xt7w9g5gf619 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7w9g5gf619/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610922  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7w9g5gf619 section xt7w9g5gf619 Brotherhood Forever, UK Men Say

University fraternity members feel brotherhood is
here to stay even if Esquire, a national magazine for
men. doesn't think no.
In the October issue Esquire says fraternities are
on the way out. The principal reason behind the fraternities' impending doom, the article says, is the
of national organization policies among local
chapters.
But UK fraternity men aren't placing muVh stock In
the magazine article.
"It's absolutely ridiculous!" said Herschel Robinson,
president of Kappa Sigma. "There Just isn't enough
evidence to say that local chapters are getting away from
the national organization."
"We're strictly for a national organization," said
Ronnie Moss, treasurer of Alpha Tau Omega. "There are
in. my prominent citizens leading our group. If we broke
lip into local chapters and let college students determine

everything, we would end up with nothing but a boys'
club.
The article said local chapters were dissatisfied
particularly with the national organizations' racial and
religious discrimination policies. The article added that
rather than submit to the fraternity policies, chapters
were dropping from national membership.
"Our fraternity system Is building Instead of falling,
said Tom Scott, president of the Interfraternity Council.
The frateinity system is changing, certainly, but It Is
changing for the better."
David Graham, president of Phi Delta Theta. also
believes fraternities are here to stay.
"I don't think our fraternity Is drawing away from
the national organization. College students today are
g
nore
than ever before and many fraternities
may not like a lot of national control, but this does not

mean they are trying to get away from it completely,"

Graham added.

"I don't think fraternities are going out either." John
Sliwka. president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said. "However,
I do feel our system here could be stronger.
"Personally, I think it would be folly for a local
chapter to pull away from the national organization."
Local sororities benefit from national organization,
too. is the opinion of Kathleen Songster, a member of
Delta Delta Delta.
"I believe that our strength as a sorority conies from
being a member of the national system," Miss Songster
said. "The same probably applies to fraternities."
At any rate, the University's fraternities aren't roll-in- ?
up their welcome mats, taking down their emblems
or even anticipating their doom. Some of them are even
planning parties for this weekend.

Slalc Network Proposed
For Educational Television
V ii
Mil. No.

Vol.

r c r si t y o f I pn

tnchy

I.F.XINCiTON. kY.. FRIDAY. SEPT.

4

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elected from the representatives
c;ri;oky
about Oct. 1ft.
Kernel Campus Iditor
Ripple, in a telephone interview
Cl.invl Sipple lias resigned
from Covington, commented:
from Stinlt nt ("onurrss. leaving
"John Wjl'.iams. Cecil Bell, and
I K s student 'ovcrniiient witli- - Bub Smith have taken the load off
my shoulders. They have the electoi.t a president,
ion set up the way they want it."
elected president in
P'pple
Sipple continued that he was
h:td said he would re-- ti
January
"amazed" at how smoothly plans
iii to the campus this 1;11 as a for the election seemed to be runi iduate
student and continue as
ning even thoutih he had "thrown
o; the cone! ess.
sand into the wheels of the machHowever, Sipple now plans to inery."
ti.fci the U. S. Air Force in
Sipple said he planned to come
He was in the advanced
here today for the weekend alATROTC program for the last two
though he probably would not be
yens.
able to attend the Monday night
Nipple's formal resignation will
meeting, lie added:
lie read before a Student Con"John and Bob already know the
gress meeting Monday night.
plans I had for Student Congress
now pass this
Duties of the congress
year, and they can make it go."
to It- - vice president. Hob Smith.
Dr.. Leslie I,. Martin, clean of
Smith said the Monday night men and adviser to the congress,
meeting also would concern it-- said that Sjpple would not be
with rules and regulations of eligible to participate actively in
the coming elect urn of repre- the group .since he will not be ensentatives. The election is Oct. 4. rolled in the University.
O le representative will be chosen
Sipple said he planned to confi'im each college.
fer with Williams and Bell about
the coming election to make some
Smith said congress officers.
a new president, will lie
suggestions during his
weekend visit.
It became apparent the last of
July, Sipple indicated, that he
Deadline would not be able to return to the
Drop-l- l
The deadline for adding classes I'niversity this fall, lie began corlias been set for tomorrow by responding with congress officers
then.
the Registrar's Office.
The congress meeting is at 7
The last day to drop a course
without a grade is scheduled for p.m. Monday in Laffcrty Hall.
next Thursday.
Applications for student representative may be picked up in the

