xt7zcr5ncr2v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zcr5ncr2v/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19630326  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 26, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 26, 1963 1963 2015 true xt7zcr5ncr2v section xt7zcr5ncr2v Blazer Lecturer
Discusses History
t

N WIN I
-.
i.tt

Bv

Krriit

doomed marine, n a shiiv-Vnot
iiniut:
ed i'luKi," sail )r. Paul Frederick Sharp in a Blaei
re entitled "Meaning in History," yesterdav.
)r. Sfi.u, pie-ittit ol Hiram
allege, Hiram, Oh
hashed that "whatever else

"Man

It

he

is

-

KERNEL

Alls

llailv HMm
.1

Vol. I IV.

So. st

I'ttiversity of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KV. TI LSD AY, MARCH

26, 1963

Eihi

Paget

U

nan

is,

-

mp

and his st

u

y

are than an unrelated series
vent- - involving hairier apes
mu by forces over which

upui

'

Ins ra
.II" eir.i
fv-.-

ititn

f

d

I.a-i- ?

a

that

suK

!

1

men and

avcats; bj ant it in, hades
carch tur meaning. Be
t.tt' i tri.it 'imeraretatioa

SSNrV

1

.1

fnr-nh-

;u

kraa

-

be

A&S Faculty Suggests
Teams Be Integrated
Ry 81

ajaaWies

imagination,

k.

esthetic

laate, ami pailosonato pnl.nn m
ilaboi .'
on inaarpretation,
Dr. Sharp stressed that facts
equal but "their import-ancsiiuniicafuc. raajvance, and
err.phasi- - - determined by the
historian- ol
their

e

1,.

iutt

"Every aerhnife student of history returns to the past deter -niiued to mark it. to study it. to
analyze it. to interpret, and to
invest its fact.- - villi pertinence.
::d meaning." Dr. Sharp -- aid.
He al.--o
aid that intellectual
curiosity and the ideas of
were valuable in le.irn-hjthe ammmgs of history.
In defining the meaning of hia-('- :.
Dr. Sharp -- aid that "his-laff- jr
i
mere ha ppening and the
vent is intended by no one."
( added that "event - a aaad- 11 word
for chance and
- on Ik hind nu n's back-- "
The Mram Pnesafeajl said, v
thr oppatdti t ial
the specti im
of hismrsml lav tight is tin
afogical ti paavidential explanation ct hi andcal meaning. 0
is mm m the central acti r,
man; history - tin story of G
:
:
rda
hip tc the affairs

d
of psychology, was
by a
majority vote.
. the
asaaiasi siated
In
icn - In
that the Art- - and
ult ga m record a- - sappsttaag
racial integration at tinteams at the t nivcr-si- l
v
ami that this fact be
t lr. Mehey and n
naeal that he instigate pracaod-kathi- - fact.
to a
mpli-- h
Dr. Michael Adelstein, assist-a- nt
professor o! Bnglish who

t

reconi-

-

-

ki

I'resitletti
ank ( ..
thai llie I nivei shy's
ilh giate athletit teams

i

The Bastion made
I)K. PAUL F. SHARP

J. Lott.

by

associate

rt
Dr.
professor

m
"Pel ie hm-oleaking
Man. I)i llu-i.siniili
yesterilav delivered the hrst
t
lit lines in the
it
I .ci ture
a
Sei it - named
h
S

ii

I

1

i

li

UK U

I. II )f

u

iir' dean

kiniuili
ii

men.

The morniim lecture concerned
the cultural perspectives of nan.
in the second lecture last night
Dr. smi'h told "i the three great
world traditions Western, Chinese, and Indian as equals in
world culture.
developing
Post --modern thinkers change
in the vision of reality from ordered to unutdeted has brought
fork
Western nan to as sharp
fac .i. Dr.
in hi tors as he ha

"I ilht r it - impossible tor man
to live with his world out ol lotus or it is not." Ir. Smith
that it is not. "that a Mill-t- o
order and orientation is rather
I11ndament.il in the human make
up."
Speakintz of current post mod
em philosophy. Dr. Smith said
that for 2.500 years
argued over which Bteta- physica system i true Be added,
"for then to agree that none is.
- a new
departure."
He pointed out that the exismethod
tentialist philosopher's
"con ; ta in centering down on
his own inwardness until he finds
within it what be Is compelled to
pt and can never gel away
from." In this way. he
the

wrong in itself." Everything deli nds on ist relation to the agent.

