xt7wwp9t4g74 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wwp9t4g74/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641001  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  1, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  1, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7wwp9t4g74 section xt7wwp9t4g74 Editor Discusses
Student Congress;
See Page Four

Tonight's Weather:

If

Cloudy, Cool;
Low 53

IE Kentucky
Mi
University
of

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, OCT.

Vol. LVI, No. 17

I

Congress Committee
To Recount Ballots

.

m

(

Election Results Challenged
After Close Vote Tallied
By WALTER GRANT

Kernel Staff Writer

The results of last week's
MADELINE KEMPER

WINNIE JO PERRY

Kemper, Perry Voted
A WS Frosh Senators
Madeline Kemper and Winnie
Jo Perry were elected to the two
freshman Associated Women Students Senate seats in Wednesday's election.
Both women live in Holmes
Hall.
Madeline, a Kappa Delta pledge
from New Castle was active in
her high school speech and drama
clubs. A varsity debater for three
years, she received double distinction from the National Forensic League.
As a delegate to the Kentucky
Youth Assemblies she became an
"avid supporter" of representative government. An honor student, Madeline feels that the
"standards of conduct and personal responsibility should be of
prime importance to all women."
Winnie was active in her high
school senior class. Even as secretary of the class, feature editor
the
of the Panther Prowler,
school paper, cheerleader and on
the yearbook staff, she graduated
as salutorian.
Involved in the French, Latin
and math clubs, Winnie was also
a member of Quill and Scroll and
Future Teachers of America.
Winnie is a Delta Delta Delta
pledge from Elizabethtown.
Three hundred and twenty four

freshman women voted at the
polls set up in the Student Center and Blazer Hall.
As the new senators, Madeline
and Winnie will work closely
with one of the other senators
on a project. Some of the possible programs could be "Stars
handin the Night,"
book, High School Leadership
Weekend or publication of the
AWS Newsletter.

English Cluh

Student Congress

election

have been protested and a
special committee will recount the votes, according to
Steve Beshear, congress president.
Beshear said today that the
Student Congress elections committee had received an official
challenge of the validity of the
election results. He said the votes
would be recounted as soon as
possible.
The president said the protest
was filed by Janet Kington, a
junior in the College of Nursing.
She received two votes less than
Julie Dee Halcomb, the winning
candidate with the least votes.
Beshear said he felt the pro- -

Medical School Gives
Scholarships, Awards
Sidney R. Steinberg, a senior in the College of Medicine,
has won the Pfizer Laboratories Medical Scholarship worth
$1,000.
Steinberg is one of 35 scholarship winners announced yesterday
by the College of Medicine. The
student affairs committee of the
college made the selections on
basis of work during the 1963-6- 4
academic year.
Admissions Committee Scholarships worth $500 each have
been given to three freshmen,
Fred J. Gorin, Wilson Sebastian
Jr., and Peter A. Ward.
Gary Wallace, a junior, was
selected outstanding- 1963-6- 4
sophomore and was given the
Roche Laboratories
award, a
watch.
All of the remaining scholarships are valued at $250 each.
Forrest W. Calico, a Junior,
received the Kilgore Scholarship.
Ellis Honor Scholarship Awards,
established by a Lexington physician. Dr. William C. Ellis, were
given to Billy Ft. Allen and Gerald L. Points II, both seniors,
-

Dr. Guy Davenport will speak
at the meeting: of the English
Club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday In
Room 245 of the Student Center.
He will speak on "The White
Tree of Lothlorien: New Poets,
Movie Makers and Painters."

Twelve Pages

1, 1964

.

