

teds.
line.

room, twin

5 minutes from UK on bus
1806 S. Lime. Phone 255- -

22S8t

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FOR RENT Room for a girl
with meaK. $16 a wee.i. Southland section.
22S3t
MISCELLANEOUS

"Ths Four Sounds"
rock fc roll. Jazz, bossa nova, and
nice ballads. Csi!
after

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pm.

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WANTED One or two boys to
share apartment. Two bedrooms,
living room, bath, kitchen. Call
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after 6 p.m.
277-03-

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WANTED Graduate student to
share 2 - bedroom apartment.
Duncan Sanford. 118 Londonor contact at
derry.
Ag. Econ. Graduate room. 22S2t
3.

WANTED Student to clean out
horse stalls. Prefer someone who
has worked around horses. Male
with transportation to work
about 2 hours a day. Located
just a mile from UK. Work gets
rough during winter. Pay very
adequate. You can work a.m. or
p.m. If interested call

Johnson Says 'Duty First';
Ike Pleas For Barry
Associated Press

President Johnson says he
going out to talk to the
ami to "look them in the
eye," but pledges "I will be
president first and not let
campaigning interfere with
W hite House duties.
He made it clear at a news
conference Monday that while
is

eo-pl- e

engaged in "visiting all over this
country" he intends to be Just
about as nonpartisan as a fellow-cabe and still run for the nation's highest office.
Topping this off, the President
greeted a large aggregation of
representatives of fraternal organizations by telling them they
were visiting their White House
and that the office he holds was
the office of all the people."
"I do not know your politics,"
he said. '"I do not care about your
partisanship. I do know and I
about your leadership."
do care
Admitting a band of surprised
tourists at a White House gate,
Johnson led them and reporters
for four laps around the White
House back lawn. As he progressed, he answered newsmen's
questions.
He didn't think, he said, that
when he held news conferences
that he was making Ma democratic appearance." The Federal
Communications Commission reportedly can't agree on whether
televised versions of such conferences requires broadcasters to
offer equal time to any Johnson
opponent.
Johnson then told reporters.
"You will be seeing from day to
day developments in government
between now and November. I
am president, and if I tell you
about them you will say they
are political announcements and
if I don't tell you. you will say
we are guiding the press."
While Johnson was proclaimRep.
ing his
William E. Miller was protesting
campaign smears. Miller said he
is the target of "sleazy, unsubstantiated smears" and charged
that the Johnson administration
apparently had given tax and
other records to "favored columnists and the Democratic Na- -

22S2t

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Kernel Announces Deadlines
Beginning Monday the following deadlines will be observed for
copy appearing in the Kernel:
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING must be in the Kernel advertising
office (Rooms 113 or 111, Journalism Building) no later than 4 p.m.
the day before the notice is to appear.
MEETINGS AND ACTIVITIES announcements will be run in a
new column not more than four times prior to any meeting or activity. Such notices are to be left at the society desk in the newsroom (Room 114, Journalism Building) no later than 3 p.m. the day
before they are to appear first.
WEEKEND SOCIAL NOTICES will be run in the "Social Sidelights" column in the Thursday Kernel and must be left in the
newsroom no later than noon Wednesday.
Late announcements will be run only if time and space permits.
Late classifieds will not run until the next day.

For fresh hot delicious donuts call 252-955- 7
and pick up
your convenience anytimt between 1 p.m. and 2 a.m.
HAVING A PARTY
CALL US FOR SPECIAL ORDERS

NOW SHOWING

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full-sca-

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8.

ALTERATIONS of dresses skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen. 215 E. Maxwell. Phone

the campaign weer to discuss the
principal Issues facing the nation "including the questions of
Lyndon Johnson making a massive personal fortune during his
years in Congress in an industry
wholly controlled by the federal
government and the obvious cover-up
adn whitewash by the administration of the Bobby Baker
case."
Miller's running mate, Sen.
Barry Goldwater, says former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
may make several nationwide television appearances in supodrt
of his candidacy.

tional Committee."
But, said the Republican vice
presidential candidate, "combined they cannot come up with
any evidence which reflects on
my integrity and character."
He volunteered to testify If a
investigation U opened
into alleged irregularities in the
House of Representatives. Such
an investigation does not appear
likely at this point.
As for allegations against himself, Miller said he would devote
no further campaign time to answering them.
He said his responsibilities in

:S2-29I-

7

WORLD"

Phone 252-7629

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C

NV

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday, Sept.

wwv

22, 1901

-.- 'I

Society
..

edited by Frances

Wright-

-

Candidates' Wives Add
Fashion To Polities
By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON

NEW YORK (AP) Four feminine wardrobes, carefully
selected to try ami influence history, are being packed and
replaced as the presidential campaign tours get into full swing.

Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey
sewed her own back home in
Minnesota
this summer. Mrs.
Lyndon B. Johnson shopped for
hers in New York one day while
the President was kept waiting.
Mrs. Barry Goldwater made
her selections in Phoenix after
consulting: the fashion buyer of
the family department store
and letting her bodyguard okay
her hat choices.
"You're the one who will have
to look at them the most," Mrs.
Goldwater told her security man.
Her campaign mate, Mrs. William E. Miller, shopped the little
specialty stores, and a few of the
department stores in Washington, for comfortable,
garments.
A style expert, who assists
many Washington wives, says a
campaigner should dress "expensively enough to show appreciation of Quality, but not sa noticeably that she appears to be a
spendthrift; well enough to elicit
admiration, but not so splendidly
that she generates
jealousy
among the ladies."
Mrs. Johnson took the first of
her new clothing purchases on
her Midwest barnstorming tour
that began Thursday.
Although the President's wife
usually will not disclose the
sources of her purchases, or describe them, it is well known
that she prefers yellows, bright
reds, oranges and whites. Sheaths
costumes predominate
and
in her wardrobe.
"But she places no emphasis
on any one style or silhouette,"
a member of her staff has said.
"What is very important to
Mrs. Johnson is whether the garment suits her as an individual
and whether it will wear well.
She is a very practical woman."
With short, slim Muriel Humphrey, whose husband is the
President's running mate, creatis a costuming
ing costumes
hobby. In each finished garment
she stitches her own label, "By
Muriel Humphrey."
A black brocade dinner dress
but
is a favorite Muriel-madshades of blue which compliment
her blue eyes and graying hair
are her usual color choices. Mrs.
Humphrey prefers jacket cos
e,

tumes that adapt to changing
weather and varying social situations.
Of the four women, Peggy
Goldwater, a former designer and
fashion buyer, probably has the
greatest interest in fashion.
Fashion

buyer Dorothy

Gays

at Goldwater's Department Store
in Phoenix described the wife of
the Republican candidate for
president as "very sure of her
own taste and what flatters her.
She will not be led astray just
because something is new or in."
Miss

Gays said Mrs.
costumes always have a
natural waist, sleeves and soft,
easy skirts.
Gold-wate-

Those hats Mrs. Goldwater
bought after advice from bodyguard Arthur Van Court are
ranch mink and broadtail berets
and bretons. They are a concession to the eastern states. In
Arizona she avoids hats because
they mess her hair.
Hairdos also are the reason
that Stephanie Miller, wife of
the Republican candidate for
vice
president, does not wear
hats. She prefers her hair in a
short pageboy, and forgoes hats,
even in the East, to keep her
coiffure

that

way.

Greens, blues, beiges and black
are
and white combinations
colors which attract Mrs. Miller.
She likes classical, tailored lines,
skirts.
usually with slim or

Calendar Discussion
The Calend v Committee will
hold an open meeting for all
students and faculty members at
3 p.m. Thursday in Room 206 'of
the Student Center to discuss
the proposed calendar.
The committee urges attendance from those who support the
calendar as well as those who are
critical of it. The calendar will be
presented to the University Faculty for approval at its regular
meeting Oct. 12.

Sig Eps Get A Neiv House
The members of Sigma Phi Epsilon will build a new
chapter house within the next year and a half. The
three story structure, designed by an alumnus of

Meetings

DAMES CLUB
The University Dames will
have a meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in the Small Ballroom of the Student Center.

Announcements
ENGAGEMENTS
Melinda Manning,
a junior
Journalism
major from Park
Hills, to Slade Carr, a recent
graduate, also from Park Hills.
Patti Harkin, a senior English
major from Ft. Knox and a member of Delta Gamma to Mike
Daniel, a recent graduate of UK
from Lexington, and a member
of Sigma Chi.
Mildred Rice, sophomore education major from Louisville to
Terry Sherman, junior pre-lafrom Louisville and a
major
member of Alpha Tau Omega.
Betsy Reynolds, Paris, a graduate from Transylvania College
and a member of Chi Omega to
Ted Kuster, .senior animal science uiajor from Paris and a
member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Julie Goeltz, from Knoxville
and a graduate of UK to Dick
Marcie, from Cleveland, Ohio
and a graduate of Wittenburg
University.
PINNING S
Robbie Wilson, senior nursing
major from Louisville, to Hudson
Smith, Junior chemical engineering major from Louisville and a
member of Phi Gamma Delta.
Jane Elizabeth Trammel!, a
sophomore
math major from
Lexington to Donald Gene Allie,
senior chemistry major from Ashland and a member of Phi Gamma Delta.

