xt7rbn9x3g9c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rbn9x3g9c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610330  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 30, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 30, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7rbn9x3g9c section xt7rbn9x3g9c Ft. Lauderdale Restrictions Hurting Business

FT. LAUDERDALE, Fl.., March 29 W The police
chief of this resort city, faced with handling 25,000 vacationing colltge students, came under fire today from a
business leader.
George Gill, president of the Chamber of Commerce,
told city commissioners there was "no excuse for last
night's mass jurist" of students.
More than 100 youths were arrested as police moved
to dear out (he I t. Lauderdale liearh area, the scene of
student discidcrs.
"You rpn't elm: e these students out of town by Illegal
means," Gill told the commission which met In an
eireigenry session to consider ways to handle the mass
of Easter vacationists, who annually bring an estimated
one million dollars worth of business Into town.
"Not one out of 20 students arrested last night by
po'ice would be convicted In court If they were represented by legal counsel." Gill said.
After his remarks, commissioners sent for Chief J.
Lester Holt.
Meanwhile, scores of unkempt and scantily rlad slu- -

C3

.-

0o

0

o

dents were sentenced to Jail or fined following efforts of
pollre to prevent further rioting.
Two Judges operating at top speed gave 46 students
a choice of either three days In Jail or a $35 fine. More
were lined up awaiting court appearances.
Some 23,000 students, in Ft. Lauderdale for spring
vacations, rioted after police Imposed a night time ban
on beer and waterfront necking.
The students were clean shaven but appeared In
cou:t in wrinkled clothes and bathing trunks. Many
were barefoot.
Municipal Court Judge Raymond A. Doiimar said
Mime 590 youths had been arrested as a result of riots
of the past three days.
"We nre confident the city authority Is now In control," Doumar said.
A monumental traffic Jam occurred last night on
U.S. A1A. flanking the Atlantic Ocean, as police used
blockades to prevent rioting.
Police said the 100 arrests were the result of their
crackdown on students who didn't keep moving when
requested or "gave backtalk to us."
Students complained in rourt about police tactics.

-

University of Kentucky

J

.;a:;n

Governor's Representatives

The Cadet Police Corps and its sponsor corps have been designated
by Gov. Bert T. Combs as his honor guard and hostess unit during
Krntuckjr Derby activities. With Gov. Combs at the meeting where
the students' participation was announced were, from left, Fred
Shank, Charles Cardrn, Priscilla Lynn, Judy O'Dcll, and Wayne
Halcomb.

tt

resort owners expressed disapproval
And ocean-frosaying restriction of the students was stifling business.
City authorities thankful for a breather In moll
action contemplated asking Gov. Farris Bryant to help
turn back some of the eastern vacation student crowd
which has yet to arrive. Mayor Edward Johns said the
City Commission may ask Bryant to have Florida Stats
University and University of Florida officials urge their
students to stay away fiom Ft. Lauderdale when classai
break Thursday.
A five-blooutdoor dance, organized with city help,
h
of the 25.000 collegians hers
kept perhaps
occupied last night.
Even so, police collared 15!) for public drinking or
disorderly behavior. They will have their day in tw
simultaneous sessions of Municipal Court, already clogged
with cases from Sunday and Monday.
No crowd disorders occurred last night. Police kep6
everyone moving on the hotel and night
beach strip and screened everyone traveling there frot
downtown.
Continued on Page 5

