xt7v9s1km115 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v9s1km115/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641015  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 15, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 15, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7v9s1km115 section xt7v9s1km115 .Reliable Sources Indicate
.Khrushchev Has Resigned
Brezhnev May Become
Soviet Party Secretary
And Kosygin Premier

EIE3 IE BTIE IL
of
University

Vol. LVI, No. 25

LEXINGTON,

Kentucky
OCT.

Twelve Pages

15, 1964

KY., THURSDAY,

MOSCOW

(AP)-Usu-

ally

reliable

sources

said Thursday

that Premier Khrushchev has resigned.

"'

r

Leonid I. Brezhnev has taken over as first secretary of the
Communist party, the key job in this country, and Alexei Kosygin
has become premier, the sources said.
There was no official confirmation.
Khrushchev's name was omitted Thursday night from an
official list of Soviet leaders.

2.

--

The list of leaders, published by the official news agency
Tass, was headed by Brezhnev, Kosygin and Anastas I. Mikoyan,
the Soviet president.
No confirmation of changes was immediately available. The
government paper Izvestia had delayed its publication from Thursday evening until Friday morning.
Finnish television, which is
was quoting rumors
that Brezhnev was dead and that Khrushchev had been removed
from office. No source was given for this report, and usually
sources in the Finnish capital were unable to confirm or

ft

'

.

1-

-

I

,

'

':

V

f

'

state-owne-

'

-a

'

.

1964 Homecoming Steering Committee

Members of the Homecoming Committee are:
seated, from the left, Barbara Batcheldor, Special
Events; Jane Gabbard, Pep Rally; Mike Jones, Displays; Cathy Adams, Displays; Elaine Baumgartner,
Alumni Relations; Sue Dorton, Secretary; Sallie

List, General Chairman. Standing, Larry Kelley,
Public Relations; John Zeh, Pep Rally; Bert Cox,
Advisor; Fred Meyers, Special Events; Vickie Sutherland, Queen Selection and Clay Stevens, Queen
Selection.

Dances, Displays, Queen Included
In Homecoming Weekend Plans
Homecoming week plans have
been announced by the homecoming steering committee.
Two Saturday night dances,
one for the alumni at the Phoenix
Hotel and another for students
at the Student Center, will c limax
the week's activities.
The Torques will play at the
students' dance.
Homecoming displays will be
judged Saturday morning and
winners will be announced at
halftime of theKentucky-Vandcr-bifootball game that afternoon.
Display themes will center
around famous sayings or (mutations.
Friday night has been reserved
for the decoration of houses and
dorms with the displays.
Voting for queen will take
place Tuesday and Wednesdayof
Homecoming Week.
A pep rally is scheduled for
Thursday while a jam session is
lt

Young Democrats
A cavalcade of Young Democrats will leave the Student Center parking lot at 8 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24, to participate in u
whistle-sto-

p

tour.

The group will meet the L11J
Handwagon in liardstown,
Taylor County Young Democrats will sponsor a dance from
8 p.m. until 1 a.m. and tickets will
be available at $1.50 per person
for anyone wishing to attend.
Those interested in traveling
with the group, should contact
lk-ts-

Dudley at

arrangements.

planned for Friday afternoon. The
five finalists in the queen contest
will be presented at the pep rally.
Any single senior woman w ith
a minimum 2.0 standing and at
least a 2.0 in the spring semester
is eligible for nomination for
queen. No past queen can be

appearance (35 points), and aptness of theme (35 points).
One trophy will be awarded in
each three divisions, fraternity,
sorority, and independent.

Each campus resident unit is
eligible to nominate one candidate but no nominee can represent more than one group.
The display contest is open to
any "rcognued campus group.
The decorations will be judged
on originality (30 points), general

display.

deny it.
The unexpected exit of Premier Khrushchev from the dominant position in the Soviet Union which he has held for almost a
decade was decided upon at meetings of the party's Central Committee beginning Monday, the informants said. When the meeting
ended and the decision came was unclear.
They said Mikhail Suslov, a top aide of Joseph Stalin and
the Kremlin's chief spokesman in its dispute with Communist
China, delivered the key report to the Central Committee.
Mr. Brezhndv, 57, has been regarded for some time as Mr.
Khrushchev's most likely successor. Mr. Khrushchev himself appeared to be elevating the former steelworker into that position.
For the last two days, Khrushchev, 70, has not been seen or
mentioned publicly. He met a French minister at his vacation home
on the Black Sea on Tuesday but the minister, Caston Palewski,
was hustled out of town with unexpected haste afterward.
Kosygin, 60, has been a first deputy premier. He ran the
government during Khrushchev's frequent long trips abroad.

nominated.