Edwin R. Nighbert, a junior, and
Martin L. Wheeler, a sophomore.
Receiving Harvey G. Hubbell
Scholarships were given seven
men and one woman: Victor J.
DiOrio, Shirley Ann Lewis, Edward A. Luce, A. Byron Young,
all seniors; William R. Crain and
David Rosdeutscher, juniors; and
'
George P. Allen and James B.
Greenwell, sophomores.
Those who won College of Medicine Scholarships include: Benjamin S. Bell, Harold V. Markes-burBill G. Roberts and Gerald
F. Sturgeon, seniors; John V.
Payne, Danny H. Kaufman, Leonard W. Mulbry, Herman R. Reno,
James R. Huey Jr., Robert L.
Rold, William W. Wennen, Stanley L. Greenbaum, and Kelly G.
Moss, juniors; and Charles R.
Allen, Raymon G. Jacobsen, and
Richard P. Williams, sophomores.
This was the first year that
medical scholarship awards were
made.
y,

test was justified due to the close
margin in the victory. He also
said it would have been possible
for a mistake to have been made
since the votes were counted by
hand.
The president reported that he
would ask a special committee to
count the votes. All members of
the original elections committee
were candidates for congress representative in Friday's election.
Members of the committee
were Phil Grogan,
chairman,
Vicki Beekman and Suzanne
Ortynsky. Grogan was the only
one elected, receiving 57 more
votes than were needed to place
in the top 23 of the 50 candidates.
About 13 percent of the student body voted in the election
of 23 congress representatives.
Miss Halcomb placed 23rd in
the election with 363 votes. Miss
Kington had 361 votes and Jim
Crockrell had 360 to lead the
losing candidates. They were followed by Miss Beekman with
356 votes and Robert Koester
with 354.
Beshear said the election protest would delay th first congress meeting. He said it , would
be impossible to hold a meeting
of representatives until the election was certified as valid.
The new congress constitution
provides that any challenge of
election results be made in writing to the elections committee by
5 p.m. of the fifth day following
the announcement of the results

Robert Trent Wins
First Scholarship
n Honors Program

A University freshman, Robert
D. Trent, Hardinsburg, has won

the first UK Honors Program

Scholarship.
The $500 annual scholarship
award was established this year
by the university with the approval of the Board of Trustees.

Trent graduated from Breckinridge County High School as
valedictorian of his
class. He is also a National Merit
Scholar. Trent is working toward
a degree in physics.

of the election. Official announcement of the results was made
Tuesday.
Beshear said only one of seven
bodies had
campus
for
appointed a representative
C.
congress. He said Samuel
Long, a junior in the College of
Arts and Sciences, would represent the Town Housing Council.
The president requested that
the representatives of the remaining bodies be appointed by
the end of the week. He said the
names should be turned in to
the congress office.
In addition to the Town Housing Council, the constitution provides that one voting representative be appointed from the Associated Women Students, Men's
Women's
Council,
Dormitory
Dormitory Council, Interf rater-nit- y
Council, Panhellenic Council and the Married
Students
Council.

Clarke, Price
To Head
Greek Week
Senior students Sue Price and
Dave Clarke will head the new
Greek Week Steering Committee.
Clarke, a member of Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, will be chairman
of the group, and Miss Price, a
member of Alpha Gamma Delta,
will serve as
Other members appointed to
the committee are: Clyde Richardson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
desserts
discussion
chairman;
Karen Pugh, Alpha Delta Pi,
special projects; Elaine Evans,
Kappa Kappa Gamma, secretary;
Alan Peck, Delta Tau Delta;
treasurer.
Phi Delta
Steve Gossman,
Theta, concert chairman; Susan
Sswyer, Delta Delta Delta, banquet chairman; and Scott
Kappa Alpha, dance chairman.
Greek Week is set for Feb. 9
through Feb. 13, 19G5. Tenative
plans include the banquet on
Tuesday night, dessert discussions
on Wednesday, the campuswide
concert on Friday, and the dance
on Saturday.
Members of the committee had
a weekend retreat last Friday
and Saturday to Camp Daniel
Boone to begin planning sessions.
Wat-kin-

s,

eaks In Lexington This Morning

Thurmond Calls For Conservative Vote
By WILLIAM GRANT

Kernel

Editor-in-Chi-

The nation's newest Republican

senator, Soutli Carolina's Strom Thurmond, told a Lexington
audience this morning that this election may be the "last time in our lifetime that we'll be able to vote for a
conservative, sound American for
President."
fund-raisin-