Vol. LII, No. 87

LEXINGTON,

KY., THURSDAY,

MARCH 30, 19(il

Eight Pages

Health Service Director
Denies Negligence Rumor
By KERRY POWELL

that there

is "some concern about who "quickly called" the Lan
this matter" but expressed the guages Department.
"Dr. Spencer wasn't free at that
opinion that "it all resulted from
a great deal of confusion.
moment to go see the faculty memDr. Noback said. "He was
"Dr Whitaker
(Dr. Paul K. ber,"
a student who was
Whitaker, head of the Modern examining
having extreme abdominal pains.
Foreign Languages Department)
"Dizziness and perspiration, recalled the Infirmary at noon Monday," Dr. Noback said in an- - Inter- quire attention but there is ordiview yesterday, "to ask for help narily some leeway in time," ho
for one of his faculty members continued. "The suggestion wa3
who was reported to be 'dizzy and made that the patient come to the
Infirmary. Dr. Spencer suggested
pel spiring'."
Dr. Noback said it was the lunch that the Campus Police might -asMiller Hall, where Dr. Blaine W. hour and the only two doctors on sist in moving him over here.
"The police went to Miller Hall
Schick, assistant professor in the duty were treating student ailModern Foreign Languages De- ments. A nurse received the call, but expressed the opinion that Dr.
partment, had become the victim he added, and relayed the infor- Schick should not be moved," Dr.
mation to Dr. Earle E. Spencer,
of an unexpected illness.
Continued on Page 2
Dr. Frank G. Dickey, president
of the t'niversity, met yesterday
with an Arts and Sciences faculty
committee which was formed to
investigate the Health Service's
actions during Schick's illness. The
president said no decision is expected from the committee for
several days.
Think of modern art in images instead of words, Prof.
Dr. Noback said he was aware
Tdward V. Rannells, former chairman of the University Art
Department,' said in his discussion of modern art during the
Peace Corjts
SUB Topics program yesterday.
Questionnaires for the Peace
"As long as we thinn all images image of a thing?" the art profesCorps, a group of young men are bounded
sor asked. "Docs it have to be anyby words we won't
and women who would asree to
thing more than a feeling of ter- serve not less than three years see into them," he said. "Only with ror or love?"
intuition and imagination can you
overseas, are now available at
Persons who view modern art
the Placement Service in the get into or feel the art."
tVlil.k If fc en
tint
Prof. Kannclls pointed out most u
Administration Building.
M.e fee
i(Uo word
viewers of modern art today want
The Corps was recently organPi of. Rannells explained,
to know "what it means" and tdy then, thnu rt Ltio o n Itnono fhftV
ized by President John F.
ti'luui
to explain the answer in words.
o actually
say R ,s on,y nrtincial
He said that art is a moment of the artist cannot win.
embodied in some ex- experience
An impression of the modern
pressive form and the art of to- - arust u that he Is talking to hlm- day is something to explore.
M.if ,
a se,.rft language about
"Does modern art have to be an
Continued on Page 5

Rumors that the University
Health Service was negligent
in providing medical care to a
faculty memler who suddenly
became ill Monday were denied yesterday by Dr. Richardson K. Noback, director of the
Tin' University lias accepted tin; recommendations for Health Service.
He said the Health Service staff
student representation on Faculty executive committees ami
"responded appropriately" to a call
UK's administrative committees maile ly Student Congress.
for help from the third floor of

Faculty Accepts
Its SC Members

Kepresentation c.n the commitwas granted for the first time
In the University's history under
the new SC constitution.

ters

Garryl Sipple, president of Student ( ongrcto.. Kitid yesterday the
were approved
recommendations
by Dr. Frank G. Dickey, t'niversity
and the I K Faculty.
president,
Each student appointed to a
committee wi'l have a voting privilege, Sipple said.
The Faculty committees jind the
SC representatives
Rules: Buike B. Terrell, Law,
and Alice Elaine Tcrd, Arts and
Sciences.
Stuck nt Activities and Scxi'tl:
D' Uul.is Fr;inr, AMs and Sciences,
ai d loii L.muaii, iducation.
Honors Program: Jerome Strieker, C'omnierte, and Marilyn Meie-Uit.l- t,
Ails and Silences.
Committee on Commit tecs: Roberta Jo Hern, Arts and Sciences,
and Km man E. H.uncd, Engineer-in,- '.

and Sciences, and Dolores Ann
Swartz, Arts and Sciences.
Committee for the Study of
Physical Education Courses: Leon
Withers, Agriculture and Home
Economics, and Henry M. Bennett.
Engineering.
The administrative committees
and the SC representatives are:
Freshman Week: Becky Groger,
Arls and Sciences; Fred ICoss
Shank.
urp : and alternate.
Marv 1)rpw i:vanH Ar(, amj Sri.

rni'ts.