cesrtd

B

be-

be

Former FBI
To Siafh'

fjr

That the Athletic Board U
separate corporation unto itself and the Arts and Scienc-1

a

faculty has no baadmm making
such a recommendation.

i.s

IM

I

The inve tig

par.

si.
au'

ni uic ngainsi

uwge

rt

it should
ference
have
voice m its policy.
"One of the thing- - that hi
been least thought of is the academic effect of such a move'
said Dr. AdeKtein. "The image of
this I niversity in the mind of
and
good students, professors,
even a new president is import-

ant."
Dr. Adelstein stated that he
felt this action wa- - a move m
the right direction. He said:
faculty has a
in th: thing and sh iuld
stand up and be counted."
He stated that he also had a
similar motion but that Dr. Lo:t
presented hi- - first.
A motion
to table Dr. Lett's
rrt omnif tain n was made by
Dr. Lewis Cochran, professor ,t
"The

-

favored the aan ore be ieh moeg

Dr. Addsti in said be fen thai

an

riot

h

II
tt

k

X. (
ch

:: n ulted when
...
lid Pet
at for busin

..
his
j;tt nal gain.
State liaarajp) GeaeraL John
IV
iawidge, arts i igawd Kagh
mac, -- ant I: l)r li ter-o- n
t
Haamf be - entitled to have
1
me
Ids
an t old if be
ad
he -- hiiuld be prosei tiled."
"An exhaustive investigation of
entry aspect of charges against
aeter.-o- n
and any matters
thereto which the Invest
may disclose has been r- -

i'

fi i

gmsit

On?

ti

-

liVita Kuippa

MesatMtahip appHcatiotM liar
ran Delta K i ppa, junior
O
at. ' rrniwf men - national leader- dp and -- i
helarshlp hoaMr-a- r.
art BvaHaUe in the Dean
a Men's n i
until Waaaaay.
A"' oration- - inu--- l be return-r- d
l
;
the dean's affiee i
Maantaj in order to hi
p.
aansideved.
Xa be eligible tor Baember-dat- p
a student mu- -t be .it least
a ' 'iior and ha v a s
gtastdtag,
w members
wilt tie tapped
at Use Men - Award- - Program
A;..:i

l.

have pertinent know led g or information to the ca c to came
forw rd arc; tell him.
Inditing el the University's
bananess affalra began It da-a- o
but there - no indication
nifl take.
how hang the audit
rVterson will remain under
until the investigation
- comparted.
The attorney general further
stattd thai in bis opinion, "it is
includinu the cuizcnry.
bring
this matter to as expeditious
as proper discharge
conclusion
of our (tut a - permit ."
There wa- - a slight indication
that tin Peterson Investigation
would slacken the University's
starch for a President. The
length of the probe depends on
the out - ol event-- , aid Breck- -

hn i bimiil,i aid the gowcrnoe
naa agreed to hi- - retiue-- t that
all hafi mi I Ian gathered by the
Governor's staff, inwandtag that
trou, the private aadttiag firm,
be made tlirei tlv BVailaMe
to nn affiee."
Kagle, chief of the Attorney
General's Office Investigations
- a native of
Divi.-io-

EfM
N- -

wlv

initiated members

at Eta

--

language honorary, are first row
Mar; t heane; Ringo, Marj Anne
Ridge, and taroh n I r imer, set
Rowena I!. Baehling, Martha Inn

Sigma I' hi

Phi. ancient
from the left:
Bonta. Raleigh
ond row : lr.
Rurcbett, Shir- -

i;iiu

a

Cono;:: ;

IM

gfltl

'

-

tear.".-

He pomfttd out several
that were made both
and iiuamst the motion.

reasanabfj argaed that

great art beibl attend ta great
subjects: seen-- - from the Gospels, saajav battles ar disting-Bashe- d
!ord- - and ladles.
"With cubism and surrsalism,
( Bstthmed an r.ii- !