Sponsoring groups will be dis-

qualified for the following

rea-

sons:

1. Over $100 is spent on the
2. Professional

help is used in

the construction or planning of
the decorations.
3. A sketch is not turned in by
Oct. 19.
4. The display is not ready by
the time for the judging.

MIKOYAN. HREZHNEV AND KHRUSHCHEV

Dr. Stephen F. Dachi To Join
Hospital Ship 'S.S. Hope9
11

Dr. Stephen F. Dachi, chairman and associate professor oft he
Department of Oral Diagnosis
and Oral Medicine at the University Medical ('enter, will join the
staff of the hospital ship, S. S.
Hope, for two mouths, in June.
"I enjoy travel and it's nice to
be able to go where your talents
are needed and have fun at the
same time," said Dr. Dachi. He
will board the ship at the 1U public of Ciiiucu, West Afiica where
he will serve without pay until
the ship leaves in
Hungarian bybiith.Dr. Dachi
came to the U. S. in PJ52 from
Canada. He received his Dental
degree fiom the University of
Oregon and Joined the UK lucidly

in
after receiv ing his M.S.I),
degree from the University of

Indiana.
Dr. Dachi applied to the Hope
Foundation in Washington for
this opportunity and feels fortunate to woik with the people of

West Afiica. Many more applications are made than openings
available for the Hope staff.
He said he expects to domore
woik with his patients than teaching the people. Most of the
treatment is done on the ship with
inland expeditions planned to
reach thi remote communities.
Six dentists serve the three nullum prisons in Cuinca.
The S. S. Hope is a foiiner U.
S. Navy vessel of 15,000 tons that

11

to serve as a
was refitted in
floating hospital. It's maiden voy- -

age was made to Indonesia and
South Viet Nam.
Project Hope costs $5 million
a v oyage and is supported by private contributions with some assistance from the federal government. It is designed to take U. S.
medical and dental skills anil
techniques to people in other

countiies.

Dr. Dachi will not be thefiist
UK staffer to serve on the Hope.
Miss Dot is Fooks, foil uer

f
1)H. KTI Tlll.N

7
t.

UAl'llI

technician in the Dcpaitincnt of

the L'K Medical
a v ear ago
lor its cruise to F.ciiador. She was
scheduled to leuiain uho.ud a
vcur.
Hadiology

at

('enter, joined the ship

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

15, 1964

'The Young Lovers Is Sensitive, Sometimes Eloquent
9

By DAVID V. HAWPE
Kernel Executive Editor
Despite the nature of its advertising, "The Young Lovers" is a

sensitive, artistic examination of
campus morality 1964.
The movie, which opened at
the Ashland Theater last night,

A

-

y

r

.

-

I

V

carries a message for all college
students and it carries it well.
While the movie doesn't preach
a sermon, it does demonstrate the

futility and the frustration inherent in premarital relations.
The story is simple; boy meets
girl; girl meets boy; they fall in
love; they consummate their love;
she become pregnant. The proof,
however, of this pudding is in the
telling, of the story.
With a tender, poignant love
story juxtaposed upon the superficialities of some collegians, director Samuel Goldwyn Junior
has served us up a study in contrast. We are struck by the contrast between blossoming love-anthe furface values of those
people surrounding it.
Goldwyn's camera captures
this contrast through use of black
against white, and through use of
figures against spacious, empty
backgrounds. Thereby he portrays the closeness of the "young
lovers" to each other and their
alienation from their environment. The young couple is depicted standing alone in an uninter-

It is scenes such as this which
construct the lovers' story for us.
But at almost every point where
the camera leaves Eddie and Pam
we are treated to a parody on
campus life. There is the stereotyped party, the old car, and the
hangout where everybody drinks
beer and dances the latest dances.
Yet another contribution to
the movie's success is the music
composed for it. The main theme
is based on a folk melody, and it
is used well in conjunction with
the harpsichord in the theme music by Sol Kaplan. Kaplan later
transforms it into a tango, a rock

and roll parody, a bullfight melody, and a beautiful waltz.