Schedule of Classes: Jackie Cain,
Fducation; Jerry Sanders, Arts
and Sci"iiees; and alternate, Ronald Porter, Engineering.
Homas Day: Louise Rose, Arts
and Sciences; Brenda Booke, Arts
unci Silence.-.and alternate, Elizabeth Cox, Arts and Sciences.
Scholarships: Janet Lloyd, Arts
and Sciences; CJuida Gadberry,
Arts and Sciences; and alternate,
Doupl.is Wood, Agriculture.
Commencement Exercises:
on Page 8
Library: Mary Jo Taisons. Arts

World

ISVw

Hriefs

SEATO Plan Adequate

View Art As Imagery,
Urges Art Professor

6

Majors
Offered Summer Trip
Non-Geolog-

y

bankruptcy facing the United Nations
grew today with a report that Fiance had refused
to pay anything toward the U.N. Congo costs.
Some Western delegates obviously Jolted by the
Six
major students
report predicted the United Nations would have
to come up with some kind of new formula for will have the opportunity to study
for Its Congo operation. The Soviet geology from nature rather than
raising money
bloc announced months ago that it would not pay
text books Dr. Arthur C. McFaranything toward Congo costs.
lan, head of the Department of
Geology, said yesterday.
Depressed Areas Hill Passes
For the past 13 years the GeoWASHINGTON, March 29 ( AP) The House tology Department has made possiday passed President Kennedy's
bill to help industry get started In chronically de- ble a field camp for geology majors but this Is the first year It
pressed areas.
It was a substantial victory for the administration, will be possible for
whose forces, beat on two votes a Republican at- majors.
The students, who will recieve
U.N. Ilankriiptcy Threat Crows
tempt to scale the program, down to 273 million
sis seuioter hour, chosen for the
UNITED NATIONS, N Y., March 23 (AP) The doll J 13.

BANGKOK, Thailand, March 29 (AP) Despite
Us compromise aspects, Secretary of State Dean
Rusk said today the moderate resolution of the
SEATO foreign ministers on Laos Is strong enough
to provide "all that is needed."
The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization compromised on warning the Communists against trying
to take over Laos ty force. The SEATO leaders decided to give Mostcw more time to think about negotiations toward ending the Laotian civil war.
The threat of rpilitary retaliation by SEATO an
idea originally pressed by the United States was
veiled behind a warning that the alliance would
take "appropriate action" if Moscow refuses to negotiate on Laos. The United States and other delegations considered this strong enough for their
purposes.

threat

of

trip will leave Lexington June 19
for Gunnison, Col.
The department is making an
effort to acquaint students witli
contact Ingeology by first-han- d
stead of textbook definition Dr.
McFarlan said.
The
majors are required to have completed the elementary geology course to apply
for the field camp.
Those students Interested In tha
program should contact Dr. Aut-hC. McFarlan in tire Geology
Department in Miller Hall.

* 2 -- THE KtNTUtKY ktRN'EL, Thursday, March 30, 1961

Cops TnvHile Campus

Ohio Student Rioters Quieted

normal. Patrolmen were Instructed to pick up any
students who did not have proper Identification and
could not show a reason for bring out. Patrolmen
also stopped cars going through the area.
All of the demonstrations, the students say, are
In protest against university regulations.
The student council yesterday said all students
rould air their grievances to that governing body on
April 13. The major gripes would then be forwarded
to the school administration.
Many of the demonstrators boycotted their classes and sat about the campus in little groups yesterday. The move, however, lost some of Its steam when
a number of students decided to return to class
rather than face a $3 fine Imposed by the school on
students who miss a class just before a vacation.
Dr. Elden Smith, dean of students, said there
does not appear to be any single outstanding complaint, but rather a collection of Individual

EOWLINO OREEN, Ohio. March 29 (AP) Invasion by a small army of Ohio highway patrolmen
la.st nlKht and beginning of a week's spring vacation
nt noon today have brought quiet to Bowling Green
State University's troubled campus.
More than 50 patrolmen moved across the campus la.st night, forcing students to return to their
dormitories. This came after University President
W.
McDonald proclaimed a state of
Ralph
emergency.
Dr. McDonald took the action after many students had boycotted classes yesterday and about 400
had gathered in front of the Student Union Building.
On both Sunday and Monday evenings such
groups grew to number nearly 2,000 and roamed the
and downtown areas.
Within an hour after McDonald's declaration acon the campus was described as far below
tivity

oy radio today
91.3 MEGACYCLES

VYBKY-F-

A.M.
9:00

(uninter"Kaleidoscope"
rupted music)
P. M.
"Music Humanities"
"Sunset Moods" (music)
"World Wide News"
"Sunset Moods"
"Commonwealth In Review"
"Sports Digest"
"Voice from the South"
"Ring Around Experience"
"How- - Goes the Blue"
"I'nder Cover"
'"Spotlight on Science"