'

Srheduhd

traditional

tween the bbMsbm and the banal
BBM ha- - beea blurred in contemporary art, Dr. Smith said. "As
a- conceived a- hwg as reality
a great chain at be lug
y
a
of worth deseeaaahag from
Gad a- - it- - crown thraugk angels,
nen aalnali. and plants to
objects at the bast it

M

integrated intercollegiate

3. Because the University
part of the Southeastern

h.ue in it- - venture of tvut and
committment ."
The world- - of the 20th century
artist- - are "paradoxical, devoid of
sense; they are world.- - into which
protagonists are thrown without
trace a.-- to why the world which
the late French noveli.-- t proclaimed absurd.' "
Dr. Smith pointed to Sayre
play. "The Flie.-.- " as an example.
In this play "no act is riuhj or
The

tmded the motion stated that
basically the motion
the Kernel editorial and suppoit--

2. The policy of the Athlef:3
Board affect both the tudeiiti
and the profe.-sor--.

MIT Professor Speaks
In First Harper Lecture

mi

mad bv
MitisHK d on Page

Mill OTT
nU i dfetai
mm! s iences m
I

i

I.' ii;t gi ii .!.

ammj."

BoUectine memory in understand- him- - If.

in

I

1

t

e.

The Blazer lerAurer saM thai
man i curious about hi past,
e feel- - ihat H i human being,
an raabaes ff.e iaaportance of

in

ui vt'steula.

I

ml

i

!. Rough, third riw:
Gnthrie and John Patlon fourth row
llonald Ieau. Sam Burke Vlii hael tewart
and Have Beshear. lilth row: Tom tone. Ria
Matnrani, and Bob Gaatt :i

lev ( all. tb in and Veronica

la

x.

--

* 2,

- THE.

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tvcdby, March J..

1963

Five Students Pledge
Engineering Honorary

n Association, national electrical engineei
Eta K;i).i
honoi society, initiateil six ne members Friday night.
ben
Those initiated were:
Bauer, Cincinnati. Ohio; Edwin
Arce Jr.. Bcarsdale, NY Arthur
End

r

Junior

Charti
Di irlam, E msvUle,
KcS
Berry; William Oicie::
Covington; and Roberl Ratclift
MrleL
Dr. WUliam Janaen, associate
profess c .:' English, was guest
I held Bator-- ::
a bai
sp ..
Cowv
uighl at Tate's C:-e-

II C

Completes
Firs! Projecl

trj

irat of th;ee commonit
i)ri).iect.s has b in c
by the aaemben of Junl ir
Inter! raternitj Council.
Lti t Saturday pi dgea from six
fraternltiea arent I the C
Road cauldron's Home and lea
ed both the house a::ci the yard
and took the childien to the

The
pledge

motriea.

the project
from the

in

Kartieipaaaag

tn

!.,

hlia. Alpha tiatnma

ii

r..

William
Bafeevta Awe

tfmr i
FiJwin

baawrarjr,
!!Dierlaai and

Arthur

It.

Baser.

:

K.

'hales

Often,

Kelson,

am!

fcr.

SecoiMl

Young Democrat

MT Professor Speaks

lie'il :it
',:i

aatlaw

' li mm Pace I
inction be) een trivial
and Important :!. appears, Alarm
clock, drift
d, pi es ol br
sU

ects lor the most

monumental

paintings."
Dr. Baaitb concluded
ret or
Reality doe
Bun ft an ellipse In

li

and
v.

Indian

the

i

7

officers

afl
:

for

SOL'S

the

le
tlu:)
p.m. 'I iiur;!.n in

ToMg

In First Harper Leciui
tlM- -

are
Tw other .similar projt-c-t
being pkanacd for the future.

Esectlaa

M

;o,i of Fsuikhosrser

BatHd-

Diem

!

Comfort Shoe
PAiRING

A" Type
C

-

SHo: R;tvr
S?eei.:lisM
s
nij Dr Se1-- ;

fpcdic

F:jfui
113 So. Uopcr St.,

'

p

"

Nu
Kap
rommunity service projects, i
course for trashaasi
sliderule
electrical
engir.eing students
an
Hipnslainu of Bnglnecr'i
Day projects.
I

Then.
iiNu. electrical
keft
arc first row fraaa l

initiates of Eta Kappa

u:!!';'

-

FanaHoHw,
' Phi Delta
Taa Onega,

New

be hi MM

l&ci tc recognizt undcrgradnatea
in elejtricicl engineering with distinguished sch urahip and exceptional traits of character. The
la il chap r v. - inst alk
in

KhO,

1.u.

Zeta r.eia

na;:

.

i.::U-t.-

I.'ur;.:; ol iii- - .;:.ior lectfksj en- jiateeraaf .iu- - o i:: tio ajsti
i
his - :i;'r i las. Nf.v
third
lembets arc tfceted twice

LaaaMa

hraaHVStles:

Maawaag

Tu he iBiJoir i"r aaeaalMttsMp)
;.