He told the group of central
that he strongly supported the
Republican presidential nominee, Arizona's
Sen. Barry Goldwater, as this "conservative, sound American."
ben. Thurmond was a Democrat until two weeks ago when he bolted the
Democratic Party to Join the GOP and
to support Sen. Goldwater for President.
II had bolted the party before In 1948
he was the Dlxlecrat candidate for Pres

ident, opposing President Truman and the
GOP's Thomas Dewey. He told the group
that, at last, he had found a party whose
ideals he could support.
Asked if his decision was in the making for a long time, Sen. Thurmond voiced
his displeasure with "recent" Democratic
policy.
He said his decision was baseu primarily on the Democratic Party's policies
of "big spending, accommodating the Communists, and disarming the country."
The major portion of Sen. Thurmond'a
speech was an attack on President Johnson's running mate, Minnesota's Sen.
Hubert Humphrey.
Sen. Thurmond noted that Sen. Humphrey was one of the founders of the
Americans for Democratic Action (the
ADA) and referred to the ADA as a
socialistic organization.
He said the ADA would "allow our
teachers to be Communists." He explained
that the ADA was opposed to the loyalty

oath some states require their teachers
to sign saying they have never been affiliated with the Communist Party and
will uphold American principles in the
classroom. Opposition to the oath, the
senator explained, would allow many
"Communists to become teachers."
Sen. Thurmond also characterized the
ADA as an organization that would favor
policies leading to:
"a socialized U.S. economy,
"recognition of that Godless nation,
Red China, and admission of them to the
United States,
with Castro's Cuba, and
"strengthening of the national government."
He said the ADA favors abolishing the
House
Activities Committee
and the Senate Internal Security Committee. "These are your committees In Washington," Sen. Thurmond said, "and they
are there to ferret out Communist,"
The ADA, he said, also would favor
accepting the rulings of the World Court

(an organization of the United Nations
and headquartered in The Hague, Netherlands). "Where would the United States
be," Sen. Thurmond asked, "with all the
Communists in the world and all the Communist sympathizers who call themselves
neutral if we were to begin accepting the
decisions of such a court?"
"Is Sen. Humphrey the kind of man
you want to be Vice President, just a
heartbeat from the Presidency?" Sen.
Thurmond asked. "Is this who you want
for Vice President," he asked again, "Hubert Heartbeat Humphrey?"
He turned to the ADA's conservative
counterpart, the American for Constitutional Action, and compared ACA's "ratings" for the four major candidates: President Johnson, Sen. Goldwater, Sen. Humphrey, and Sen. Qoldwutcr's running
mate. Hep. William Miller
The ACA percentages Sen. Thurmond
gave showed Sen. Humphrey's voting rec- Continued On Page 5
).

* 2

-- THE KENTIT.KY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

1, 1964

Local Studio Players Satirize Sex
Ry FRANK BAILEY

Krrnrl Staff Writer
Hipgamus, Hoggamus.
Woman's manogamous:
Hoggamus. Higgamus,
Man Is polygamous."
These four lines sum up Leslie
Stevens' two act comedy, The
produced
Studio Players,
by Lexington's
House. The theme is if
Carriage
a little nonsense goes a litle way,
then a lot of nonsense goes a
long way.
The story (what there is of it)
revolves around a professor of
Cultural Anthropology and his
wife, who is Dean of Women. To
this duo is mixed one shapely,
blonde Swede who wants the good
professor to help her have the
"perfect" baby. Finally a pinch
of confusion is added in the person of a would-b- e
lover of the
Professor's wife.
This stew begins when the sexy
Swede, Katrin Sveg. Charlene
decides to visit Prof.
Bell,
Paul Delville, Frank Hisel, and
wife. Content Lowell, Emy Lou
Redman. Now when Dr. Delville
first met Miss Sveg, she was a
little girl. But she grew up, and
how she grew up!
."