4:00
3:00
.i: 30
5:45
6:25
ti:30
7:00

7:15
7:30
7:45
8:00
""8:05
11:00

News

"Musical Masterworks"
Final"

"News

Two Arlists Will Teach
In High School Program

Negligence Rumor Denied
By Hcallh Service Head
Continued from Page 1
Noback said. "At that time, about
20 minutes after the illness was
first reported, as I understand it,
Dr. Spencer went to Miller Hall to
see Dr. Schick."
The Health Service staff member examined the professor, according to Dr. Noback, and told
him that he needed to go to a
hospital.
"The doctor offered to rail an
ambulance," Dr. Noback said. "The
patient refused the advice. Without any bitterness or anger, the
advice was given again, and again
it was refused."
Dr. Noback said he did not feel
obligated to "Justify anything." He
said the patient was examined and
the proper medical advice was
given.
Faculty members of the Modern

'

205,

S

20C. 4

Lack of shoes didn't bother In- dian Maid when she won the Co- lumbiana Handicap at Hlaleah.
mare ran seven
Dick Lane, who is under a Ford Foundation Grant to The Florida-bre- d
furlongs barefooted, an unusual
write music for Lexington High Schools, has written a 14
racing feat.
ute musical score for a WBKY
This commercial concerns a new
The Henry Clay High School
OPrN DAILY S:M P.M.
drug, NFI80, which has been discovered to treat a pig disease. The orchestra has been chosen to play
title of the commercial is "And Mr. Lane's works In a concert
AvonHO
Kuclio)
Cnovy Chaaa
this little piggie had none" and It which will be held at the conferNOW SHOWING!
will be used in
Club films and
"MARRIAGE-GO-ROUND- "
ence.
television.
Susan Hayward
Jamet Maon
Dick Lane has written piano
Mr. Lane writes musical scores
"FEVER IN THE BLOOD"
Efrom Zimbaliit Jack Kelly
for' Lexington High School Or- pieces for singers and currently
chestras,
choruses, and bands. has four songs recorded by MerThere are a total of 12 composers cury Recordings. The lyrics to
under the Ford Grant in the these songs were written by Mark
Van Doren, English professor at
United States.
The Music Educator's National Columbia University.
Conference, which will be held at
Ashevllle, N.C. this year, will fea- I.
ture the musical compositions of
the composers.

-

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Jc

7

it

"PRIVATE LIVES OF ADAM
AND EVE"
Manila Van Doron
Mickey Rooney
In Color (7 30 and
0b)
ALSO
LIGHTFOOT"
"CAPTAIN
Rock Hudton tartar
Ryih
(At 9 17)

PAWKY

JOE MILLS AND BOB MILLER

at

This Week

KEENELAND HALL

Each Saturday Night
8:00 'til 12:00
SPONSORED BY MEN AND WOMEN'S
INTER-DORCOUNCILS

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From

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(Prov. S. India including Malabar and
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ill

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With . . .

fJSiftllLtA

I

Admimon

ilLS.

p.m.

LKD Steering Comml 1 1 e e,
Room 206, 6:45 p.m.
Student Union fine arts movie,
''Rasha-Mon- ",
Japanese, Ballroom, 6:30 p.m.

Local Composer Writes
Commercial For WBKY

:24

EST!

Political Economy Club, Room

'tts.

1

Tho World't Miahtiott Man
"HERCULES UNCHAINED''
ttovo P.oooa Sylvia Kotcina
In Color (7 30 . II. 04)
ALSO
THE ANGRY RED PLANET"
Nora Hayden
Cwreld Mohr
In Color (at 9 33)

Interfaith Council Seminar,
Room 128, 4 p.m.
LKD solicitation committee,
Room 204, 4 p.m.
Pi Tau Sigma Initiation, Room

'""

Bfl DEAIJ

Marta

Women's Administrative Coun-

ArU Gallery, movies, pror"ms ot sPeclal "
gram was organized to stimulate
;ip to horse farms,
interest in art in Kentucky high
P"vlsed social activities,
schools and to find out how much and
e Lexington Junior League
art instruction from professional w111
award tult,ion scholarships to
artists students who range in age
two stents for their freshman
from 15 to 18 years can absorb.
"3 a"
Special features of the program
High school principals have been
will Include an exhibition of paintasked to nominate juniors and
ings on display in the University seniors with
intelligence, character,
and "drive."