Pioduc's

Lex.,

Ky.

nature

Isdoaa.

thought

meshing
wherever

possible.

that if
II will
it man

!

rh

Kt

cosmos in
Hating focus: ih
uhirh life Is set and againsl bis
I
be enacted.
d'vtiny no
ttrre !:. Smith
In t'is anaaad
ecpaaiw l thai the We tern i
natural wiseaaphasizrd
social wisdom
hine
dom, the

Trouters
will haM I
p in today in the
Gym. A party will be
Baaaa Wi feBawaag the
tor all acraeSM interested

at

Troupers

t

meetiim

If

Ibunni
held in
meeting
in join-

ing Ihe arganization.

'Dear
forms tl
con: 'Si

:

Chin se science d ies not i
velop because "statue is smething
to be appectated, intuited, communed v. ith. reverenced,' and he
added, "there h no laatstned
thought of using it or xnntinii
thai it might be mastered.'1
in noia the vast, dry desert
regions caused the inhabitants
to think thai "nature is ungovernable and. in some strange
ray. unreal." Dr. Smith said.

I
ir Ground
World

NSW YORK IAPI - One play
Jerome Kilty on the

is keeping
global go.

Kilty adapted the drama "Dear
Liar" from the correspondence of
Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick
Campbell, acted in it with Ids wife
off --Broadway
and in London.
Recently he has been traveling
across Europe to examine other
productions.
After seeing; three displays of
in different styles-realisti- c,
it in Mo-coromantic and gemireal-isti-c
- the air nor traveled on to
view interpretations in Poland,
Hungary, Greece and Italy.

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FT LAUDCftOAU
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One asn 111 65
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Pnone 255-344- 5
SSort 3frefit
219
i

.

tr

mm

wml tmnSYj sr mmi
noun mi cms m has.

mi

-

* THE KENTl

Season For Swapping
Pledge CI asses
D
Be Prepared
ij

thei
tunny E

i) 4 .: -

Migrating

th

I

Lleg

around the
Icend her

je campuses
Lb. Thi past

a1

k

KLRNEL.

Twa&ay, March 2h. 1963

Coeds Vie For Coveted Title
Each pear about this time
there Is i sudden Hurry m (he
women's homrfni unit.-- , m the
women try to decide who ta
- ..ci. prod, and cajole into applying for the Miss Lexington
Pageant Not that this is some
chore, mind you. its just that its

tin

Well, at lC aid alter the proper
,.ii,ount of eajottng dM agrees
and viola she immediately become.- a celebrity. All he v. anted
a.-- a little
coaching. The group
'ot all out iindiim a
place to It t maciame om en rehearse tan solitude. Plus other
various sacrifices.
After week- - of work, learning

won't be chosen till tonijiht.
Ot course this is all in fun but
the patient - worth seeing and i
is toaUfjItt. There are eiuht L'K
ct.ed- - in (he conte.-- t
and ..i.- -t
year - Miss Lexington, DebMc iv- laney. will crown and pert cm. As
an extra added attraction Mari!'
lyn Van Derber, M:.-- - Amerii
is5s will be mistress el cere- -

t

Clay

....

limning

The nest morning the Miami pledge.- - were off bright and early
Jit..;::.- - back for Oxford. They said that they really enjoyed the
opportunity of being able to theft and stay Ln the sorority house. The
Tri Del:- - here plan tc return the visit sometiaae and visit their

Kcrthern

Social Activities
PIN M ATES
n.
Fa ye Moore. .! senior ti m
and a rr.embtr ol Kappa
Kappa Gamma sorority to Larr
lor t;. a recent paduatf from
sj
Lexington, ar.d a member ol
Gamma Rhc.
in Ay Broadus. a sophomeie
frcsn Lexir.gtcc. and a r.tnker
ci Kappa Kappa Gamma trcr-it:- .:
tc David Mortimer, a sophomore from Lexington,
and a
member ci Sit;m;j Alpha EpEifon.
Pat Witt, a freshman physical
rr.ajcr from LfXjnp: ri
::d a pledge cl Fi Etta Phi tc
BOMf fouha. I senici from
Lrui-vill- e
and a rr.err.it i cf Kappa Sigma.
ton,
Dnnj gfSa ec. i ml
and a membei "t Fi Etta Phi, tc
:i
a
gftai il
burg
an J a membei ci Phi G.

