xt7vx05x996s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vx05x996s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19621107  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November  7, 1962 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  7, 1962 1962 2015 true xt7vx05x996s section xt7vx05x996s (8

Editor Discusser
Date Tickets;

o

Today's Wrallirr:
Cool With Lfclu Rain;
1 ix
r.'i

Jim mwm jl

1

11

University of Kentucky

Vol. LIV, No. 28

LEXINGTON, KV., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7,

TV Classes Have
Varied Audiences

VM2

Vjvi

Fii;ht

7

A survey of Kntdish Literature and a course in Oriental
Humanities are beint olfered ly the Department of Knulish
as television courses tin's semester. The courses, tanuhl hy Dr.
George1 K. Urady and Dr. Aitlmr L. Cooke, are broadcast by

the Lexington station WLLX, channel IS.

in the cours- University
cs view them from four television manner,
sets in McVey Hall. Those taking breakfast

them as credit courses at home
come to the campus only for their

examinations.
One woman working: on ,ier
master's degree wrote to Dr. Cooke
"I am very grateful to be
able to view the necessary literature courses in such a delightful

Crash Kills
58 UK Grad
A 195S UK journalism

grad-

uate was killed Monday when
his plane crashed in Viet Nam.

right at home, with

my

coffee."
"Not all the audience watch the This display in the Kins Library illustrates the the Department
courses for credit," Dr. Cooke activity of the Communist Party in the United of Investigation.
said. Students at local high schools States. Material for the exhibit was contributed by
are watching the two television
courses to supplement their litera- jure ciasses
Also letters have been received
from people who watch the classes
only for enjoyment.
Some of the letters rome from
as far away as Stanford and as
close as one letter from a University associate professor who wrote,
Material on communist ac- - combating communist propa- "It has been a good many years
since I took a survey of the hu- - tiv ity in the United States ami ganda and espionage is on disrefreshing to
unities nrrltm it nfis F.nrlann romp successfuI cff()rts of thc peder. , at the Man,aret L King
c
al Bureau of Investigation in Library.
to life again."
Located on the second floor
landing, next to the circulation
the display will be
shown through November.
Four famous espionage cases.
successfully solved by FBI agents,
are illustrated in detail by photowill
a student tour in the graphs and printed narratives.

?

ii

of Justice, and the

I

I

ederal Bureau

Communist Materials Are
Subject Of Library Display

....

Art Dept. Plans

Lt. William B. Tully of Lexington was the navigator of the plane
which was assigned to Hurlburt
Field, an auxiliary of Elgin Air
Force Base, Fla.
He was to have been transferred out of South Viet Nam the last
The art department
sponsor
nf nctnhor hut 4h (rincfpr W9
summer of 1963 that will visit 10 European countries.
canceled because of the Cuban
crisis. His discharge was due this
The group, limited to 20 students, will study art in

Tour Of Europe

month.

1 fffdflam

Italv. Austria. Germany.

Leichtenstein, Switzerland,

.
Besides majoring in journalism.
i..;
Tullv was active in the ROTC dio
Dr Richard Freeman, head of
at UK. The death brought
gram
. ...
.
tUo art HemrtniPnt
rnnHnrt
10 it me numoer oi Americans
st
killed in U.S. support of the
L.
tour of Europe," he said. "It is a
Viet Nam government.
, .nr
a
Tully was to have been married f.H in thp nrt of FnrnnP "
in February to Betty Collins, Mason County, a student at Morehead
Up to six semester hours may be
earned on the tour, nut me courses
State College.
are not mandatory for
ihn who make ihe trin.
The group will sail from New
Convocation
York June 8 on the Cunard liner
Arts and Sciences classes will "Mauretania". This will
give the
be dismissed this morning at 19:-0- 0 students an
opportunity to orient
for a convocation at Memorfor the coming tours,
ial Hall. All Arts and Sciences
will give them a chance to be- students attending classes in come acquainted with each other.
other University colleges have
The trip will cost $1450. The
been granted permission by Dean
includes UK fees, trans-At- M. M. White to attend.
lantic transportation, hotel accom- -

iin,.l

These cases include the Hollow

France, Nickel Espionage case, the Colonel

San

Ma- - Maksim case, showing Soviet Rus- -

i?l.,.l

l

pro-We-

trK.