Advisoiy
on Educational
Television,
made the proposal in a report appearing in the current issue of
"Review of Government." published by the University Bureau of
Government Research.
The Federal Communications
Commission was petitioned
by
Governor Combs in July to reserve for noncommercial, educational use television channels alto Ashland,
located
Pikeville,
Morehead, Hazard. Covington,
e,
Somerset. Bowling Green,
and Murray.
I nun. an said that these channels and channel 15, now in use
in Jefferson County, and one that
has been requested for Lexington,
would compose the network. The
request resulted in part from a
recommendation made by the Advisory Committee on Ldurational
Television of the Legislative Research Commission.
A bill to establish the network
will be introduced into the 1962
General Assembly. If the bill is
passed, the network should be in
operation within two years.
Reasons given for the proposed
ETV network aie low financial
base and teachers salaries in rural
areas, and overtaxed budgets in
urban areas. ETV can provide

Twelve Paces tee

Sipple Quits Post
As Congress Head;
Election Date Set
By WAYNE

A statewide network of 11 educational television cTianncls
has been proposed by the spc; iker of the Kentucky Mouse of
Representatives.
skilled, experienced teachers to fill
Harry King Lowman, also
in the gaps in a teaching staff and
of the
Commit-

office of the college dean or at the
Student Congress office in the
Student Union Building beginning
Monday. The applications must be
returned to the congress office by
Thursday.

Former Instructor
Has First iovcl
Marie Into Movie
'The I Instli r," the first novel
ol a former I'niversity Kii'jjisli
instructor, lias been filmed by
20th Century Fox and will be
released within a lew months.
The film rights to the novel
for $2..HK).
were sold in
Paul Newman will star in the
film as Eddie Felson. a crack pool
hustler. Jackie Gleason of television fame will play New York
and Minnesota Fats, Eddie's arch
business rival. Piper Laurie plays
the "lame lush" with whom Felson
becomes involved. The film will be
produced and directed by Robert
Fossen.
Walter Tevis, who completed
both bis K.A. and M.A. degrees
here, wrote the novel while a student in I'jrifi. During his student
years, he worked hi way through
college by racking billiard balls in
a South Limestone pool hall. There
he Rained a first hand knowlvdge
of the art of billiards and the
on l'age 3

lr)

Lat (ilianee

All unaffiliated
seniors who
have not signed up for a yearbook photo sitting may do so in
h'oom 210 of the Journalism
Building. Today is the last opportunity for seniors to sign up.

'

1,000 Flee FromWillEsther Momlav
AiWress U.N.
Keuueilv

YORK, Sept. 21 (AP Hurricane Esther
hit Lons Island with 100 mile an hour winds.
Electricity was cut off at more than 200,000
homes in Nassau and Suffolk counties. In Suffolk,
en the eastern tip of the Island, more than 10,000
telephones were deud.
In Rhode Island, more than 1.000 Cape Codders
were evacuated to shelters.
Connecticut escaped serious damage despite
wind gusts of up to 71 miles per hour. Low lying
toastal areas were flooded but lew evacuations
vere necessary.

Katanga
liriu: Oast'sLI In Katanga. Sept.tYoviuce
iAP
F.LISA BETH VI
.E,

21

Kutaiigans and U.N. .soldiers generally held their fire today in obedience to a (ease-lir- e
agreement that uppeaied to have settled
nothing.
Only three or four hursts from machine guns
hroke the spooky silence of the capilaj of this secessionist province, scarred niui smoking from
c:gli! days of mortar, nuuluiie gun and small arms
i.iv.
Battie-weur-

y

Movie Scries
Start Next Week
The Russian film. "Alexander
will open the DepartNevsky,"
ment of English film series at 7:30
p.m.
Tuesday in the Guignol
Theatre.
The film series will consist of
six films to be shown throughout
the school year. The other five
films and the date that they will
be shown are:
'
Burlesque on Carmen,". Tuesday, Utc. 12; "I Am A Camera,"
Tuesday. Jan. 9; "Day of Wrath,"
Thursday, March 15; "Treasure of
the Sierra Madre." Tuesday, March
C ontinued
On Page 3
'