IKE A DCNUT BREAK!
We're Gen ?i!! 2 a.m.
(
Cooking

For

and

iidt

are cooking splil
add a piece of .alt
U

pes

fo:

2

II

Dixie Ctearn Dcnut Shop
Delightful sauce for fish allots:
melted butter mixed with lemon
ju.ce and mn.ceci parsley.

Ever cook celery, cut into short
. and serve it in a cream
man psychology major from Wil-- I uot-sauce?
Dave Burpio. a sopho-commerce
rt
major from
Ever add match-siz- e
strips: ol
and
number of on red red
Harrodaburg
pa
apple to a toned
Delta Tau Delta.
green salad? The fruit adds real
flavor interest.
DKSSKKTS
Alpha Gamma Delta sorority
Dice celery fine and add to
entertained Phi Kappa Tau fraternity with a dessert Thursday creamed chicken, ham or eggs for
a crisp texture contrast.
evening at the chapter house.
Alpha Xi Delta sorority enter-tame- d
the Phi Kappa Tau fraSalmon, cod. haddock and haliternity with a deaatri Tuesday but are fish that flake easily after
cooking so that they may be used
evening at the chapter house.
in fi.--h salad.-- .
DELTA GAMMA
A Founder's Day banquet
was
Want those fried eng.s to taste
held at the Phoenix Hotel Saturdifferent? Brown a tablespoon of
by the Delta Gamday. March
of
butter, mfat m a
ma - rarity. In addition to the
vinegar and pour over two fried
Founder's Day ceremony, the active sch larship award, which is

PmwJ

South Lime and Euclid
Across from HollCl Halt

ONE DAY LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANING
At No Extra Cost!

SAVE 15

ON CASH AND CARRY!
"Serving The Students For 47 Years"
-B-

ECKER-

LIME & EUCLID

Phone

Scs Trapk Star cn!y at these
received

Prestonburg,

to

a junl
Ft. Th
Lambda Chi

.1'

im:

o

:

i

fiUplwi.

K

.:.
Phi

.

Authorized

El

bj

PHI
Sigma

HA K

tPPA

Kappa celebrated
Its Both anniversary of the foundi the fraternity on March it
ing
The celebration was heM at the
chapter house. Phi Si alumni
and the parents of the actives
and pledges were nuest for the
Dccas&ion. Darrd Hancock, a Phi
S:u alumna- - and candidate for
the leaislature, was the guest
speaker.
l
SIGMA
The following officers were
elected lor the 1963-6- 4
term by
the Kentucky Chapter of Sigma
Xi at
meeting held in the
Chem tarry -- Physics Mtikttng on
March 15. They are a- - follow.-- :
v.M. Insko, Jr.. president,
profeaar of poultry science; vice
president, Dr. Donald R. Jacob-so- n,
dairy science: secretary. Dr.
Richard s. Maarri . Mining c
Metallurgical Engineering; treasurer, Dr. James W. Herron, Horticommittee.
culture; executive
Dr. William R. Brown. Oeology;
Dr. William F. Wagner, Chemistry. The program al-- o included
a tour cf the new Chemistry- -

HALES PHARMACY
w PRESCRIPTIONS

MEN'S

a--

COSMETICS

FOUNTAIN

Open
S.

7

Free Parking

Limestone
Across from

TOILETRIES

College

cf Medicine

linf Green
... US jLWELERS

ille
ae
SH1VELEY JEVELERS
C

Gcorgdown
CRAVEN'S

..t

a'

M

JEWELRY

Gre e nsburg
H. E. SHIVELEY

Hopkins ille
CLAYTON'S JEWELRY
Louisville
KENNETH

G. BROWN

Louisville
SENG JEWELERS
.V.odisonville
JAMES A. BRYANT

M.ddlcsboro
CLYDE M. ENIX

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for you?

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SSdbyville
SCEARCE JEWELERS

Stcnfcd
THE TIME SHOP

o.m. to 10 p.m.