. ..
OOiUIOnS,
.

.
IHO

.

day, tour
f
to
all museums and galleries, taxes
and Ps ln turope. and 10 special
events, such as operas, theaters,

.:,

meaiS

""group will
COach

sia abusing diplomatic privileges
in the United States, the Ethel and
juijus Rosenberg case, and the
Otto Verber case.
Charts, drawn up by the FBI.
show the organization of the U.S
CommunLst Part'' the cnief meth"

travel by private
1
piupagauua, majur ou
in Europe. Local u
...ni
ho v.iCfrioi tives of communist bloc remesent
jc.
political, and social background tatives in the U.S. and communist
for each stop on the tour.
front activity.

motor

nr,ia

A SDecial feature of
be a 27 course dinner

the' trio will
at the Haus.

Dr. Lawrence

S.

dl- -

Thompson,

frau in Munich. Ample time for rector of the University libraries,
individual sight seeing and explor- - said the King Library has an un- ,.
ation will also be provided for.
t.0ection of corarau.
Ten students have already sign- - uUy.
nism ,n aM I uroPean languages,
ed up for the trip. Details may be
obtained from Dr. Freeman or inculding source materials on orig- from the Art Department ottice. ins of
acquired
Marxism-Leninis-

m

from the Lenin Library and the
Library for Foreign Literature in Moscow. Thompson said
the material was gathered under
the library exchange program.
Thompson was an FBI special a- gent for four years in Latin
ica;t New York, and Washington,
All-Uni-

Amer-departme- nt,

Zyzniewski
Addresses
V7oi lnlloor
VJViivl-- v
11

Dr. Stanley J. Zyzniewski,
University assistant professor
of history, spoke yesterday at
the United States Naval War
College in Newport, H.I
The speech, which was heard by
both American and foreign naval
officers, was entitled "The Soviet
Alliance System."
Dr Zyzniewski. a specialist in
modern European and Russian
tory. studied the origins of Rus-an- d
sian policy in Poland during the
spring .semester of last year as a
culLural cxchange student. He
ried on nis .studies at Moscow
State University.
car-pri-

ce

Kastle Hall Refrigerator Bloivs Its Stack
spark from a faulty
motor was apparentthe cause ol an explosion
ly
whk'h oeeurred in Kastle Hall
at midnight Monda'.
A

i

William
ol

IT-

.

M

r

J

i

x,-

Warner, prolivs-so- r
ihemistry, said t!ie
contained organic
1'.

sohi nts whieh ui'nc oil wipors.

"

iileutl) when the motor
kicked on, a spark Irom the
electrical system ignited the
chemicals," Warner commeiit-ecl- .
U- -

'V
--

.,'

-

''

II
'I'M

f

'

h
n-fi'-

K

'
1

I

Kubeit Itoyer, la'.xratury nian.t-ge- r
for Kastle Il.tU said, "We employ a nulit patrol, wliitli is ;i
team of two men who
k every
office and laboratory in the build-ii.oiue an hour from l!:30 p.m. to
(i:'M) a.m. II it hid not bern for
them, we wot! I have lt I the

!(

:;

T

1-

-

-

,

.

;"mm

hiiiKlinj;."

The refrigerator apparently readied a high temperature s sliouu
(7;y (lie melted insulation uu tlie lowrr liht hand side of the dour.

o
sV

i

The force of the explosion bl.'W
out all of the windews in tliy rituai,
and blackei'.ed all ot the walls.
1'He I.t'Aini;t'jn Fie DvV:ii'tiiui:t
extai-

-

'd

the

I'iulrur

Waslifr'- otlue wa- the taFet oi vtater irom the fire
wUiii came through the ceiling into hit otfite. lie laid all
ot Ids booWv magaiinev and papers out to di yesterday nioinin.
-

IiQm--

bl-ii-

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y

r,

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* KENTUCKY Ki:RM:i.,mV.lia

lin

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mI.iv,

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Nov. 7.