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Wo I'M iNrws Briefs

NEW

reduce the number of preparations
required of the overloaded teacher
who is called upon to handle many
subjects.
Lowman also pointed out the
ETV can provide specialized teaching materials. Laboratory experiments can be performed on tele- -'
vision that could not be duplicated
in the classroom, and students can
gain a closer view than In a class
demonstration.
Ther projxised network would
have several production renters at
cities with universities and colleges where extensive educational
resources are available. A microwave system would be used to carry ETV signals to transmitters.
According to the report, teachers would he chosen from throughout the state by auditions Riven on
recommendations by superintendents, principals, and supervisers.

--

if;

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KenWASHINGTON, Sept. 21
nedy will address the United Nations General Asin New York on Monday.
sembly
Much of his speech will turn on the progress of
taUs now under way in New Yoi k between Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.

'.,

..

'.

I,'.

U.S., Iiiissiu ClaslrOn Nuclear Han
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y., Sept. 21 (APi The
United Slates and Soviet Russia clashed in the
United Nations over the demand for a debate on
tlit signing of a treaty to end nuclear weapons
tests.
Moscow blamed U S. polity in Germany for its
decision to resume tests and said the issue should
be taken up in overall dis.u uiainent debate.

Itriles

Suffers Heart Attack

CONCORD. Nil. Sept. 21 iAP Sen. Styles
.f
was reported in serious condition
Ural :es
today alter suffering a heart attack described by
Ins doctors as moderately M'iiou.

r--

";

Pleasant I'pnisinx
fall's
Kernel

;.

Bess Moody, this
first
Sweetheart, seems to be enjoying her rtadiu assignment durim; the first week of school. Hut
her attention is diverted from the printed page by handsome
I'ak Waie, Kcrm-- l phidocraplier. Bess ii a senior soii.il vurk
majur Irani l iiiinenee.

* THE KENTTCKV

2

KERNEL,

fiuby,

I'M,

Sept.

Esther Slams East

Supermagnet To Revolutionize
Man's Use Of Electricity
BLAKESI.F.E

By ALTON

Science Writer
21
Creation of a revolu-

Aisorlated Pre

1MTTSBUHC. H.St pt.
(AP)

was

tionary supcrmagnet

an- -

HMiinfd today ly Westing-- :
ionse scientists.
Weighing one pound, and only
;.he size of a doughnut, it creates,
.1 magnetic field twice as strong
;s that of a conventional electromagnet weighing 20 tons and as
nig as an automobile.
"The Kiiprrmagnet promises to
revolutionize almost every aspect
if man's use of electricity," said
)r. J. K. Ilulm, associate director
f the Westinghouse Research Laboratories.
He foresees uses in generating
md distributing
electricity, in
mabuilding new
chines, magnetic containers trying
.o draw peaceful power from the
reaction, and lightweight
jower plants for interplanetary
r.pace ships.
The secret of the supermagnet
a new superconducting wire.
This is a wire or coil w hich loses
nil electrical resistance at a tem- jerature of 540 degrees below zero
Fahrenheit. The electrical current
I'reates a magnetic field.
"The breakthrough is that this
superconducting wire docs ot lose
ts superconductivity
because of
;he magnetism it creates," Dr.
'Iiilm said. I'ntil now, this has
jeen the bugaboo in trying to make
jscful magnets out of superconducting materials.
Last year. Dr. J. B. Kunzler and
associates of Bell Telephone Laboratories showed certain superconductors keep their properties
ven in strong magnetic fields. Dr.
lulm said.
Westinghouse experts in
research went on to
'reate alloys which produced "the
'irst magnet to achieve in practice
Jie outstanding performance predicted by superconductor theory."
"We feel it is a turning point in
.his special field of research. Superconductivity will soon be making

impact upon the lives of millions,"
Dr. Hulm predicted.
Conventional
electromagnetics,
only half as powerful as the new
one, use an iron core and roil, a
power plant continuously supplying 100,000 watts or more of power,
and a cooling system pumping
thousands of gallons of cooling oil
or water every minute.
By contrast, the superconducting
magnet runs from an ordinary
automobile storage battery. Once
current is fed into the coil, super-curren- ts
can flow through continuously without loss in strength.
The special wire was designed,

With Violent Winds

prepared, and drawn by a team of
metallurgists headed by Dr. Fraser.
He' said there "seems to be no
fundamental
metallurgical roadblock to widespread development
and use of superconducting magnets in the future."