PHONE

t

ALSO
IN THE WAKE OF A STRANGER"
Ton
Wright Shirley Elton
(At 9 29)

cil, Room 128, 6:30 p.m.

12-1-

ISENAU

Ad million bit
7.24
Hitchcock't Shocker
10 Si)
PSYCO'' (At 7:30
Ton
Perklni Janet Leigh

Sun.

SUIl Activities

Two professional artists, Walter Quirt and Adja Yunkers,
will teach classes in drawing and painting for 50 Kentucky
high school juniors and seniors during the second annual High
School Studio Week, June
at the University.
Sponsored by the Lexington Jun- ior League, the experimental pro- - Flne

Foreign Languages Department
would not comment on the quality
of medical service given to Dr.
Schick by the Health Service.
A secretary in the department
said yesterday that Dr. Schick wa
resting in his home after a thorough physical checkup. The nature
nnd cause of his Illness are still
undetermined, she said.

VIA

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* TJIE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

Styles Help Females
To Become Shipshape

By The AsHorUtrd Press
Once upon a time a female
never went Railing before summer
unless her ship came in. Today
we know that this Is Just a fairy
tale.
What with Jet travel, pay-latplans, and winter vacation schedules, nearly every working girl can
tet her siRhts on a cruise, weather
or not, good fortune or modest. '
Once upon a time a female
aboard ship was considered bad
luck. Undoubtedly, this was because the ladies then were at odds
about what to wear.
Even today any landlubber putting on sea legs for the first time
can be unlucky If she does not
wear the proper attire. Women
loathe to forsake their usual garments in favor of nautical wear
alternately burn and freeze, lose
their hats, and get their billowing
fkirts tangled in the tackle.
fashion-makers
Fortunately
today's
are charting a safe and
course for cruising.
practical
They've been on boats, too, so
that they know that a shipshape
wardrobe must be:
Weather-Controlle-

d

A rich suntan Is part of the
rewards of sailing, but dangerous
burns happen faster with the salty
breezes to help. Consequently, a
cover-u- p
Jacket for sunsuit and
fwim suit is a must for the duffle
baR.

Licking hot weather changes to
chill, ill winds quicker than it
takes the sun to duck behind a
cloud. Therefore, a smart sailor
needs something wooly warm to
clip on or wrap around.
Water-Repella-

All hands

on deck get soaked

regularly. But many fabrics used
are chemically
for crulserwear
treated to Ignore the salty dew
like ducks backs.
Workable
Whether the
helps
hoist the sails or casts a line for
some helpless fish on board with
her, her clothes have to be practical.
On a boat any size she must
stretch, step, blide, leap and Jump
around a slipjeiy deck with the
wind whipping at her all the time.
This fact action modestly calls for
shorts, cullottes or clam dipper
plus toppers and Jackets with
plenty of underarm leeway for
movement.
A wet deck also requires true
canvas boat sneakers with non-sli- p
rubber soles.
Of course a tourist matey can
be glamorous as well as practical.
Vibrant colors that rival the sun
and sea do the trick. Denims, sail
cloth, terrycloth, cotton and wool
Jerseys, some miraculously stretch-abl- e,
are fabrics that lean on color
contrast for design.
A few florals sneak into the
bathing suit picture but generally
the pattern of fashion are bold
blocks, triangles and wide stripes
makes a lady sailor a pretty sight
In anyone's periscope.
With these go hats, caps, or
scarves, gay
that
a girls hard-earne- d
preserve
coiffure.
Generally, a good
leaves her make-u- p
at home, and
substitutes Instead her suntan oil.
Whatever she brings It must be
as lightweight and as little as