Ela Kappa Nu Dr. Gladden Resumes .
I UK
Initiates 16
Teaching Dalies A terminated
Dr. James W. Chidden.
that
New Members
administrative
piofrsvr of MiciVi:y,

i

Uni- -

r

Vcrsity

Sixtrm till students h.nr :vcn
n.i- -

i

Nu,
initi.itcd into Eta K
ti'mal (urtiical cii';inctri:i'.; lum-or-

j

resumed te.u'iiim following
a wars It.nc of ahsetKt'.
li is

ai

Dr-in-

Cil

y.

c
i

idde-.-

the year's
held thp

Or.

Uave.
oT

pve.-ien-

t

Asejr.bly, a
Tho now initiates nrr: James (f the Blue Rid-:1 nl'erence
center of the
Wrmlrll Ilumincl, n;ul jummer
Brnylcs.
Men's Christian
Paul Association.Young
RnnnM r.all, William-buiu- ;
Wilson. London; Anthony Dnttilo.
l.oiii' ville; Alvis Adkins. JIuddy;
Oeorue VanCJeavc, Oreensbu:-!;Joe Harnn, Lexington.
Anthony Batsel. Central City;
Elvis swinjs as never before!
Gordon Bloom. Columbus; Reese
l.
Terry. Mt. Sterling James
U Mi
Ashland; Ronald Ratcliff,
El-VRetina; Don Dobsnn, Summer
iS
and Paul Price. Williamson.
New members are chosen two
times a year. To be eligible a student must be in the upper
of his Junior class or In
d
FLV1S RIXSS THE
of his .senior
the upper
class.
I.
) J. . BELL WITH
J)
(

"

'

-

'

,

J

'

.

-

J- -

J

flv 8

,7
r

1,1

14

V7

....

his Job
CUiddcn
as president hecause he found
tasks intrifrr- the
ri1 with ,,U PTsrnlin? these pro- grams.
"Artr.il.y tho assembly needed a
public relations man to raie one
million dollars in three years." Dr.
Glacklen said. "The pronrams that
I was conducting were rut calcu- lated to raise that amount of mon- ev in that amount of time."

NOW!

;

STARTS

7:30

Adm. 7$c

Vand-erpoo-

is one clock on campus that has the correct time and WHKY
lias it. They have solved the problem by getting a Dr. Pepper
clock which they find far superior to any other timekeeping
mechanism on this campus.

Ihere

one-four-

one-thir-

Placement Service Sets Interviews
The placement hureau lias announced the following inter- Machines electrical mechanical
views will he conducted hy recruiters from organizations engineering; chemistry, mathematics, physics.
listed below. Students should sign up immediately in the place
Nov. 20, Union Carbide Chemicals, Marketing Division chemisment office for interviews in w hich they are interested.
Nov. 19,

American-Standar-

Re-

d

search chemical, electrical, me- sanitary, mechanical engineering;
chanical engineering, chemistry, chemistry, physics at all degree
M.Ii.A.

candidates
with
levels;
background in accounting, finance,
marketing.
Nov. 20. B. F. Goodrich Company chemistry, mathematics, physics, at B.S., M.S. levels; chemical,
civil, electrical, mechanical engineering at B.S., M.S. levels.
Nov. 20, Humphrey Robinson and
Company accounting.
civil, chemical
Nov. 20. International Business

metallurgy, physics, and industrial
design.
Nov. 19, U.S. Forest Service
civil engineering at U.S. level, January graduates.
Nov.
Firestone chemistry
at B.S., Ph.D. levels; chemical,
electrical, mechanical engineering
19-2- 0.

at

B.S. level.
Mead
Nov.
19-2- 0,

presiev Galahad

th

It

SONG

COLOR br DELUXE
Released thru UNITED ARTISTS

HITS!

ALSO

aetw
wtmA vn-i-

N

try, chemical engineering.

Mi cp For Scion co

FIRST AREA SHOWING!

The
COLUMBUS, Ohio W
500,000th mouse has acquired cancer through a needle in the giant
testing program of anticancer
chemicals being conducted at Bat-tell- e
Memorial Institute.
Thus far in the tests. 15.2G0
chemicals have been screened,
more than fne million injections
n
have been given and the
mice, costing $250,000 have
been used.