Cool, Man

Some
CLARENDON, Va. (AP
odd things turn up in package
mail boxes but clerks in the post-offihere think they found the
a shopping bag containrecord
ing a package of cigars and a
carton of beer. The beer, they
said, was refeshingly cool.

II) DEADLINE TOMORROW
The deadline for picking up ID cards has been set for tomorrow
In the lobby of the Coliseum from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Pictures of
students who registered late will also be taken at this time.

e

e
In order to pick up ID cards,
students must present a
copy of their college dean's schedule card which has been approved
and validated by the dean and stamped "full fee" by the Registrar's
Office.
Full-tim- e
students who have lust their ID cards must pay a S3
penalty to the Bursar's Office to obtain a second one.
Students who have lost their schedule cards must obtain verification of their class schedules from the Office of the Recorder in
the basement of the Administration Building.

n'w

X

m.p.h. were reported as far wet
as New York City.
Drenching rains and towering
tides, reaching as much as 14
feet above normal, accompanied
the hurricane as it thundered to
ward the New England coast.
Hurricane
warnings remained
yesterday from eastern Long Is- land to Ea.stport, Maine, with gula
warnings to Cape May. N.J.
Thp hurricane watch was di- continued alonj the Connecticut
nd
fw York City area,
sustained hurricane wind!
reported along the coasts of
New
Massachusetts.
Hampshire
and Maine.

L

'

Itlll

v

Rusts even higher. Gusts up to 60

listed in first reports were power
failures affecting several thousand
homes, flooding of highways, brok- en windows, downed signboards
and trees, and a few minor injuries to individuals.
The single highway to the Mon-tau- k
Point resort area on the eastern tip of Long Island was put out
of use by floods reaching a depth
of three feet over an eight-mil- e
stretch between Amagansett and
Montauk. Much of the highway at
this point is near sea level.
About 700 people in the .Montauk
area had left dwelling in low
spots to take refuge in emergency
shelters on higher ground.
Winds up to 108 m.p.h. were re- corded by the Coast Guard at the

f

MJ

I

KENTUCKY
THEATRE

NKW YORK, Sept. 21 ( AP) -- Hurricane Esther slammej
past the eastern end of Long Island this morning, lashing out
with winds above 100 miles an hour. The effect on the island
and in the populous metropolitan area appeared to have been
mild.
The most serious consequences eastern end of the island, with

n.

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SC Applications

Student Congress applications
may be obtained from the college deans or the SC office in
the SI II beginning Monday.
An organizational meeting will
be held at 7 p.m. Monday in
Laflerty Hall.

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22,

ll-- 3

Berlin Crisis Discussed
Love Defeats Russian Movie To Open
Al
Meeting Hurricane
English Dept. Film Series
NKW
Stair Van
Ilusk-Gromyk- o

I
Husk
YOI5K, Sept. 21 ( Al') -- Secretary of
and SoviVt Foirinn Minister Aiulrei CromvKo tliscnsseil the
llerlin crisis for ulxnit three hours today in a friendly and
atmosphere, hut concluded without discovering an
basis for negotiations on ending the crisis.
Gromyku is understood to have
stuck to the publicly stated Soviet ,in Pmblrm. Rusk armed that the

line of readiness to negotiate about
Berlin solution based on a peace

treatywithflividedGermanv.Ru.sk

is belu ved to have made clear that
the Western powers require a much
broader basis before they will agree
tJ nenotiatioiui.

t.n

U!.at th,

rW

riirf

n

another meeting between them
here next week. By that time both
ill have reported to their governments and possibly receive new
instructions.
Rusk and Oromyko met in the
U.S. secretary's suite on the 28th
floor of a nudtown hotel. Waldorf- Astoria, at 1 p.m. Rusk had in
vited Gromyko for lunch. B'.elsides had experts present on
run and European affairs.
Ambassador Adlat Stevenson and
Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian
Z'jrtn participated part of the time.
The luncheon began, after a
photographic session and a round
of cocictail.s. at 1:30 p.m. and ran
f jr about an hour. During the
luncheon Gromyko is understood
to have made clear to Rusk directly, ns he had previously publicly stated, that he intends to
rress for a three-ma- n
board to
a