Marriage-Go-Round-

When wife sees "little" girl,
the stew begins to simmer. Suspicious run rampant and are
confirmed when - wife finds out
that the only reason why girl has
come to visit is so professor can
help her have the "perfect" baby.
This calls for wife to run to
would-b- e
lover, Ross Barnett,
(David Greenwald). She neds a
shoulder to cry on, and he is
only to happy to oblige.
The pot boils when wife catches
husband embracing Swede. Wife
runs to would-b- e
lover, relates
problem, and decides to "go home
to mother" (which is the situation comedy's answer to the
western's "Let's cut 'em off at the
pass.)
But the stew finally colls and
the play ends happily when husband apologizes to wife on bended knee, and sexy Swede for
some mysterious reason decides

to unmix herself from the rest
of the stew. Hurrah! Eureka!
Amen!
From a play of nonsense came
some no nonsense acting. Emy
Lou Redman demonstrated how
to play a skeptical, but intelligent wife who is worring about
her husband's
activities. She has confidence and
poise in her role. An otherwise
outstanding performance is marred only by slight lapses in diction when the Kentucky "twang"
shows through.
extra-curicul- ar

Most of the time Frank Hisel
makes the viewer forget that he
is really not a college professor.
But there are those few instances
when he seems more like a young

Though

lover and
wife's would-b- e
bination "soft shoulder

A

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Lynch's direction was
and
The only complaint with the
technical end of the production
is that the lighting and the prop

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However, he is a lively, actor
who has flashes of brilliance,
especially in his delivery of comic
retorts. Charlene Bell does an
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an intelligent,
class
Swedish girl is especially convincing. The only flaw in her
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

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Kyian Queen Contest

Society
...

edited by Frances Wright

Goldovsky Opera, Auburn Game
Highlight Week's Social Activities
Editor's Note: Because of the
change in the Kernel printing
schedule, the society column will
appear in the Thursday edition.
Any social activities that are to
be included in the column must
be at the society desk no later
than noon on Wednesday. Any
late items will be printed only
if time and space permits.
CONCERT SERIES
The Goldovsky Opera will present Puccini's "LaBoheme" tonight In Memorial Coliseum. The
event Is part of the scheduled
concert series at the University.
SORORITY DESSERT
A sorority scholarship dessert
will be held at 7 o'clock tonight in
the Student Center. The dessert
is to honor all sorority women
who have an academic overall of
3.0 or more.
KENTUCKIAN QUEEN
The Kentucklan Queen contest
will be held at 7 p.m. Friday In
Memorial Hall.
FOOTBALL
The Kentucky Wildcats will
play the Auburn Tigers at 8 p.m.
Saturday at Stoll Field.
PHI DELTA TI1ETA
Phi Delta Theta Fraternity had
its annual rose presentation to
the sorority pledges last night.
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
The Alpha Tau Omega pledge
class has elected officers. They

are: John Stir, Portsmouth, Ohio,
Bob

Palmer, Brandpresident;
enburg, vice president; Mike

e,

r

Louisville, secretary;
Wahner, Fort Campbell, treasMike Greer, Lexington, sourer;
cial chairman; Jim Mills, Lexington, public relations officer.
KINKEAD HALL
Kinkead Hall has elected dormitory officials. They are Tom
Swift, Louisville, president; Mike
Cummins, Louisville, vice president; Glenn Barnes, Shelbyville,
Ind., secretary treasurer.
KAPPA SIGMA
The pledge class of Kappa
Sigirfa fraternity has elected the
following officers. President, Dean
Charles; vice president, George
Antonini; secretary, Buddy Wilson; and secretary Bob Fuchs.
PHI SIGS
The Phi Sigma Kappa pledge
class will have a car wash from
S a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the
Phi Sig house on Huguelet Drive.
Cars will be cleaned inside and
out for a dollar.
STUDENT NEA
The University Student NEA
will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in
the Student Center Theater. Dr.
Lyman Ginger, dean of the College of Education, will be the
guest speaker. Education students
who have not Joined the UK Stu- Xav-ie-