STARTS

7:30
fl

7itq-f7M7!TO7T-

Adm. 90c

half-millio-

CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE

RECORDS

LOST

One Siejna Chi pin. rubies and
KOI! SALE
Sunbonm Alpine. I. ike new,
C.ouo miles. Windshield w ipei . white pearls. Reward for return. Call 7H34. L7t
Hilt- w;dl tires, radio, heritor. White with
wri-red interior. I!e;isonably
priced. Call LOST -- Pink jjold on t watch, in Me- -i
12Gtf tnorial Coliseum
or
Monday. Oct. 29.
between 3 p.m. Was placed on metal
chair in front row, right side. Call
hardFOR SALE 1957 Dode.
fil2K after 3 p.m. Reward.
2N4t
Mon.
top. Good condition.-- Call
5 p. in. 7 p.m. $(;i)0.
3!OtU
MISCELLANEOUS
through Eri..

ond 11:12

7:30

LOST

ALTERATIONS
Coats, dresses and
FOll SALE Frigid tire deluxe refrigerskirts
Custom made
ator with freezer. Also Frigidaire elec- Phone altered. New location 215 hats.
East
tric range, 40 inch deluxe model, por- Maxwell. Mildred Cohen.
2i)Stf
celain finish. F?oth excellent condition.
alter 5 p.m. lN4t TYPING of nil kinds. Theses, term
I!e;jsonable. Call
fiN4t
papers. An thing. Call
radio
FOll SALE -- 1955 Pontiac.
5 good tires, straight stick,
;ind heater.
shape. $395. After 5:30. Imperial
Trailer Park, 800 North Uroadway, Lot
KHAncna
8.
2N4t
J
Bert Crawford.

W7v

A-- l

LEADER PAPER ROUTES FOR SALE
Good route available downtown,
week profit. Contact Ron MacLeod after
(i p.m.
ON'lt
or UK Ext. 2370.
OFFF.NHAUSER

b.

Manifold.

I

NOW! 2 Big Hits!

3

cutis., progressive linkage, all rutinus
iind clamps, assembled ready to install,
fits
lord or Merc. See at 2(il

ECEE'i

SIDHEYPQITiER

1949-5-

Lexington

Ave.,

p.m.

any

between

clay

72t

WiiW3JI-:V:K- ii

'

GEORGE

AXELROOiJOHH

GEORGE AXELR0D
A

wis!

M.

C.

it

WOOuaiON

RELf

FRANKENHEIMER

RICHARD CONDON
5t0 THRU UNITED ARTISTS

2

COLON by DC

FOR

STEREO and

Pl,Ui
ROCK

HUDSON

HI-- FI

Now In Stock!

'bengal'brigade'

House

Trailei

Eastland
CN3t

REG.
PRICE

Winner of 10
A ca dsmy A wards!

OPENS FRI., NOV. 9
NO RESERVED SEATS
THIS
Feature Times:
t.
AGEMENT
1:30,
ONLY
4:25. 7:15,
Adults $1.00
9:48
Sun. Hiru Thur.
Ch.U 50c

EN

Fri.-Sa-

2:00, 5:10,
8:C0

MP
mil

0r

For

COMPLETE PHOTO COVERAGE
of

HOMECOMING EVENTS
Call

...

$1.58
$2.38
$3.18
$3.98
$4.78

20

(9:52)

2-66-

mm
72

Famous Name Brands

3&iti3

'BEST PlQTURk

OFF

$1.98
$2.98
$3.98
$4.98
$5.98

RENT

Trailer Park. Call

Luxe

CinimaScop6
rrcuuct't inc. rrouuciign

NEW FALL RELEASES

FOR RENT

HOWARD V. KOCH.

M MMCKtea

FOR

19C2
SALE
Tempest I.cMans
sport coupe. Bucket seats, automatic.
Must sell. Make offer,
2Utt

RCA VICTOR
CAHITOL

MERCURY
DECCA
COLUMBIA

ff
st

if

id

9
emmm

STERLING'S
INC.

669 S. BROADWAY
Phones
FREE

PARKING!

TS ft

OPEN
MONDAY,
SATURDAYS

9--

9

ii

SHHMf-KJ-

i

ii

D

mi him

OLt UT CRNT IUIN
rr

"mii

n

.

Candid Shots of

FRIDAY,
9 - 5:30

,

JOHN FRANKENHEIMER.