College students should profit
by seeing "The Young Lovers."
Certainly they will find many
things in the movie with which to
identify. And certainly there is a
message there havingnot a little
to do with the need for a mature
attitude toward sex if students
will only approach the film with
a sense of perspective concerning
it.

ested world.
Several scenes are shot in a
parking lot atop a campus building. Here the empty field of concrete and steel serves as a frame
for sad, anxious moments passing
between the lovers,
same purpose, as do several shots
of the campus itself at times when
it is almost empty.
One of the most beautiful
scenes this reviewer hasencount-cre- d
in the cinema is the lovers'
first real meeting. It is shot in the
amphitheater. The boy Eddie
Slocum is late for his appointment with Pam, the girl. Pam
starts to leave, and just as she

I

T

does Eddie appears in the bottom
of the amphitheater, lie calls out,
"Stay, Damsel, stay! Oh, what a
rogue and peasant slave am IT'
He stands on the circular stage,
like a figure in a fantasy. In his
hand he holds a bouquet of balloons. As the scene progresses we
come to realize the balloons symbolize youthful idealism and
childhood fantasy. As the scene
draws to a close, Pam has the
balloons in her hands, and she
asks Eddie what todowith them.
He replies, "Let them go." And
we watch as the balloons rise to
the sky.

Startf 7:30

90c

1ST AREA SHOWING!

Romance and Racing
are in Their BloodI
PAMELA

JAMES

f LIKE

1

Admission

-

DARREN

TIFFIN

NOW SHOWING

Tie

Peter Fonda and Sharon Huffuenjr appear here In
a scene from the Samuel Goldwyn Jr. production,
"The Young- Lovers." The couple tells the story of
-

two people In love a story as old as time. But the
tale Is told within the context of a college campus.
And the time Is now.

tun J
NOW SHOWING

r

71

At 1:30,

S

NOW SHOWING

and 8:30 p.m.

THE ACADEMY

this is the

McCLURE SQMMERS

AWARD WINNER

"BEST JL PICTURE"

ME

Sk.

THURS..WED.

JOANIE

DOUG

Young Lovers

Av--

urn

Jones

m

2ND SWINGER

EASTMANC0UM
1

WNTII

MTBTS

imn mciu
XV

"

PLUS
4.

'

'READY FOR THE PEOPLE'

i

FljV technicolor
WALT WSNEV

S

COIDEN H0HSESH0E

Fonda Hugue'ny Adams WaLleY

TYPEWRITER
SERVICE
ADDING MACHINES
OLIVITTI ADDERS AND
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS

ADDO--

University Shop
FRIDAY

"SUDDENLY LAST
SUMMER"
Starring . . .
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
MONTGOMERY CLIFT
KATHERINE KEPBURN

Ph.

252-020-

9

rrrrnrr ttttt

IJUAlliliJrliJiJ

I IT)

n CTi

Admission

STARTS TOMORROW

"A BEAUTY OF A nU.l- -

75c

n

Yl

t!KJ

TONIGHT

SJHttflWPUr

BY ALL MEANS GO!"

c

Starts 7:30

SH6 rVANTTO A

ASIXNCTROM

r

CARBONS, RIBBONS,
OFFICE SUPPLIES

387 Ross St.

m

LAST TIMES TONIGHT
"THE SERVANT"

KENTUCKY
-- 4J

REVUI

QUtET WECOINa

IV.

His Shotgun
Joseph

7

r

Elaine

i

Student
Center
Theater

rocas
COMPAMSOM

"ATUREI

ACUM

Admiuiom 50c
Show Tims: 6:30 L 9:00

3

"GRAND OLE OPRY"

USIsUKCOlOI-DYUISCOP-

ff,i

lm

InituMi Pctuiw

RcImm

At 7:20, 9:30

PLAY BANKO TONIGHT

JACKPOT $450.00

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

On-- T

he-Camp-

15, 19(VI- -3

us

Announces

NEW STORE HOURS

Open 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

LL. Lib r

;:LU Li tl- -,

Each day except Thursdays

Kitten Queen Is Crowned

Saturday night Susan Bays was named as the 1964- 65 Kitten Queen at the
Kentucky vs. Vanderbilt
freshman footbaU jame.
Shown from the left are Bob Speed escorting

Social

Round-U- p

Hi!