UK

Ar.cared Jewehrs

Ill

eh,

a sophomore
civil engineering
major, and a member cl Lamtria
Chi Alpha.
Merry Werr.er
E::gh-- h
major from Lexington
and a member of Pi Eeta Phi
a SCpho- sorority to Dave
gaore tcatmmia majoi from Eldorado, DL, ar.d a member cf
Lambda Chi Alpha.
m:
Martlvn Younp.
heme economics major from
Louisville, and a KOlbei of Alpha Gamma Delta, tc Jim Bersot.
a sophomore prehva major from
Louisvfflf, and a membei ci Sigma Alpha Ep.-iicLinda Hannr., I
nore
political science maj i from Lex-Ing- ti
i . and
a membei of Alpha
Delta Pi. to Butch Giatw, a s
biology major from
Mich., and a. membei of
Delta Tau Delta.
aecaiet McMillen a fresh

915

w

yoke

nk

music major ire
and a membei
Alpha.
Armita
(lark.
math ffc Genr.

h

a.m.

I
M

aC

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High

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i

* UK Athletic Poliov
Shouldn't Be Dictated
By Dixie Bias
J
(The Cornier' Journal)

,

state with an official ami- dbVrinunation policy, it is an an- ornaly lot the state university to con- done and practice it in the area ol
it is an- ili.it ni.it
iithk ii( v. I
!in.ili ;is within the context ol uni- tisii policy. I K admits Negro stuIn

t

i

i

dents without restriction, yet the j cannot play "'i its athletii teams. Why?
K is
membet ii die SouthBecause
eastern Conference and the conference
is to nave
.unlit
teams.
The Kernel the campus daih
contends the price is loo
high f. pa) lii conference member- ship, and sve agree. In an editorial,
Tht Kernel declares: "II the univer- Mt i to live up toits moral obligation
and make ugniheant progress as a
ma jot institution ii must divorce itell from the segregation policy which
dominates the Sosstheasteni Confer- I

e

Here and now with a withdrawal
hum tlu SEC "i .ni announcement
thai ki will begin t. recruit Negro
players by .i certain date, we have a
chance
take a real step forward."
T he lattei
course, we believe,
would lit- preferable to immediate
withdrawal. Looking .it the situation
from one .mult-- it would make more
tense ioi two m three othet confer
enct members
Mississippi. Missis- State and possibly Alabama to
j
,

i

i

1177133 70

imm

I

withdraw front the conference. 1 lie
lwo Mississippi institutions arc the
ocks o segregation in the con.
itK:uc- allhou8h Mississippi State set
a l,recet,en'
eaI in competing,
I'M (lit
time, against Xegro play- ers when its .t.kt-team pi a veil
V
in tlie N(
)n previous occasions
Mississippi State, although it won the
right
represent the Southeastern
refused to
Conference in the M
participate because it would have to
play u sins with
egro athletes.
-

i

.

I"st teams in die Southeastern
Conference have played against
conference teams with Negro players,
and rootball-a- nd
)Ul m basketball
die sky didn't fall in, and it wouldn't
Southern teams had Negro players
,:l tne" "un- u
5Ure lnis
)
would appeal to coaches. think ol
what a rich recruiting lield tin South
would olfei ii iis own schools started
seeking out good Negro athletes,
ad ol losing them by default to
tlil K1 1,1 die country!
1

"--

e.

!!

,i

o

1

I

hist ry department, then wi"t ;n
to s.i thai Ik didn't know whethefl
made a suii-liii.- il
Kentucky should
lamb in this case), lm thai he
knew the il.ic were not segregated)
and Ik didn't sit any difference
classes and athletii teams. I his
sounds likt i!k old line, "In sotm
one els do it. I'm afraid." What is
tin k to bi afraid of: I he LL If
the University's inlet nal
lii ies must
be formulated by the SEC, and it the
University must depend on ihc sEC
Ioi pi i siut. then I k i a laUurc as
a university.
n
tin same arti le, Pi i iU nt
sakl thai the problem cannot
be solved by student otinioj ot hy
I
would remind him
prison. il liat.
thai ii thin were no students, ihcie
would be no University.
university)
belongs to its students; therefore, ii is
iiu ii ii;Mt to hi allowed to take part
in formulating its laws and its policies.
nr.
Dami
an
tin.

liairinan Speaks

he Editor:

1

h

yom t dit

ic

i

ial on

Im.-

and
had to
I

K

:Mtiits will
Integrated
consideration 'i every feasprompt
ible solution to this problem Main

issues and the context in
night to hi s lived.
t horough study should be given
now to an alternative not mentioned
directly in youi editorial: the possibility "I integrating I In athletics and
sta iii in Ik Southeastern Conference. I his solution could strengthen
ol the i.;sii

whii

ii they

i

I k's
position ol leadership in persuading die othei Conlerence schools
to lolh w a similat policy.
he
iu suggest that
k is you
publu attitudes about integration ol
intercollegiau athletics are changing
rapidh in many southern states, II so
no opiMirtunity should be iosi to urge
effectively a change Ioi good in Conference custom oi policy. Perhaps this
could be dom hi si ii l k proposed
to integrate athletics ind to remain
in tin SEI
W. I Mm iiu ws Jr.
Faculty Chairman "I Athletics and
SEC Faculty Representative

I

liki

i

.1x5 Ftwth mm

.