First Run Western

PLUS

OFF

'itr. :K.'U.ULJ.tl)-y--

J.iftf

FLOATS
DANCES

HOUSE DECORATIONS
PARTIES
RECEPTIONS

* Tin: ki:m re uv kkJinYi

ADPi Pledges 'Walk 'Out'

v tlTn

,

I.i,

Nov. 7, I'M..'
3

Social 'A Minifies.
m;

I

Sis

;mi

Carnlui l',itnsr,

n

4:

lunr (
I'l ,inkf(i t. to

iiuijor fi M.n
.lunrs, ;in i( (Hint inu ln.tj ir
at KaMfin Stutr CnUiyv
f i rm
I'l unkfort
Clracr liithrrs(oiir, a mudu.itt
student from Milton, N.Y., and a
member of Kappa Delta .sorority, to
Knnnic ll.isll.iml, a senior arohi-trctumajor from Hopkinsville,
and a mrrnbrr of Pht Kappa Tan
N

.

aii

m

(

.

1

i

im;s

SI KV

SL'KY ti Mt'
llinr vill
mectinus tod;iv. tomorrow. iiinl
Friday at 7 p.m. at tlir east n .ir
door of Memorial Coliseum.

fraternity.

.Medical Wlvrs
Medical Wives will hold a rwet-iii- K
today at 8 p.m. in Uoom '2iY3 of
the Medical Center. The prner.im
will be Sharing Christmas Ideas'.

KI'TItr.AT
Delta .sorority held its
annual retreat last weekend at
Sunset Lodso.
Xi Delta sorority held its
annual retreat last weekend at the
Y Teen Camp on Versailles Road,

Wrstmlnstrr I rllowshlp
Westminster Fellowship will hold
a Fireside Chat today at 7:30 p.m.
at the center with Dr. Amry
denboseh on "The Cuban Crisis",
At 9:30 p.m. the weekly worship
seivice will be held in the chapel.

rr

Kappa

Sy
"C

(Au'hor of "I II.-- : n
h,v.s ,,f

--

,1
f.

Alpha Delta Pi sorority plec'ce
abandoned their chapter here in
lavcr of Phi chapter at Hanover
College in Indiana Saturday.
They spent the weekend with
their ADPi sisters and were introduced to a life very different from
so
is
Kentucky's.
"Everything
quiet and peaceful there; it almost
teems like another world," Shary
Scott said. "Its like the colleges
you always read about beautiful,
small and friendly," added Judy!
Caskey.
Hanover College overlooks the
Ohio River and is surreundeel by
trees, lonely paths and an abundance of tradition.
They were having their Koed
Weekend which is similar to the
Golddigger's Ball here, and the
ADPi's arranged dates for the
pledges.
"The whole pace of life is a step
flower than ours," Karen Pugh
explained. "The Twist is just coming in there and the newer dances
just aren't heard of."
The pledges traded songs and
customs with their 5ister, and
left them with' an invitation to

huny and
though the
have their
the pledgee

visit Kentucky. Even
Hanover ADPi's didn't
pledges, the trip gave
an excellent opportun- ity to see another chapter, and
meet their Yankee sisters.
One r.nusual aspect of their
chapter house was the sleeping
derm. There is one big room which
contains all the beds, it has no

i

heat and all the windows are left1
open. Then eatii girl has a larger

room for studying, and recreation.
They never have to worry about
keeping someoiu up with their
partying at night.
When Hanover receives their
pledges in February, the Alpha
Delta Pi chapter here expects a
large influx of northern sisters.

'J'lic ft
At !:i'

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lhr:rf," "The

f,."V--

m in 7

,r.)

i

r!.i---

i

r!y
c

to

-

ln thi n? Aluill.lntl Llir co'lrnr-- to t!i ivy? I
Ikm-nuc t lie In ic of iii.m nkind
,iy Aiiiri ic:i did r.nt
tlio world's l.it'ii'-- t proiluccr of lnittc rf;it :ttid tallow liy ruiiniiiii
away from a filit !
Wll.-l-

siy

im!

--

!::ill

M-

I

i

:

1

If you're always ton hungry or ton sleepy for cla-then let's
liild classes when you're not ton hungry or sleepy: namely, when
lt.
you're eatim: or le
Classes wliile catini: re a siuipl( matter. Jut ha( a l(v turer
lecture wliile the eaters eat. I'ui wat- h out for noi.-- y food. I
mean who can hear a Icetun r lecture when everyiiody is crunching celery or niato or like that? Serve nuiet stuff - like anchovy
paste on a doughnut, or steaming howls of laini) fat.
s,

j

i

;

the fourth dimension: TIME
a mysterious concept to science. Time is only an idea,
an abstraction... an area of shadow, speculation and surprise.