ProP"' had n P"-- a
f "n""" " ihr 1'nited Na- llon, and that lhp l'N '" ur'nl
nrra " tor n
h'd
bT
ukr ovfr thf duti"
Hammarskjold.
After the talks broke up shortly
before 5:30 p.m., Carl Rowan.
of
Deputy Assistant Secretary
State for Public Affairs, read a
.said:
statement which
"The talks took plate In a
friendly, businesslike atmosphere
but I am not prepared to discu.-the nature of the talks or the contents of the discussions."
ovlrt ,roik

ELIZABETH CITY. N.C., Sept.
APi Cupid, like most of the
North Carolina coast, came
through Hurricane Esther's fringe
winds unscathed.
Seaman Wayne Lane of the USS
Northampton and Nadine Carter
of Portsmouth, Va.. arrived here
by bus Tuesday afternoon.
'We were planning to get married and go back to Portsmouth
where we have an apartment," said
Nadine.
"We didn't have money enough
to stay in a hotel. Finally we found
the frhool."
The two spent the night in the
emergency shelter.
With the help of the Red Cross
and disaster officials, they got the
marriage license and were married
in a school classroom. Hurricane
refugees who served as witnesses
piovided the bride with something
old. new, borrowed, and blue.

21

Continued From Page 1
"Day of Wrath." a Danish film
27; and "Pickwick Papers," Tues- with English subtitles, was filmed
in 1943. It tells of a 17th century
day, May 13.
"Alexander Nevsky," which was witch hunt. The New York Times
made In 1938. was directed by review noted the most extraordiSergie Eisenstein. It deals with nary use of the camera in all film
the struggle of the Order of Teu- history.
tonic Knights against foreign Invaders at the Battle of Ice fought
In 1242. The dialogue is in Russian with English subtitles.
"Burlesque on Carmen" will star
Charlie Chaplin and Edna Purvi- nce. Chaplin will play the role
of Don Hosiery. In a parody on
Cecil B. DeMill's spectacular of
1914. This film is silent with music
from the opera dubbed In.
Julie Harris win star in "I Am
A Camera." a comedy based on
the story by Christopher Isher-wooShelly Winters, Laurence
Harvey, and Ron Randall are also
in the film, which has won every
critic's award that is available.

Former Student Sells Novel

Dance At

Continued from Page 1
sonalities who inhabit the halls.
Before beginning the novel, he
wrote several short stories deahna
with the pool room setting, includ- -'
ing "The Big Hustle," which appeared in Colliers Magazine in
It 55. He hns also published short
stories in Esquire, Redbook, Cosg
mopolitan, and the Saturday
Post.
"Hie Hustler" deals with a
n
drifter and crack
. icceed
U.N.
Secretary-Generpool player, Eddie Felson. who
Day Hammarskjold.
a living by conning
makes
The discussion on this point was strangers into a game. When the
as imondusivr as that on the Iter- - stakes grow worthy, his naiveness

begins to fade away and the skill-- !
ed. cunning
player emerges to
walk away with the winnings.
who N presently on the
Tevis,
faculty of Southern Connecticut
New
State College.
Haven, is
scheduled to complete his second
book, a science fiction novel, this
fall. It will be published by Harpers in the spring.
Before beginning his master's
woi iC, Tevis taught at Hausville.
Carli.sle, and Irvine High Schools.
He was an English instructor here
in 1956. In 1958-5he was with the
Northern Center in Covington. He
also holds an M.F.A. from the
State University of Iowa.
Tevis took many of his creative
writing courses here under A. B.
Guthrie, then instructor of creative
I I3
writing, fiuthrie had received the
PuliUer Prize for fiction in 1959.
Fellow at
ile was also a
Harvard I'niversity.
Tevis was born in San Francisco.
Calif., in 1928. He is a graduate of
Henry Clay High School.
I

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AT 11:45

Nit

.7-

PHONE

Broadway

119 South Limestone

"Bottle in Outer
Space"

M

S.