Social Activities

v

Meetings

POLITICAL ECONOMICS CU B
The Political Economics Club
will meet at 4 p.m. today In Room
206 in the Student Union.
CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Dr. Samuel C. Hite, head of the
Department of Chemical Engineering, will be guest speaker at
the meeting of the American
Chemical Society.
The society will meet at 4 p.m.
today in Room 214 in Kastle Hall.
Dr. Hite will speak on "Coal Research and Kentucky Coal." The
meeting is open to the public.
PHARMACY MEETING
David D. Stiles, director of market development for Abbott Laboratories, will speak to an assembly of pharmacy students at 10
JOAN WEINER
a.m. Friday in Room 303 of the
Mr. Richard Weiner, Newport, Pharmacy Building. Mr. Stiles will
announces the engagement of his present an illustrated lecture on
daughter, Joan, to Dave Braun, "The Challenges of Pharmacy In
senior Journalism major from Cov- the Sixties."
ington.
Miss Weiner Is a stenographer
Elect iions
and model in Cincinnati.
TAU KAPPA EPSILON
A September wedding Is planned.
Tomas Wilson, a senior engineering major from Louisville, was
elected president of Tau Kappa
Epsllon fraternity.
Others elected were William
The YWCA banquet will be held Block, Paducah, vice president;
at 5:30 p.m. today In the Maxwell Joseph Peeno, Erlanger, secretary;
Street Presbyterian Church.
Jason Adams, Crestwood, treasurDr. James Gladden, professor of er; Harry Altman, Pikeville, pledge
will be the guest speaker.
sociology,
trainer; Wallace Hance, Bagdad,
His subject will be "The Impor- chaplin.
tance of the YWCA and YMCA
Gordon Bloom, Lexington, hison the University Campus." InMark Anderson, Middles-bor- o,
stallation of officers will be held torian;
sergeant at arms; and John
after the speech.
rush
Officers to be Installed are Inna Norfleet, Lexington,
Strache, president; Molly Ryland,
vice president: Betty Choate. secand Kathleen Cannon,
retary;
treasurer.
.

YWCA Banquet

Mnh

30,

19GlT

Petticoat Rule
Proves Best
NEW DELHI
of a
south Indian village have proved
are better administrators than
they
men.
The experiment was tried in the
seven square-mil- e
Mattampalll village of Andhra State, with a population of 1.710 men and 1.890
women.
Is
The village administration
conducted by an elected body of
elders called Panchayats. Women
have never been admitted into it.
Many villagers opposed the entry
of women into politics last year.
"We will not submit to a petticoat government," some shouted.
But the majority view prevailed.
Women candidates were selected
and to the eight-ma- n
body, six
women were returned unopposed.
Men who contested the two other
seats lost by large margins.
Within a year, the "petticoat
rule" produced results. The village got its first school, its first
cooperative society. A spacious
children's park and a community
listening radio set enlivened ita
hitherto dull existence.

Impress Your Date-T- ake
Her To . . ,

LA FLAME

RESTAURANT
941 Winchester Rd.
"FINE FOODS, LOUNGI
AND DANCING

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939 S. LIME

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ASHLAND OIL PRODUCTS
BRAKE WORK

GO WHERE THE BOYS (AND GIRLS) ARE!
But first, visit Kennedy's for the latest in official Lauderdale
a must for every southbound scholar.
equipment

TUNE-U-

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LUBRICATION
ROAD SERVICE

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TIRES & BATTERIES

...

SWEATSHIRTS

To show off your Alma Mater if they
happen to be making another movie.

BEACH TOWELS

Can double as blankets if ycu have
to sleep on the beach.

BATHING CAPS
To keep your heir dry or if used upside down will contain a full quart with room for
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* Hazing What's Next?

Last spring a UK fraternity
pledge, extremely sick from nicotine
poisoning caused by being forced to
rat cigarettes during the fraternity's
preinitiation activities, was rushed to
a hospital emergency room to have
his stomach pumped. This spring
three K Club initiates, one with a
large gash in a knee and two sick
and severely beaten, had to be taken
to a hospital for emergency treatment. We are wondering what will
happen next spring. Will a hazed initiate again be taken to a hospital
or will the dean of men be called
out of bed early in the morning to
drive to the morgue?
We are wondering, but are others? Apparently not, for already it
seems that the K Club hazing has
been, forgotten by all but a skeptical
few. After a flurry of excitement and
University life has
crawled back into its normal rut to
wait for spring vacation to begin. The
administrative offices involved in the
hazing affair have breathed a sigh
of relief and are smugly contemplating how they successfully kept the
worst facts of the hazing from becoming known publicly.
The Athletic Department is busily
engaged in the activities of the baseball season. The state's snorts writers
are occupied with the same thing.
In fact, anybody who has regularly
read the state's newspapers during
the last three weeks knows that the
sports writers acted as if the hazing
never happened. As for the K Club
itself, not a word has come from it.