...still

And kindly olcrve silence while li:;htinu; your
Marlhoru Cigarette. Ion't he striking kitchen matches on your

IS RUNNING DOWN! Friction from
Once our master timekeeperEARTH
ocean tides is almost imperceptibly, but definitely, slowing the earth's
rotation, gradually disqualifying the turning globe as our most accurate
time measure. Science has already devised more dependable timing devices.

11

jr,

;X

fi;

4?

PhoatT

witiout

KINTUCMV

"

orWlsyiaxf-- '

jeans. Instead carry an emher from th( dormitory fireplace in
your pur-- e or pncki t. l'lace the Marl horn auaiii-- t the emher.
it quietly. Uh, I know
I.iuht it owietly.
a ureat
deal! I know that one's natural instinct upnii encoiinterint;
Marl horn's fine llavor and filter is to throw hack one's head and
hellow meat, routine ciie of joy. Hut oii mu-- t not. n nm-- t
Contain your ecstacy, lest you diturh the lec, uriny, lecturer.
'oii can, if you like, pern.it yoiir-el- f
a few small
hudders ot
pleasure - you smoke, hut take caie not to wear garments
which will set up a (latter when you shudder-like taiTcta, for
example, or knee c mhaK
Let us turn now to the prohlem of learnim; while sleepinir.
J'ilst, can it he done?
holoists hae provi d that the brain is
Yes, it can.
definitely ahle to assimilate infoi niat ion tluriiu: sleep. Take, for
instance, a recent experiment conducted hy a leading Kasteru
unieisity (Stanford). A small tape recorder was placed under
named (Ilebe Sigafon.
the pillow of the subject, a
hen ( ilebe n;i tat asleep, the recorder was turned on. Softly,
all thl'oimh the night, it repeated three stati ineiiN in (ilebe's
slumbering ear:
1. Herbert Spencer lived to the :i:e of It)!) and U called "The
rounder of Mnglisli lltlectic l'hilosnphy.-I. The banana Jilaut is not a tree but a large erenni.-i- l herb.
in 1U14 t
.'. 'I'he Archduke l'erdinaiiil was
a
Sarajen b -- 'i ui.g li.it ioiialist named Mjilas Ci tnie, who has
he Trigger of NWM
:ir J.bin. railed
hen ilebe awi kr in the niurniuv, the
holngists said tu
.f lll'.i. What i
livid to the
he
him, "Hubert
1

TODAY ONLY!
Your Greatest Musical

7.

Ih'u

-:.f ynu'ri' Inn sleepy.
- ;.ni!'i.m l.u; :;i'y. At (.illy ni'lcri.nnii
(!
i
n
you're
yiti'n Inn In-.- y. At Im'c ;i!'(:-r:I !,
:im!
I:tct
ii;i'.'lit ;t well face it tin-rliimirry
is no iiixl time 4 i;iy to t:iKc :i la-- '.
v.

r

i

i
tlX INGTON

Van-Alp-

Thrill!

JEANETTE

MacDONALD
NELSON EDDY in
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"BITTER
Times

SWEET"

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12:00,
1:50, 3:40,
5:30, 7:20, 9:1C

PRECISION

STUDENT PRICES
Matinee 50c; Evening 75c

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StartsTH URSDAY!
SEE Castro's Conquest of Cuba!
SEE Escape over the Berlin Wall!

'WE'LL BURY YOU'
PLUS

OYSTER TIME.
DAVID JANSEN
POLLY BERGMAN

"BELLE SOMMERS'
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TIDAL TELEPATHY?

Ocean oyster will continue to open up for feeding according to ocean tides long after
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THURSDAY!
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From Clatvic Book
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DICKENS'

"DAVID COPPERFIELD"
Timet

10 am., 12:10,
4:50, 7:10, 9.30

2:30

STUDENT PRICES
Matinee 50c; Evening 75c

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(iU In' sluts, but yim, in trust, art uj) ami about. Why not
improve eavh waking hour u ith our line product Marlbont
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Tlie Kentucky Kernef
UNivtnsitY

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University Soapbox
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No Need To. Answer
Them All

of Kentucky

I.ninntnn. Kentucky r. second tUu mitttrr undef Itie A! of Mmh 3, 1879.
hool year ricrpt during holidays and eiami.
wrik during the regular
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Jac k H.