This weekend may prove the downfall of many industrious
students who had planned to spend the entire time studying for
examinations next week.

mid-ter-

Friday afternoon the Delta
Z,eta s are sponsoring a jam session on the Student Center patio.
The music provided by the
Tem-tashun- s,

will last from 2 to 5 p.m.
For those who want to take
time off Friday evening, the Student Center Theatre will be
showing "Suddenly Last Sum-

mer."

The major event on Saturday
is the football game against
L.S.U. at 8:00 p.m. at McLean
Stadium. Additional game interest is provided by the chance for
the Wildcats to prove that we can
still give L.S.U. the beating we
gave Ole Miss and Auburn.
A note might be added here
that the dress for women at a UK
football game is still suit and
heels, for men, a coat and tie.
Some groups seem to feel that
more casual dress is in order,
but the consensus is still with
the ''dressed" look.
;.
After the game, the fraternity
Pin-Mat-

es

Betty Quisenberry, senior elementary education major from
Winchester to Patrick Rekter, a
Junior pharmacy major from
Louisville and a member of Phi
Sigma Kappa.'
Hasan tverett, a sophomore In
Arts and Sciences from Lexington, and a member of Alpha
Gamma Delta, to Tom Tilt, a
June graduate from St. Louis,
and a member of Lambda Chi
Alpha.
Cecil McCIary, a Junior commerce major from Nficholasvllle,
and a member of Alpha Gamma
Delta, to We Albright, a senior
military Bclence major from Lexington, and a member of Delta
Tau Delta.

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

men will probably be returning
to their respective houses for a
little partying. The time will be
too short to engage combos, but
lots of juke boxes and record
players are going to get a real

workout.

Blazer Hall is having an open
house Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m.
Visitors are invited and welcome.
The ATO's have invited Dr.
Lyle Dawson of the Chemistry
department to be their guest
speaker this Monday night. This
lecture is part of the fraternity's
cultural improvement program
and will begin at 7:00 p.m. Students are encouraged to attend.
The society staff would like to
explain that organizations who
do not see their scheduled activities appearing on today's society
page, neglected to supply the
necessary information.
In the future there will be a
social column every Thursday
and all campus groups are encouraged to let the society editor
know what is planned each weekend.
News must be on the Society
desk by 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday
to fit in with the Kernel's new
printing schedule. This information will increase student coverage of campus events and add to
the attendance at social functions.

NAME
WATCHES

Concert"
By Sclma Epstein
and 'Mela Joy

Embry's

Sportswear
Mart . . . You
know
thing?

On-- T

he-Camp-

us

381 SOUTH LIMESTONE

some-

Across from Holmes Hall

You

can't save at
'

the

Sports
wear Mart!

"

Honestly, even though all of

our prestige sportswear is
drastically discounted, you
won't save a dime. Oh, it's
true that every name brand
and famous label sells at a
price far less than you'll see
for the same garment anywhere else, but it's also true
that the magnificent selection of women's sportswear
at the Sportswear Mart is so
darn enticing, that you'll always buy more clothes than
planned. That's right . . .
you'll end up not saving a
thing, but you'll have the
marvelous satisfaction of
knowing that you have purchased the best for the least
in a ladies store that offers
the largest selections of up
to the minute fashions In
casual wear
all at discount prices. Remember!!
The Sportswear Mart caters
s
who can afto the
ford the finest, but ore wise
enough to take advantage
of lower prices! The Sportswear Mart Is open
daily
and is located at 1133 New

X

"

''

"

"

i

'

rM-

X

--:,-- '

V'W

...

co-ed-

i

t'

i

l

'

9-- 9

Circle Rd.

-

MINOS

DIAMONDS
CRYSTAL

MARLS

ONLY
CAMERAS
SILVERWARE
LIGHT tRS

TROPHIES
RINGS
WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY Of ALL KINDS

PEWUk MUGS
GIF TW ARE
ENGRAVING
SHAVERS
CLOCKS
RADIOS
TRANSISTORS

LUGGAGt
APPLIANCES
TYPEWRITERS
PENSETS
HI-F- I

THE CAMPUS BENCH WARMER!