dent

NEA can join

at the

meet-

ing.
PRESBYTERIAN CENTER
Intervarsity Fellowship will be
held at 7 p.m. Friday at the
Presbyterian Center. The Center
is located on Rose Street across
from Stoll Field.
PROFESSOR OF MONTH
Dr. E. T. Browne, associate
professor of botany, has been
chosen as the professor of the
month by the members of Phi
Kappa Tau fraternity. Dr. Browne
holds his A.B., M.A., and Ph.D.
from the University of North
Carolina, and is a member of
Sigma Xi, a scientific honorary.

Keeneland Open
House

Keeneland Hall will hold open
house from 5 p.m. Sunday. A
tea will be given by the girls to
honor
Miss Saundra Hobbs,
Women's Residence Hall Director, and the new resident advisors .

Planned For Friday

The kentutkian Queen contest will he hclil at 7 p.m.
Friday in Memorial Hall. There will he no admission tin age.

The winner of this contest, in
addition to being the yearbook's
beauty queen, will represent the
University at the Mt. Laurel
Festival in the spring.
Candidates and the organizations which they will represent
are:
Olivianne Johnson, Alpha Delta
Pi; Betsey Beecher, Alpha Gamma Delta; Peggy Ann Carter.
Alpha Tau Omega; Anne Vaughn,
Alpha XI Delta, and Betty Cline.
Blazer Hall.
Vicki Bradford, Bowman Hall;
Ann Denise Gardner, Breckinridge Hall; Janet Kington. Chi
Omega; Sheilah Ann Rogan,
Delta Delta Delta, and Stacia
Yadon, Delta Gamma.
Sue Donohue, Delta Tau Delta;
Jill B. Galagher. Delta Zeta;
Edith Ann Hammonds, Dillard
House; Judy Crumbaker, Hamilton House, and Jo Yvonne Cline,
Farmllouse.
Phylis Carolyn Nichols. Holmes
Hall; Penny Hertelendy, Kappa
Alpha; Becky Anderson, Kappa
Alpha Theta; Gail E. Davidson,
Kappa Delta, and Susan Stumb,
Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Tracie Owen, Kappa Sigma;
Julie Dee Halcomb, Keeneland;
Kathy Kerler. Lambda Chi Alpha; Annette Westphal, Phi Delta
Theta, and Ann Sutherland. Phi
Gamma Delta.

Tonl Barton. Thl Kappa Tau;
Eileen Carl, Phi Sigma Kappa;
Tat Witt, Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy
Ann Bartlett, Sigma Alpha
and Janle Olmstcad. Sigma
Chi.

Deborah Phinney, Sigma Phi
Epsilon; Abbie Caroline Caldwell.
Sigma Nu; Barbara Griggs, Tau
Kappa Epsilon; Marty Minogue.
n
Triangle; Carolyn Williams,
House, and Linda Thompson.
Zeta Tau Alpha.
Piano accompaniments will be
furnished by Anna Laura Hood.
Wei-do-

Announcements

PINNINGS
Maryann Colenda, from Fort
Lee, N. J., and a sophomore at
Temple University, to Marijan
Dizbar, a sophomore accounting
major from Union City, N. J.
and a member of Alpha Tau
Omega.
Judy Rockwell, Waynesboro,
Penn, and a senior of education
State
major at Shippensburg
College, to Frank Martin, senior
journalism major from Pen Mar,
Penn., and a member of Alpha
Tau Omega.
Teresa Ann Roland, sophomore
nursing major from Williamstown
to Chuck Kluesner, junior
major from Louisville
and a member of Phi Sigma
Kappa.