Riciurd Wilson, Motioning Editor
Een Fitzpatbuk, .Sorft Editor
Btv Tinico,

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Cuthrif, Editor
Dick

vi:i)m:si)ay news

Editor

Miki

Smiiii,

John PfUFFm, Campus Editor
Wallace, Advertising Manager

staff

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This would also curb the practice
students borrowing another students H) card and trying to get by
the gate man, hoping that he doesn't
look too closely at the picture on the
card. Most students try to obtain ID
cards lor their tlates to use, not necessarily to avoid paving the price of
a date ticket, but because they want
to sit together.
It would be very simple for the
gate man to punch ID cards and at
the same time collect date tickets.
This would not only save those who
do not date University students a lot
of trouble, but would also put an end
to the mass of confusion caused when
people from the end zone head into
the student section five minutes before game time and try to find a seat.
Because of this mess many students not only miss the kickoff, but
the National Anthem as well. They are
too busy trying to find a seat or fighting to keep the one they've got. The
pushing, yelling, stumbling, and name
calling could all be eliminated if only
those people with date tickets could
come through the main student gates.
We hope that something can be
done before Saturday's game.
of

Personal Goals
NOTE: This editorial

based on dis-- c
ussions held at Leadership Conference and is the first in a scries of
three.
The world of 1962 moves at such
an accelerated and exhilarated speed
that the people seldom stop to think
why they are doing what they are
doing. In short the people have no
goals.
This is a major problem today at
UK, at colleges and
throughout the United States, and
with all of America. Very few people
stop to evaluate their lives, but only
live by habit.
At the recent Leadership Conference Dr. Kenneth Harper asked one
of his discussion groups to discuss
goaK. It took the members of the
group 10 or 15 minutes to give him an
answer to his (juestion, probably because verv few of them had ever
is

universities

stopped to determine their goals
whether they be idealistic or otherwise.
We have foreign students on our
campus who in their home countries
demonstrate for food and freedom and
the necessities of life, but UK freshmen demonstrate for panties.
This seems to demonstrate the ease
of our life in America and the lack of
goals due to this easy life.
The first problem in attempting to
solve this sorry situation is to make
the apathetic first realize that there
is a problem. When they realize the
problem then we must try to get
them tt) search for personal goals.
In a world where fear of nuclear
annihilation threatens us every day
we need to have higher goals in order
to remain sane. And in order to lead
a life which is any better than that of
a machine, we must have goals.

Campus Parable
The Bible is disconcertingly blunt
in the way it classifies people. It
speaks of only two kinds: wheat and
chaff.
Many people dislike such a clear-cu- t
division. They imagine three
kinds: the very religious, the irreligious, and a middle group, in which
they think they belong. They admit
they are not in the first, and they
don't want to be considered in the
second. But that third group is an
of their own. Nowhere dots
the Bible speak of such a middle class.
There we re two classes in the days
of the flood those within the ark and

BILL

SI I ELTON

would like to comment on the;
replies to my letter of Oct. 9. For
the sake of brevity, I will concentrate
on the reply of Mr. Shibley. In a
fashion characteristic of our monolithic society, all of the replies said
I

Cam, Modfcki, Avwfflfe

Date Tickets
Another football wrrkrnd is clos-iiin on us and oner a.iin tin' aur
old problem of Student Date Tkk.rU
is no in '4 to lr tin subject of much
controversy if a solution to the difficulty is not rear it cl.
Under the present system a UK
student who has a date with a person
not enrolled in the University cannot
enter the student section of Stoll
Field until five minutes before kick-of- f
time. The student cither lias to
wait outside the stadium or sit in the
end one until the public address
announcer gives permission for those
students to battle their way through
the crowd trying to find a seat. By the
time their mission is completed all the
Lood seats are usually taken. As
far as getting to sit with their friends
well this is just impossible. Thus
they end up in the corner somewhere
s tting by themselves.
We agree that UK students should
have first preference on obtaining
good seats, but we also believe that
those students who date persons out-- s
de the University should have the
privilege of sitting in the student section without going through all the
red tape it now takes.