TAPE RECORDERS
UNIVERSITY OP KENTUCKY CHARMS,
FRATERNITY
SORORITY JEWELRY

Sunday, October IB

Piano unci Harp

I'm

WHOLESALE PRICES

Clays Mill Rood

10:45 a.m.
Service and
Church School

.

STUDENTS and FACULTY
Your UK ID Card Entitles You
To Buy At

Hlobee Milt Road

-

v

.

Margaret
from the

m
I

.

on Thursdays

CAYC1SII

CHINA

at

Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Suzanne Huffines, 1st attendant, Tom Sweet with
Pat Stacy, 2nd attendant, escorted by
Larry Kelley. Pictured behind is Jim HoFz, vice pres- ident of the
Club, who crowned the queen.

Miss Bays, and

G&H.

RAUCE-- 3

INC.

WHOUSALI DISTklBUTORS
Sine 1887

109-11- 3

Church Street (Near Post Office)
OPEN .9-- 5 Mondoy-SoturJo- y

.

.

.

Cozy college Bench Warmer looks so sporty, and
keeps you toasty warm for school, football
Wool melton
. every casual occasion!
games
cloth in navy or loden green, sizes S, M, L. 12.00
.

OnTk-Cjmp-

Str

Hn.t 9

.m.S:I0

p.m.

381 S. limettona
cet Thur.( 9 a.m. -- 9 p.m.f

* I've Got A Health Plan That
Leaves Everything To You'

'Congratulations

...

Foreign

calendar is filled can benefit from
the special perspective of the foreign student. Panel discussions and
other programs can benefit from foreign students' special backgrounds.
But to return to the primary
point, it seems inappropriate to
dwell on the "foreign" aspect. It
seems that a more important consideration is the development of
the student in the University.
If the foreign student is labeled
as such, he is thus removed from
the main stream of University life.
He can then never participate fully.
His will be the experience of a foreigner attending school in America.
It will not be, as would be more
beneficial, the experience of a student from a foreign country who is
attending here.
It is odd that the transposition
of two words "foreign" and "student" can be so significant. But
it is. And we subscribe to putting
"student" first.

Students from 11 nations across
the world are currently takingwork
at the University of Kentucky.
There is a tendency on the part
of some of the campus's more conservative elements to regard this
influx of foreign students as an invasion which somehow denies or
limits privileges for the home folks.
These more conservative students
display the same tendencies toward
provincialism that characterizes the
Central Kentucky aristocracy.
Too many students are prone,
we think, to label the foreign student. In their minds, he is not a
student, as such, but rather a foreigner who attends school here. The
important difference may be in
which word we use first, "foreign,"

"student."

or

This is not to imply that foreign students should be regarded
completely in the same way that
others are. Certainly the foreign
student has a background different
from that of most students here-o- ne
which can be useful for others
to explore.
Discussion groups and seminarswith which the University

Kernels

great deal of talent is lost in
for the want of a little
- Sydney Smith.
courage.
A

this world

A Retreat For Federalism
Electioneering in both the United States and Britain could easily
divert attention from the most significant development in Europe
since French President de Gaulle
vetoed British membership in the
Common Market.
Spaak has sounded
conditional retreat for the forces
a
of European federation. The Belgian foreign minister, former
General
of NATO and one of
the leading architects of the European Economic Community; has
offered a "trade" to General de
Gaulle. Mr. Spaak would accept
Gaullist proix)sals for a merely
Europe of fully sovereign nations in return for a place
for Britain in that Europe.
Paul-Hen-

ri

Secretary--

con-feder-

However hedged round with if s
and buts, however preblematical
because of a possible decline of
British interest in the Common
Marke t, this is in effect the meaning
of moves reported from Paris where
Mr. Spaak has been meeting with
other members of the parlhnents
Western Euroof the
pean Union.
Mr. Spaak's leported change
of direction reflects unselfish statesmanshipa wish to see the European unity i floit oine out Ik mi
mkV r
u Inch ha e
political buidi-nits piogiess I'm the la
impeded
fir ami a hull. le publu states
seven-natio-

n

c

;

t

!