Available to all UK students with I.D.'s
discount on all L.P.'s and singles.
a 20

Higgins Record

Department
Phone

252-688- 6

SPONSORED BY THE NEWMAN CLUB

SATURDAY, SEPT. 26th, 1964
8:00 TO 12:00
SMALL BALLROOM
STUDENT CENTER
JAZZ QUINTET
Call

25S-046-

REFRESHMENTS
For Information

7

there . . .
I'm Margaret

Hi

from the
Mart. to
don't have

Sportswear
You

be wealthy to

buy quality
clothing . . .
even those
families with nominal income know that in the long
run they get more for their
money when they buy name
brands and famous labels.
We're lucky to have here in
our city a fine group of
ladies fashion shops . . . and
by carrying only the finer
clothing, they can guarantee
you superior fabrics and
later styles . . . better fits
and finer tailoring. Now the
Sportswear Mart sells this
identical prestige casual
wear at discount prices. If
you girls have ever been accused of not knowing the
value of a dollar, you'll never be incriminated again,
for a purchase from the
Sportswear Mart gives you
the satisfaction of having
purchased the best, for the
least. Just remember
you always get wjiat you
but at the
pay for
Sportswear Mart, you get
more. The Sportswear Mart,
is open
and is located
on the Northern Deltline.
..

.

.

669 South Broadway

FOREIGN STUDENTS DANCE

w

11

Over $20,000 in records to select from.
Current top 100 singles. All major labels.

the UK chapter of Sig Eps, will house approximately 50 men. The second floor will be the recreation and chapter rooms.

9--

1"

"''

.

.

9

1...L..I.. J-

llll

IHJIHII

.

llf7)

WARNER'S
Slretchhra
ar

v.

m

,

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'W

a

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j

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:

'

FABULOUS STRETCH STRAPS ON COTTON

.

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Warner's started it all with the first Stretchbra; now puts
stretch-strap- s
on cotton, for you who like its feel and easy
care! Beauty and comfort for 2.50.
White A, B, C, (D), 3.J0.
381 South Lim
Campus

and Downtown

Hrt., 9:30 to 9 Monday

9:30 to 4,

Ti.-Sat-

.

* A Calendar

"Mind If I Watch While You Draw?"

For Tranquil Holidays
The Faculty Calender Committee

has disclosed for press publication the
three alternative calenders for Fall
Semester, 1965. There is certain to be
lively debate about which is best from
the students' point ol view.
At issue are three questions: How
early can the semester begin without
interfering with student jobs and university commitments for conferences
scheduled late in August:' Should
there be a four-daThanksgiving
holiday;' And should there be a two-dareading period before final week:'
Kach of the calenders answers
one ol the questions unsatisfactorily.
The first -- Calender A -- cuts into the
last full week of August and deprives
students of two or three days of work.
Calender
present plan -- does
not provide for a Thanksgiving Holi-daAnd Calender C has no study
period before final week.
This Final inadequacy is the most
dugrevious of all. Finals have only
bious merit as the method of assigning the bulk of one's grade in a
course, even with two days to prepare
y

y

H--

the

for that most grueling of weeks. With
no time to prepare before tests begin
(until Sunday when it is too late),
finals will be an even faultier system
of "measuring a student's progress."
Since a reading period is the sine
qua nan for student approval of the
calender, the Kernel suggests a slight
modification in Calender C. Classes
should end as scheduled in that proposal on Tuesday, December 14.
Then the first study day should be
inserted on Wednesday, with finals
beginning on Thursday. After three
days of tests, the second free day,
Sunday, will occur. Final week would
end on Wednesday, December 22.
Although this change gives one
less day at home before Christmas,
the two days left will probably be
more tranquil than the three days
made possible by the more hurried
plan proposed by the faculty.
With this slight change there will
be a bit more "peace on earth and
good will among men" after finals,
and much less 'discord on campus
and agony among students.'

if:

Four To Make Ready
but

Suppose you want a job,
your
skin is not white and you don't belong to the union. For almost three
weeks you show up for work, but the
white members of the union walk off
the job. They say it is because you
don't belong to the union. You wonder if it is because of your color.
In any case a big project cannot
be stalled indefinitely because of you.
The Mayor steps in, and the president
of the AFL-CKYou are offered a
test lor union membership.
You tail.
This is what happened to one
Negro and two Puerto Hican plumbers in New York. (Another Puerto
Kican expected to take the test later.)
An episode of a few men brought to
pathetic locus one of the biggest problems in the minorities; struggle lor
opportunity. When the chance came,
the men were not ready.
We are not denying that qualified
men from minorities have been relused
jobs because of their race. We are not
denving that white nun ol poorer
qualifications have been hired. We
think we understand a Negro Iriend
who complains, "Why do we always

hav