.

n any event, the University ol
Kentucky N not in the Deep South,
and Southern customs and prejudices
should no longet dictate hs athletii
policy, the Board "i Irustees and
the tthletu Board "I Control should
announce that the University intends
follow
to recruit
Negro athletes,
through on it. and leave the next
move to the Southeastern Conference.

Kmlorst's Statttl
!k Editor
heartily endorse t mii stand
racial segregati hi which w as
reported in the Cincinnati Enquiiet
1

o

l

I

Integration Essential

he Lditoi:
Congratulatoins on taking the initiative in an important and controversial matter. Integration ol athletics
at I K is essential it we .u
la tall

To

I

Friday morning.
Yoa .nt to be commended fat taking a positive which will no doubt

progressive and
i and this move cannot come too soon.
In lieve that the most effa dve ai
tion would he the announcement thai
UK will recruit Nim athletes and lei
tlu si ( react as it will. I his not only
integrates athletics at I k but puts
previure on the othet schools ol the
Ii we are to get out oi the SEC,
SEl"
then let us bt thrown out because
out stand loi human rights.
Rh M k:i
Mmi ikin
fllO'll
(.itiillhitt

ourselves

a

open-minde- d

institutiu

UK Students
Take The Lead
(The Louisi ilk Times)
A minus sidelight
the school
integration argument thai has bu n
jf (iiiii ni Im nearly a decadV is the
c

act thai the white students, the very
people who would be most immediately affected by integration, are, h
and large, fat less disturbed about it,
u more in favot
it, than theit
elders.
I

I

i

Obviously, not every white high
school oi college student is overjoyed
the- prospect ot reality ol
by eithet
events in Missisintegration. I
and elsewhere have destroyed
sippi
and tendency to think oi segregation
;s ju.,1 .hi old man's prejudice. Nevertheless, the youth ol the South is demonstrably much more willing than
it
seniors to accept even when it
does not embrace integration.
-

part, hut only in a small part,
think, this may hi- due to the
enormous impact ol the Negro in athIn

Vt

letics, when colored boys (and siiiN)
hav proved theit skill and courage
and stamina. Certainly the Southern
white athletes have shown no reluc-tanto meet Negro athletes. Mississippi State's basketball team, fot i
ampie, was eagei to particulate in this
ir's N(
tournament. I he laci
that it would meet- - and did meet and
was defeated by a team having sev- I
Negro players did not bothei Mississippi State's boys. I Ik- game,
to press accounts, was pl.ixcd
v. itln mi im ident.
K
t
Uh sti:
he Ki
newspapes at the I niversity ol
tink. is urging that scliool's athletic
overlords to take what is. in out opinion an overdue step: ns. Ntio ath

Now

I

letes even though this may mean withdrawal from the Southeastern ( on-lem e.

"Here and im w," an edit ia in
the pa pei sas. "with a withdrawal
from thi SEC, m an announcement
that hi will begin to recruit Negro
players hv a certain date, we have a
golden opportunity to become leaders.
We can stand tip ami tell the world
that we, a Southern university, arc
siik and tiied of having a doctrine
ol racial inferiority rammed down
m

out throats."
The university itselJ is integrated,
with perhaps as many as !'" Negro
students on the campus. But its athletii teams have
presumably because many ol iis fellow
ihSEC tlo not want to
members
pla teams having Negroes.
fr. Frank Dickey, university president, w hile agreeing in pi im iple th.it
teams should be integrated,
uh I
asserts there is also a responsibility to
the bondholders who put up money
fot the stadium and Coliseum Withdrawal from the SEC might mean
difficulty in scheduling games and
result in Rnam ial loss, he says.
Granting the responsibility to the
bondholders, we are not sure this
point i completely .did. Even ii I is.
began t" recruit Negro athletes todav,
they could not play intercollegiate
ball until their sophomore year. In
the intervening time, I K nu! could
make some adjustment ol it sched- e,

l

l

I

.

i

l

ditoi

Integrate?