1

'

he has diluted his earlier purposes.
It would be however a great
mistake to imagine that there is no
very substantial difference between
the Gaullist ideas for Europe and
those which were launched with the
Common Market. They are differences not only in pace but in
method.
The Common Market approach
to a unified Europe involved the setting up of European institutions,
several of which already exist. Under tlie.se institutions narrow con- flic is of interest become matters of
general concern and their solution
is undertaken in the name of the
whole family.
Under the Gaullist version of
Europe, conflicts would tend to
keep their national aspects there
would be less emphasis on a common interest for solving them. A
dispute between two nations will
tend to remain just that.
Some advantages very real
ones must be risked if a Europe of
"parties," as de Gaulle calls it, is
to emerge in place of the federal
hope. Some of these advantages are
already embodied in the Common
Market, and piesumably its institutions would not be dismantled. But
they would necessarily be seven ly
delimited tor the forseeable future
topuicK economic functions.
'The Christian Science MnniUr
The Christian Scienci' AomY'

OJWBIB
TIKI

of the Kernel:
The conservative Mr. Smock
has, in typical reactionary fashion,
assailed the character of one of
our nation's most ably qualified
politicians, Hubert H. Humphrey
of Minnesota. (One is surprised he
didn't, a la Coldwatcr, ridicule the
next ice president's middle name.)
Let us now look at the qualifications of the 'Republican' vice presidential nominee, William Miller.
Miller was selected by Mr.
Coldwatcr (and the fanatic, howling mob at the (low Palace) for
three main reasons: (1) he was a
significant factor in the piratical
capture of the Republican Party,
(2) he is Catholic, and (3) he "drives
Mr. Johnson nuts." Now in the
name of all common sense, are
these acceptable reasons for nominating a man to the second highest
office in the land ("a heartbeat
away," as Mr. Smock so originally
put it)';' It is widely known that
the nondescript New York
had virtually accepted
defeat in Nov ember until
political
the man whom I.vndou Johnson
calls a "ranting av ing demagogue
selected him as his uinning-mate- .
lis lev old in the louse is coinp.u-ablto that of Sen. Coldue.tei-ahsolu- tc
To the Editor

.

Kentucky Kernel

The South'? Outitanding College Daily
Umvfrsity of Kentucky

Con-gtcssnu- ii

i

rle;

Wu-liA-

Chant,

ncgativ ism!
Shall we elect t lie pool,

Editor-ln-Chl-

David IUwpe, Executive Editor
Cary Hawiswohth, Managing Editor
KtNNtTii Chun, Assistant to the Executive F.dtor
Fhancis Whicirr, Women's tage Editor
Ilr NKV Itou nthal, Sports Editor
Sid YVehb, Cartoonist
Jou.u T. Dauc.hadav, Circulation Manager
l'AtvW'ALKLH, Advertising Manner

-

la

Kf:n

:

r'Wlf

Tr

mis-

guided junior senator and the
No, Bilchcis,
puppet.-- '
and Mr. Smock, we
Klanstnen,
don't even have an echo; we have
an Amei ican Tragedy.
One wonders, incidcntall),
what Mr. Smock, a. graduate
dvut,. .thiwkv 'l ,M'- Goldwater's
he child
uca ion:
views oil'
g

iitere.1 at the pott office lit l.eiiutftou, keiituiVy u tetond clall mutter UiuW the Act of Mrch 3, 1870.
irnulaf
futlitlel lour time! week tiuruif tiie Kbioi tcbool10 year except during lolidyi huj auiut.
cent
17
yen;
Subiiivtou
toyy iiuui kit.