Private Rooms for Parties
Open

The Mctn is Captured
Earth it

No.

A--

ADAMS

Killimanjaro"
and Eastman

A--

Home of the College Folks

683

Cinemascopt

JR.

1
lever for the l candidate"
Pd. polir. adv. Students for Moloney

"Killers Of
In

Tu Fu

Root Moloney Home!

DOWNTOWN

ROBERT TAYLOR
In

FOR PARTIES

OR

h.

NO. 3 AT 9:37

$2.00 Per Couple

ALSO AVAILABLE

ff

f

By

8:00 To 12:30

"Pull the
9:22
Jckpor $250 03

FRIDAY

Music

Technicolor

FLAY BANKO AT

.

.

THIS

GUY MADISON

2

Nigel Patrick, Hermione Gingold,
and Joyce Grenfell star In the
movie version of Charles Dickens'
"Pickwick Papers." This comedy
contains some of Dickens' most
famous caricatures and grotesques.
The plot consists of a series of
episodes. The movie was filmed In
England in 1950.

Old Frankfort Pike

"The Hord Man"

NO.

1948.

DANCELAND

sfrrisk.
1

.

"Treasure of the Sierra Madre,"
starring Humphrey Bogart and
Walter Houston, has five academy
awards to its credit. Directed by
John Houston, the film deals with
the tale of three gold miners whose
greed causes them to become
enemies. The movie was filmed in

j

r

CAMPBELL HOUSE
JEFF

RICHARDS

MARGIADCAH

iotthe

KENTUCKY'S FINEST
HOTELS

peter falk
COLOH MM1.UU

Television
Air Conditioned
Free Parking

LAFAYETTE HOTEL

* Reservations About Berlin
There is encouragement Init still
relatively little assurance in the fact
Kit American Secretary of State Busk
and Soviet Foreign Secretary Crom-)karc to meet each other for talks
during the Ignited Nations General

tive governments are to accord even
de facto recognition to the regime In
East Germany, there should be a
willingness on the Communist part
to discuss not merely West Berlin
but all of Berlin, including the East
sector, and to maintain a more normal
border instead of a prison wall between East and West Germany.
If Mr. Gromyko can indicate that
Premier Khrushchev is willing to discuss this problem in its proper
breadth, then his meetings with Mr.
Busk may lead to something helpful
toward stabilizing peace in Europe.
If not, then the time for negotiations
is not yet.
The Christian Science
Monitor.

1

o

Assembly session.
The encouragement stems in part
from the alacrity with which the
Foreign Office in Moscow picked up
suggestion from President Kennedy
for such talks.
Bcscrvations, liowever, are implicit in tlie statement of what the
Soviet sjiokesnian woilld he prepared
to discuss. The search, as the Kremlin phrased it, would be for a solution of "the problem of the conclusion of a German peace treaty and a
settlement on its basis of the situation in West Berlin."
Krom the outset any Western objections have not been to a treaty
between the Soviet Union and East
Germany but to the effects the Communists pretend such a treaty would
have. If a person is selling to another a piece of property across which
third parties have a right of passage,
the transfer must he subject to tha
easement.
If Moscow v ill write a treaty w ith
the Ulhricht regime which respects
and safeguards rights of communication between Berlin and West Germany, then the Western countries
may reasonably accept performance
by the East German Government of
details within that Iramework.
However, if free and representa

Kernels
There are many in this old world
of ours who hold that things break
about even for all of us. I have observed, tor example, that we all get
the same amount of ice. The rich
get it in the summertime and the
poor get it in the w inter. Hat
Mast-crso-

We must have respect for both our
plumbers and our philosophers or
neither our pipes or our theories w ill
hold water. John W. Ganlnir.
o

If individuality has no play, society does not advance; if individuality breaks out of all bounds, society
7.
perishes.
Huxley.