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* An

Unfortunate Outcome

Congress elections
are over (except for the inevitable
recount) and 23 representatives liavc
been named to represent the 10,500
Ixwington campus students for the
coming year.
Prior to the election we noted that
the opportunity to have a responsible
student government on this campus
was perhaps greater now than ever
before.
We cited these assets:
a a president of llic University
who is zcillin- g- even anxious- - to put
more responsibility in the hands of
responsible students and to give students a bigger say in University af1

he Student

fairs;
a new Student Congress constitution, the basis for which reus the
hope for a responsible and respon-s- i
i e student go i cm m cut;
a the lack of damaging factionalism in (his year's election.
In arranging for the election,
congress President Steve lieshcar
committed an unfortunate error in
judgment when he appointed three
candidates for office as members of
the elections committee and to be
election judges.
This was, perhaps, the loosest-ruStudent Congress election in years.
None of the traditional rules pertaining to campaigning inside the polling
area and to the placing of posters
were followed.
But if the election preparations
were unfortunate, the outcome was
even more disappointing.
Unless changed by the recount,
the new congress will be 100 percent
Greek. We submit that an
congress is inherently poor. No
poorer, we agree, than an
congress or any other conwhich does not give proporgress
tionate representation to all campus
n

k

groups.

A congress composed entirely of
any one group, to the exclusion of
all others, is a poor congress. It

does not provide equitable represen-

And They Danced A Lively Tunc

tation to every student on campus.
We feel that the present system of
elections will never insure equitable

representation in congress.
It is a poor system that is unaware of these representational shortcomings and does not face reality.
Several suggestions have been
tendered in the past year concerning
just how congress might best organize
to get the fairest representation. Obviously this system -- not yet a year
old -- has demonstrated in practice,
its

I

"

SYSTEM

jQfl

inadequacy.

We suggest that President Beshear
give primary consideration to the
future of the organization he heads.
Its future is by no means secure.
Allowed to continue on its present
course, it will never become an effective student governing body and will,
one day, just pass away -- unseen and
without eulogy.
We ask that the president immediately appoint a committee-cam-puswi- de
in scope -- that will consider
the loopholes in the present constitution and its possible reform.
We suggest that representation by
housing units would provide a much
more adequately apportioned congress -- possibly the fairest possible on
this campus under present conditions.
What has existed in the past must
not be permitted to continue. Student
Congress, as an institution at the
University, is at stake.

The Kentvckv Kunel

Kernels
Unhappy is the man who is not
so much dissatisfied with what he has
as with what the other fellow possesses. - Chauncey M. Depew.
o

Ability and necessity dwell near
each other. -- Pythagoras.
a

o

Words without action are the
sassins of idealism. -- Herbert

as-

-

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

Entered at the poit office at Lexington, Kentucky as second class matter under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Published four times a week during the regular school year except during holidays and exams.
school year; 10 cents
Subscription rates: 97
copy from files.

William Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

Gary Hawxsworth, Managing Editor
to the Executive Editor
Frances Wricht, Women's Page Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Sid Webb, Cartoonist
Page Walker, Advertising Manager
John T. Daughaday, Circulation Manager
David Hawpe, Executive Editor

Kenneth Green,

Linda Mills, News Editor

Assistant

THURSDAY STAFF
Sandy Brock, Assistant

Letters To The Editor

Reader Attacks Kernel Editorial As Disorganized, Illogical
Editor of the Kernel:
The editorial, "What Of Quieter
Victories," (Tuesday, Sept. 29), began as a series of disorganized rhetorical questions and attempted
combined to form an illogical attack upon the football program
at the University, and ended as a
To The

half-answe-

analysis of and comon the academic depravity
mentary
of those who participated in the victory celebration that followed the UK-Ol- e
Miss football game.
The anticipated "no" as an answer to each of the four questions
posed in paragraphs lour, five, six,
and seven oi the editorial does not
logically follow it serious consideration of those questions, first, it is
doubtlul that "those who found 'total
football' too much lo endure" suffered any more "heartbreak and
anguish" than did those who played
ami lost miserably during the past
two season.; because ol it lack ol
depth with which to compete in Southeastern Conference iootball. Second,
the "numerous line athletes" who did
not have the opportunity to play loot-bal- l
were not excluded Iroin "prolit- -

ing by attending this University and
establishing proud records as alumni." Whatever college football might
be, it is not a benevolent society for
the athletically inept and infirmed.