Why shouldn't oui athletic
integrated? Negro athletes
have proven time and again th;it they
are just as skillful as anyone else,
l ook at the
Kentucky
team, and at Loyola's Ramblers, am! at ( iminn.iti's Bearcats.
hen them is the field ol professional
spot ts baseball, football, basketball,
track, boxing, etc. Each has its outstanding athletes, and many arc
Negroes, skill, not skm color, makes
an ;.tli
In an article appearing in the
March 23, Courier-- ) uornal, two directors ol tin Ithletics Association, the
dean ol the Graduate School, ami ihe
head ol the history department here
in
that
ai I K, were quoted as
most ol the SEl will he integrated
before long. Dr. ( lark, the head ol
pio-gra-

til-Sta- te

1

bring much a bus upon ou by the
ihc University and
old guard both
ol KenttM k in general.
However, lei them t addle in the
abyss ol ignorance and bigotry hut
let them also allow those in the
youngei generation be free n live in
and tranquility with all the
merica regardless A ac-- i
people ol
ii!t nis ol birth ir:. ludi g color.
l

Cnj

Mi s

C

mgfon,

A-

-

ii

ck

ntuckj

TheJitKentucky Kernel
&

Er.tf

:

fi.'

n Mi

it

j

..

irffci Otttstmnding C ! g
Uxrvi Rsm or Kexti i .ky
!.

sl

r

h.s

W

E

lson,

H

1

II

it

bt

.I'!.:,

.1

DOLLARS A b( UO

m k li. Gt'Tiin;!

bare

Dadt)

.'

Kealadq

k

M
Edit r
Frrzi ktkm k. Stx rti Editor
Nancv Los., & .t .': Edttor
Ri

Perhaps there would be some open
dates fot a yeat oi so. but we think
that preferably to perpetutaing a system that has no place in today's world.

id

hy
To The

z

SV
i

Act of

.iJuy

MmI

jJ

1. 1S79.
una,

r

Jphn
D'CK

Frrmp

C

"vus

EdUwt

Wallace, Advert m Mumtwtt
E titor
J v Kit Klam. Art

TUESDAT NEW a STA F
StE En; icott, Scus Ed

Maxixk Cates

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Pagan,

,

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A&toc

tuta

* THE KEN Tl

(

M KERNEL, TuomIjv

-

March 26,

News From The Centers
Editor's Bate:
The Kernel

ah

will devote
p.o
month or. Um p ed page to
trom he -- even
the ne

MM
niTMt
1

PM

state.

Beaten

ASH! 1VD

Trcdon
.' Dr.

-

(

throughout
EVT1 R

ivciy body's

Bert

Ockerman

bu-i--

Centei students : ently
avocation. Tbif was one
i the points in hie lectttM which
the importance ol
emphasised
in

c

....

hisher education.

: is

NOKTHWEST

Dr. Ockerman, director of student I' ans ar.d scholarships
al
the University,
stated "Edu ..- -

t Id

ENTER

(

.....Party
3a:ik

at
The beat- -i
i Si g social event

.; the Left
the Northwest c.utt-:- .

p:e.::t

ma Icta.

:

..

...

was Jim Ham

...

ck, Charli

Har- -

-

M

....
KORTHI RN

rn;

!

Studi
in Covins; t
The members are Blaine Batch-wi- n,
Betty Lou Hutchinson, Ruth
Ann Mayer, H. J. Brewer, and
Bath Ann Meyer.
ASHL IXD ( I N n :r
Dr. MarshpTl H. WrubeL professor ol astronomy at Indiana
v.a.- o.ue.- -t
lecturer
University
la.--t week .'.t the University's
Ashland Center.
Dr. Wrubel, who was spi nsored
Astronomical
by the American
Society and tlx National Science
poke on "8omc
Foundation,
Modern Problems in Astronomy.''

orth rrn Center Queem

l?'!iim, ( o. a saphamore at law Usdversity's Nrthera ( ente-s- n
C'ovingtaw, h.;s recea)Uj been mleetoi .t Caaapm Qweem sh
i
t Arts and SciesKea and i
in the Callege
fraaa Erhmgcr.

Candidate For Governor
Takes Government Course
Attcndine the third annual Lett Bank Part) at
Northwest
enter at Henderson are irom the left:
Pat Met ullou