.
Sandy tuon.-- Assistant

-

rhi.vn

v

e

nrq

has no right lo an education. In
most cases, the children will get
along very well without it." It
should be considered, of course,
that these are the feelings of a man
who dropped out of college in his
first year after making below .average
.;
grades.:'
'

t

.A C

S

boldt

Sen it 'f

Tekel
Editor of the Kernel:
According to your issue of Oct.
13,
you have generously offered to "translate" the "Greek"
word "tekel" for the "enlightenment" of your readers; but in doing so I should like to add a
foot note for your own enlightenment.
The word "tekel" (Daniel V:
25) is not Creek; it is, rather a
Chaldean word, specifically an
Aramaic passive participle. Your
"translation" of the single word
"tekel" ascribes to it what the
whole phrase written on
wall meant when
as a unit by Daniel. The
entire phrase, "Menc, mene, tekel,
upharsin" (literally, "Numbered,
numbered, weighed, and divisions") can be interpreted to mean
what you have claimed for the
single vvoid "tekel."
Your point, however, Was well
taken. You had the right church,
but the wrong pew
JAME.S.C, BRYANT
Teaching Eelloie
DcfHiitmetit of English
To The
196-1-

,

Bal-sha.a-

intcr-putc- d

!

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

Army ROTC Cadets
Receive Star Awards:

Jenkins Arrest Inspires
Fiery Campaign Speeches
9

Twenty-fiv- e
ROTC Cadets ha
Achievement Award for academic
With the arrest of Walter W.
accomplishment in the 1963- 64 school year
Maysville; James B. Wadlineton. Jenkins, a top assistant to PresiThe award is sponsored by Tampa, Fla.; Paul R. Wakeland,
dent Johnson for 20 years on
Scabbard and Blade, the nationMaflisonville.
morals charges, more fire has
al military honorary.
been added to the speeches along
Qualifications for the honor
the campaign trail.
are based on oversall academic
Sen. Barry Coldwater told a
and military science standings
The final oral examination of crowd Wednesday night if they
during the freshman, sophomore
Mr. James M. Kline, candidate for elect him president, he'll take
and junior years, with a star the Doctor of Philosophy degree, off "bureaucratic shackles" and
will be held at 1 p.m.,
representing each year.
get the Bobby Baker case
Three-sta- r
awards were given Oct. 23, in Room CP 179, Friday, "cleared
Chemistryup in a hurry."
to David E. Bolin, Clinton; M ich-a-Physics
"We want strength at home
Building. The title
P. Cox, Lexington; C. W. of Mr. Kline's dissertation will be and we want it
through freeIludnall, Portsmouth, Ohio; and "Thermoelectril Properties of Bisdom."
Arthur H. Knight, Frankfort.
muth Trisulfide." Members of the
The Republican presidential
Two-sta- r
award winners are student body and faculty are innominee made stops in Kansas
William R. Blevins, Cumberland; vited to attend.
City, Omaha, and Denver.
James C. Calmes, Irvine; Lloyd
D. Caudill, Pekin, Ind.; JohnW.
McAtee, Cracey; Edgar A. Smith,
Lexington; William P. Sturm,
Murray; Raymond R. Davis,
Carson B. Harreld,
Owensboro.
One-sta- r
award winners include James S. Harty and Wick-liff- e
And it's no idle boast. A Little Pigs
S. Rogers, both of Lexingbarbecue is in a class alt its own.
ton; Charles E. Anderson, May-fiel'Cause fresh, tender meat is barbeFred G. Christensen, Ken
L. Fields and Larry D. Harrison,
cued, swabbed and browned for long
hours over genuine hickory wood emall of Louisville; Robert N. Cox,
bers. We "squeal" to please!
Paris; Avo Kiviranna, North Merrick, N.Y.; Miguel A. Martinez,
Ft. Knox; Albert D.Owens, Lancaster; Edward L. Schumacher,

Rep. William Miller predicted
in a speech in Chicago that the
American electorate will oust
President Johnson next month to
end a "suspicion of its own

Ph.D. Oral Exam

leadership."
.
He said the voters "are
discouraged and uneasy about
Lyndon

many

Miller gave his attack in a
speech to a rally at Indiana
State College in Terre Haute.
took
Johnson
Meanwhile,
time out from his campaigning
to help Robert F. Kennedy in
his efforts to win a Senate seat
from New York.
Kennedy was with Johnson
when the President made a swing
into upstate New York for
speeches in Rochester and

istakes. . .

ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE
ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND

Mule Pigs
OF AMERICA

Don't sell yourself sliort ul the keyboard. T)pin: error
don't show on Corra:alle. Katun's paper willi the special
surface makes perfect paper possible every lime, I lie
first time. An ordinary pencil eraser makes a
t
a
cineli willi never a telltale trace of evidence.
Conasalile is available in lihi.
I
,
i ti iii , ii
ii
iii
o,tr
meijinis uiiii
Onion Skin. In handy
ream
packets ana

696 NEW CIRCLE ROAD
299-991-

over

Johnson

things" and he felt there's no
doubt they are going to elect
Sen. Barry Coldwater, the Republican presidential candidate.

el

Phone

15, 1964- -5

5

mlt-ou-

SHIRTS THAT YOU WILL BE
PROUD TO WEAR
In by 9 a.m.

5

I

ruu-sne-

i......

Out by 5 p.m.

EATON

A

i

....

Urn

rrrl.(PU

PAPER CORPORATION

MAY

INC
255-431-

I

aper

E

PITTSFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS

EATON'S CORRASABLE

EMERGENCY SERVICE

CROLLEY CLEANERS,

r..i

.i Heiksiiire npewnler

DRY CLEANING BY PROFESSIONALS
AT REASONABLE PRICES

116 W. Maxwell

V"MJ

Coriasalde.

for $1.12

ALTERATIONS

I

100-slie-

BE

PAPER

OBTAINED AT

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

3

BASEMENT OF STUDENT CENTER

blue ribbon form in riding
clothes from Meyers

SYMMETRY
FROM SI25

our
riding clothes hove the hallmark
of excellence in every class; hunter, jumper or
saddle horse . . . from our correct
collection we show here;

13

world-famo-

ready-to-we-

AT THESf

FIN

STORES

COVINGTON,

Jfwfltfl

also available, jodhpur boots, 12.9S and stretch
denim jodhpurs, 12.93 as well as every possible

DAMYKLI.
Kjlfcryw

i

boors, 19.95
hunt cops, 14.91
cotton breeches, 12.9S

KINTUCXV

IftOTM

ar

Ikoppt

riding occessory
UXIMOTON,
Victor
C.

tMtf

LOUSYIU.I,

MURRAY,

Unity's JwUf

prk

kr frt

right

ros

rh

ttr

or

Gr-Ji-

k

SKrt

while thoppiaf

Myrt
I!l!llir--I

f

* 6--

THE

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct. 15, 1964

Split From Sliawnectown

Debate Match
Begins Today

CooperstoiVIl Drafts
New Constitution
By TOM WILLIAMS

Kernel Staff Writer
Cooperstown's town council
lias completed a tentative draft
of a new constitution.
The council will discuss and
possibly vote on the constitution at its regular meeting next
Monday. If accepted, it will be
submitted to the Office of the
Dean of Men for final approval.
The Council had voted its old
constitution null and void and
Fred Dellamura exMayor
pressed hope for a more compact document. (The tentative
draft is a
typewritten on standard size paper.)
Under the proposed constitution the council's name would
be changed to Cooperstown
Family Housing Council. This
is a definite break from Shawnee-towShawneetown
was included under the former name of
Family Housing Coverning
Council but has supplied no
representatives recently. Dellamura said that the Cooperstown
council is willing to help interresidents
ested Shawneetown
form its own independent council.
The tentative constitution
states that elections will still be
held in April. Dellamura said he
had hoped the new constitution
would change election time to
September. This would allow the
influx of new residents at the
beginning of fall semesters to
vote for their representatives.
lf

Correction

Tuesday's story on the Sigma
Chi Derby failed to mention
that Jeanie Hancock, Delta
Gamma pledge, was named as
second runner-uto the Derby
Queen.
p

Teams representing 20 universities and colleges will compete in
the Kentucky Thoroughbred Debate Tournament which begins at

A change was not possible,
he explained, because the council's itemized budget must be
submitted to the administration
in June. September elections
would result in an incumbent
council submitting a budget to
be used by the next council.
April elections allow the outgoing council to help the new
one draft a budget.
Dellamura said he is not satisfied with the present article,
since "new residents in the fall
would still be represented by
individuals for whom they did
not vote. The council, at present,
has no alternative," he added.
The proposed document also
makes a distinction between the
officers (Mayor,
Secretary, and Treasurer) and
wing representatives. Candidates seeking the position of
officers will run for those offices specifically and be elected
by all residents. Wing representatives will be elected by
the residents of their respective