administrators. Paragraph nine offered no profound insights into "the

elfort by the coaching staff to prepare the team for the approaching
season. Fourth, the fact that Ole Miss
appears on the UK schedule does
not entirely account for the absence
of Negro athletes on the team, as the
editorial implies. These four questions
are failures insofar its they are used
iis arguments against the present UK
Iootball program.

cording to students who were there,
other reports in the Kernel, and accounts in the Sunday Herald-Leader- ,
no specific groups were responsible
for whatever confusion that resulted
idler the game. According lo these
same reports, President Oswald and
Cov. Breathitt were also on hand to
greet the returning team. It must be
assumed then, that they, too, added
to the confusion by participating in
the celebration.

substance of this success."

Paragraph 10 attempts to place
largely on fraternity groups the
Third, the "embarrassment of blame for causing traffic Jams and
censure by the NCAA" obviously confusion in the area of the airport
came only as a result of an honest and on roads leading toward it. Ac-

In paragraph nine of thcedilorial
combegins the
mentary on the victory celebration,
along with the analysis of the attitudes of the football oriented student
body at UK. The definition of the
Iootball team as a group recruited
and trained by the University can
also be applied to a rifle team, livestock-judging
team, debating team,
or even to teachers, researchers, and
"holier-than-thou-

"

Hi consists of an ungeneralization; mure auevidence is necessary to
prove that students who go to classes
live or six days each week and attend
or listen to one football game over
the weekend are placing athletics
"higher on the scale ol values than
more intellectual matters which re

Paragraph

supported
thoritative

late directly to the process called 'eduThe example used in para-

cation.'"
graph

14

(concerning students'

apa-

thy toward the report of the Warren
Commission) bore little relevance to
the context of the editorial.
Just what is meant by

"total football"

is

ambiguous

in the editorial. Coach Bradshawwas
presumably employed by the University for the sole purpose of improving the caliber of football being
played here. If the coach chooses to
apply the term "total football" to
his system for producing a winning
team, then his critics should be satis-lieto Judge how well he accomplishes that goal; the means toward
the desired end has been left to his
judgment.
These statements are neither in
the interest of promoting football nor
of
it; their purpose is
merely to suggest that the editorial
stall of the Kernel use a more solid
base from which to launc h its attacks,
and that sound, logical arguments be
used in presenting those attacks.
HOB 0. TODD
English (,'raduatc Student
d

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday. On.

I, IWil-

-S

Kliruslichcv On A Tightrope

Profit Motive Debate Shakes Soviets
By WILLIAM L. RYAN

The Associated Tress

Talk in the Soviet Union
about the profit motive has
Premier

Khrushchev

on

a

tightrope between the devil

of creeping capitalism and the
deep blue sea of Marxist-Leninis- t
dogma.
A

debate probably will enliven a Communist
proflt-moti-

Central Committee meeting in
November. As he has before,
Khrushchev may occupy the role
of compromiser and the debate
likely will resolve nothing.

Party members admit the
economy is in a bureaucratic
trap, but the notion of profits Is
difficult to square with Communist scriptures.
Suspecting him of capitalist
inclinations, Peking has called
Khrushchev the head of "a bour- -

The Malcontents
Angry General
By RALPH McGILL
As Sen. Goldwater continues to expose himself to
public scrutiny and as his often confused and irrelevant argu-

ments are heard and read, the senator increasingly creates
concern. He seems, at times, like an angry general out of "Dr.
Strangelove" or "Fail Safe." His sometimes extravagant criticism of Secretary of Defense McNamara sounds to some ears
as if it had an edge of hysteria in it.
The quality of the s