By

those outside; two in the Parable of
the Net the good and the bad; two
in the Parable of the Ten Virgins
the w ise and the foolish; two roads to
travel the narrow and the broad;
two classes in the picture of the judgmentthe sheep and the goats; two
places in eternity Heaven and hell.
So there are two classes, only two,
in the world converted and unconverted; saved and unsaved. Christ is
the dividing line. Only in Him can
w e live and move and have our being.
Boll a n L. Blnthit
St. John's Lutheran Church

the same thing in different words;
therefore, there is little need to answer all of them.
In the first place. Mr. Shibley has
been very unobjective in reading my
theory of education, lie confuses my
objective study of our educational
system with my personal value judgments concerning that system. In my
letter of Oct. 9, I said nothing about
what my personal feelings on the
question of whether to hire or retain
Mr. Morin and Dr. Marlatt were.
However, I did say that given the
values stressed in our society, the
present power structure of our society and the current place of an unir
versity in our society as the
of these archaic values in the
lucky offspring of the dominant power group, that Mr. Morin and Dr.
Marlatt should be fired. I was merely
being descriptive in my letter not
prescriptive. In being unobjective Mr.
Shibley and the others who answered
were being unscientific. With the advent of the now dominant religion of
science, being unscientific is analogous to being unholy.
incul-cato-

segment of their minds.) In short our
educational system is teaching stone
age ideas of social organization along
side space age ideas of technology.
The two have proven to be highly
inconsistent. As new technology is
developer!, the society which develops this technology , is transformed
at the same time. This makes requisite
a change in social ideas.

Today, our society esteems barbaric values such as: aggressiveness,
blind stupidity (bravery), individual
irresponsibility and competition. The
universities of our country instill these
values in students mainly through the
humanities
sector, although
subjects such as economics
help reinforce the process (I feel that
many students will recall the competition of the classical economic model.)
For students who major in the physical sciences, the archaic values are
instilled through sports and fascistic
semi-scientif-

organizations (fraternities and sororities.) However, all progress of man

Secondly, if Mr. Shibley had been
a little more perspicacious in reading
my letter, he would have detected a
trace of irony in my choice e)f adjectives, that would have indicated that
I'm not completely uncritical in my
view of the status quo.
Mr. Shibley's reply that my comment about the "uncomplicated wisdom of bravery, blind patriotism and
the status quo" reminds him of the
fascist rulers of World War II is quite
relevant in this period of history. Unless one is equipped with a compartmentalized mind (as most college
students are today), one could easily
have observed frequent manifestations
of blind patriotism during the past
week by reading the Kentucky Kernel
and listening to students after Kennedy's blockade of Cuba. In the tradition of western journalism, the Kernel
along with the Lexington and Louisville papers, used emotional words
such as brave and courageous to describe the hysterical actions of our
leaders in the Cuban situation all
the misery, starvation and waste that
previous wars caused was forgotten
in a patriotic reaction.
Mr. Shibley is also correct in saying that fear ef other systems will not
make them go away. However, many
of our prominent leaders think so.
For example, Mr. T. Morton argues
that if the U. S. refuses to recognize
Bed China, then Bed China will go
away. Mr. Morton purports to think
Bed China out of existence.
Mr. Shibley may be correct in
saying that the function of education
is to teach students tt) think before
they act. However, this doesn't seem
to be the case in reality, for students
still voice theories which developed
in a barbaric period in culture even
worse they live by these barbaric theories (except for the technological

kind has being effected through cooperation, not competition. Progress
has been halted when individual
irresponsibility and aggressiveness
came too expressive.

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by intolerance and aggressiveness
a most alarming development."

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Education should be concerned
with replacing these archaic values
with values that are more consistent
with the modern technology, not with
teaching students how to not perceive
reality. Particularly in Southern universities, students should have it
pointed out to them that truth is not
directly proportional to fervor of belief. 1 agree with Carlo Cipolla who
said: 'There is nothing more dangerous than technical knowledge when
unaccompanied by respect for human
life and human values. . . . The
of modern techniques in
environments that are still dominated

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* THE KENTUCKY KERN LI., WutneMb), Nov.

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