The Kentucky Kernel
Umvkhsiiy ok Kk.vikky

Pntcrfl Hf thr pmt nlTic lit I .rvintftim. kfntiw kv mi vi onil 'U ni.ittrr nmltT the Act ol M.tnh 1, 1879.
'"I1
!iiMihead limr lituri a
(hiring thr revuhir n Imul vitr
during liuliduvt tliiii MJml.
A SC
SIX DOI.I.AHS

I'.u

Editor

Kl'U'Y l'oAH.l., MilliuiiiiH

HhN

Jkan Sciiwaimz. Society Editor
Muhrle

N

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fa

H,

:6Ji

x

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A

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DAILY SEWS EPElOns
kutlirrine Lewis
June Crjy
Associate Sews Editors
Toni I.cnnos
Beverly Cardwi lJ

IVilini?

FMnii I'liillips

S.Clt'

teen-ager-

So the vulgarians have their proper place in eternally refreshing. ujKl.iting,
ami freshening the native tongue. But the purists haw a place that is equally
important, liny are the brake which constantly needs to lie applied.
.

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Sport Coats
$35 to $50

f

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5

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Kyra Hacklejr

Our language, like any other, is a constantly changing thing. Even today,
Dickens is hard reading. Shakespeare obscure, and Chaucer almost incomprehensible, despite that each in his time wrote what was considered the best
of English.
New words are added constantly to the vocabulary, and old ones are
dropped. Over the long years, some words even reverse their meanings.
Grammar in the long view is not a matter of rule but of style.
But these linguistic changes must come slowly if the language is not to
s
who change
lose its value as a means of communication. Were the
their jargon each year to prevail, soon we all would be trying to conwrse in
another Tower of Babel.

!

t

"--"

.

C.utlirio

A lot of people who don't say ain't, ain't eatin'. Will Bogers said in tho
classic answer of the colloquialists to criticism. After Sept. 2S, they can order
up the vittles again. Ain't becomes respectable.
The new edition of the standard dictionary, to be published Liter this
month, gives the long disputed word official acceptability.
The vulgarians undoubtedly will cheer the outcome. The purists, however, need not feel defeat. There is victory for lxth. The point to'be strevseJ
is that while ain't now is in the dictionary, it took a full 50 years for it to
get there.

.

.vr-'

I

Jack

Ain't "Just Ain't (Im)propcr

4
ft

IKAH

Wayne ('km.ohy. Campus Editor
FirzrA thick, Sports Editor
Pick Wai.i.act., Adirrtisinn Maiuiner

.

S

HOOL

an Hook, Editor

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mJLu .iffiv

White Button

Jm
Down

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11

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Suits $60.00

f

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frffl
V

Weskits

yffj

i

Ties
$2.50
.jwMiiyy"irn"T'TXT""T"P""m"'"a

1"

iff'

Ivy Slacks
$5.95 to $17.95

'

Our University Shop is bursting with handsome new Natural Shoulder clothing
scaled to the college budget. So saunter
in and take a look.
126 West Main Street
New Customer Entrance on

Water St.

Sport Shirts
From $5 00

1-

A

ivp
"

l! &

From $B.95

--

Ma
mm

!

AND COMPANY INC.

i.LHHwii

SYS

'

* THE KENTUC

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Triday, Sept. 22,

inH

,

v

.

KY KERNEL,

)
J

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,

.

ISfe;-- :'
-

T7m

tSi.ji

Sousophone Serenade

-

iSo

Taps During

laps

BIG BAND SOUND
Rlanton Collit-r'foothallrrs arcn t the only people working
hard for UK's clash tomorrow night with the University of Miami.
The

"Marching 100"' hand has been drilling for
program for weeks. But working in hot afternoon
sun day after day has proved a mixed blessing to the
(except for the baton t wirier) band. While the music ami marchthe

'

V',

:;

half-tim-

blue-suite- d

e

ing seem to be progressing well, many members of the band
are being baked a fiery red.
The 19(31-6"Marching 100" unit will be a familiar face
to thousands of football fans who are accustomed to being
2

greeted at Stoll Field by the band's brassy renditions.
there is one important difference.

'Tivirlmvity9

Motrin t:

1 1 is

Own Horn

Hut

"This year's band," members claim, "will be the 'blowingcst
band ever."

'On, On, 1' of K'

-- 3

* 6-- TIIE

KENTl (

KV KERNEL,

Tiiday, Sept.

1f)nl

Social Activities
this meeting for the chess team
which will represent the University
competition.
Troupers, tin- tiroup rnyaiied in
Anyon