We talked with the club's president
last week and he told us he would
like to say something, but he is "not
at liberty" to do so. No explanation
of what is causing this silent situation was given.
The dean of men and the dean of
women are in far-oDenver meeting
with their fellow deans. Student
Congress met Monday night, but
hazing was not mentioned during its
hour-lonmeeting. The Interfrater-nitCouncil is still haggling about the
perennial problem of rush. It would
be interesting to know what one of
its committees, formed last spring
to .investigate hazing at the University, has learned and what action
the 1FC has taken as a result of the
committee's findings. The only comment on hazing to come from the Office of the President has been a few
vague statements forced out by reporters.
Throughout the University administrators who have never had to
swallow a live goldfish, professors
who have never crawled nude through
g
a gantlet of
athletes, and secretaries and
sorority women who "just can't believe" that fraternity "men" actually
Cartoon by Skip Taylor
make pledges eat a spoonful of lard
of raw
followed up by a large piece
7 got it for bravery under fire at fade Ileach."
onion and a big bite off a tobacco
plug are still thinking that "hazing"
means merely that "boys will be
By BEM PRICE
military goals anil strategy. This
boys."
WASHINGTON ( AP) President
Kennedy has ordered.
Only a few of us are wondering
Talor said this study should be
Kennedy this week officially diswhat will happen next spring.
carded "massive retaliation" as the paralle lled by immediate modernization and expansion of the nation's
nation's
war deterrent.
limited war forces, including an inIn its place Kennedy prescribed
A
crease in ail lilt.
in his special defense budget message
Our J. Edgar who art in Washington,
Kt nned) 's message indicated comto Congress the application of what
Hallowed be thy bureau.
military men call the "balanced force plete agreement.
When thy retirement come,
Ta)lr said the nation needed "an
concept."
May thy will be done in Russia
What this means is: Don't put all iuvulneiable long range missile force
As it is in America.
with a second strike capability;" that
your eggs in one baske t.
Give us this clay our daily clearance papers,
It means the United States should is, an ability to absorb a surprise
And forgive us our pecking in the Nation,
lie equally prepared for any war-b- ig, attack and hit back with devastating
As we forgive those who read the Kernel.
effect.
little, or
And lead us not to CORE demonstrations,
While Kennedy has indicated disKennedy agieeel.
Rut deliver us from the ACLU.
satisfaction in the past with the size
Ta)lor said the nation needed a
For thine is the country and the directorship and the glory
and shape of the nation's armed long range missile system with three
Until at least 1964.
mobility, concealforces, the remedy he ordered is not characteristics
AMEN
with him.
ment, and invulnerability. The only
original
It may be only coincidence, but system which meets these specifications, the general said, is the Navy's
nearly ever) thing the President
Polaris missile.
recommended was outlined by Gen. submarine-lxirnMaxwell D. Taylor, former Army
Kennedy said, "Our hopes for
Freedom of the road is as Amercommerce and pleasure driving.
close to an absolute eleter-re,ican as apple pie. Rut to millions of Along . every strip of roadway are chief of staff, in the January issue of anything
must rest on weapons which
service stations a total of more than foreign affairs quarterly.
people in other parts of the world it
Taylor fought a long and losing cone from hidden, moving, or invulISO.OOO in the country for your conis a privilege granted to only a few,
nerable bases. . . ."
venience and freedom of choice. battle against the Eisenhower docand at that, their freedom of moveHe then recommended an increase
trine of "more bang for a buck."
There are 70 million registered vehiThis brought him into conflict in the Polaris procurement program
ment halts abruptly at guarded bordcles in the country,
the
to give the nation 29 missile suber outposts.
vast network of highways at the rate often with the Air Force chief promarines, instead of the 19 presently
of 700 billion miles a year.
ponents of the theory that an overTrail blazing pioneers fought for
mile after mile of America's highFreedom of the road in America whelming nuclear striking force is the programmed.
best guarantee against all wars, large
Perhaps the key sentences in the
ways. Even early automobile owners is the right to pile in the car any
and small.
Kennedy message were these:
bad to do battle with citizens and lawtime you want and travel with ease
While this fight was going on, the
"Any potential aggressor contemmakers who were hostile to the and convenience. This freedom canAir Force steadily grew more powerplating an attack on any part of the
"horseless carriage."
not be taken lightly. It is a pleasure,
free worlil with any kind of weapful and the Army and Navy dwindled
Today, there are nearly ZXA milyes. Rut it is also a herita