xt71jw86kw2g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt71jw86kw2g/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1965-02-03  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  3, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  3, 1965 1965 1965-02-03 2015 true xt71jw86kw2g section xt71jw86kw2g Inside Today's Kernel
Albert Gore has called for U.S.
troops to withdraw from Vietnam:
Page Two.

Sen.

'TXT TTH TTD

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University

la
Vol. LVI, No. 70

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LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY,

I Ell.

195

explained:

EiRlit Pages

Young Republicans
Ask Student Poll

V

V

(

Kernel.

The letter charges that the

NSA has "constantly deviated
from its original role as a body
representing the advancement of
the academic lives of American

college students by taking extreme stands on all manners of
political questions."
It has been charged in years
past, during Student Congress debates concerning the NSA.-th- at
national group takes the "communist line" in its positions.
Congress President Steve
explained at last week's
meeting that he felt positions
taken by the national assembly
of NSA would not necessarily reflect on member student bodies,
since the group does not claim
that its positions represent the
thinking of all colleges represented.
Representative Winston Miller
asked whether it was possible to
join NSA in a provisional role, so
that the school would not hold a
seat in the assembly and thus not
participate in the voting. He indicated this would be a move to
avoid identifying with positions
that might not represent University opinion.
The following resolution was
enacted in the Feb. 2 meeting of
the Young Republican Club:
Whereas, the National Student
Association has constantly deviated from its original role as a body
representing the advancement of
the academic lives of American
college students by taking extreme stands on all manners of
political questions, and
Whereas, the University of
Kentucky Student Congress has
voted to affiliate with the National Student Association without first determining the opinion
of the student body of the University of Kentucky, be it there-

University Receives Check

Dr. Glenwood Creech (right), University vice president for University
relations, accepts a check for $250 for UK. The money is the amount
matched by the Lexington branch of International Business Machines
Corp. to a fund contributed to UK by several alumni employed by
IBM. Representing IBM are Howard Grossman (left), branch manager of sales and service offices, and Bill Fletcher, an accounts

representative.

Be-she- ar

fore

Resolved that the University
of Kentucky Young Republican

Club does hereby request the
Student Congress to conduct a
referendum of the students at the
University of Kentucky to determine their views on the question
of affiliation with the National
Student Association.

Indians Rout
Thomas Jefferson
From White House

the Associated Press
InWASHINCTON-T- he
dians have routed Thomas Jefferson at the White House. Rut
it's only temporary.
Cuests passing through the
Red Room at Tuesday night's
state dinner noticed that the
portrait of Jefferson which usually hangs there had been replaced by "The Last of the Mohicans" by American artist
Thomas Duran.
It was explained that the Jefferson portrait is being refrained.
The Committee of Fine Arts of
the White House picked the picture of the Mohicans to occupy
its place.
Dy

two-yea-

r

Pogc

ROTC

program is

Law-son- 's

second-degre-

1

e

Cumberland Avenue, a main artery leading past the campus.
A snowstorm Monday dumped more than five inches of snow
on Knoxville and East Tennes-

see.
After Willett shot the student,

his friends knocked the truck
driver to the ground and beat
him.
Homicide Capt. Fred Scruggs
said Willett had a bruised left
eye and nose and a "busted
mouth" as a result of the beating.

The shooting was near a
popular student hangout, the
"T" Room. Several hundred students were engaged in a snowball fight on both sides of the
e
highway at the time.
One student, Dana Fred Wolf
Jr., Knoxville, said he was 30 feet
away from the truck and saw the
shooting.
"The truck driver got out of
the truck and stood on the running board," Wolf said. "He
had a gun in his hand and
swung it around passing a group
of students and aimed it at Marty (Goodman).
"I saw him (Marty) fall on
his face and ran over to him.
1 was afraid to move
him but
turned him over. It
somebody
made me even madder when I
saw blood coming from his eye.
"Some boy grabbed the truck
driver's arm and when he did,
the gun was knocked down and
discharged. I grabbed his arm too
and all three of us fell in the snow.
1 hit him twice in the face with
my hand. 1 know it wasn't the
thing to do but I was mad."
Wolf said some motorists' cars
were hit in the snowball fight
before the fatal incident.
"Some of the people in the
cars stopped and threw snow
back and some just laughed and
rolled up their windows."
four-lan-

More News Briefs On Page 2
He said he stopped for a traffic light and had his window
down so he could see through the
heavy snow falling at the time.
Willett said there were several
boys throwing snowballs and two
of the missiles came through the
open window and struck him in
the eye and on the nose.

has

Pogc Fire.

the fraternity
ketboU championship: Page Six.

bas-Th- e

The Agriculture Sciences Center has
a new librarian: Pogc Seven.

Committee Proposes
Registration Process
By

TERENCE HUNT

Kernel Staff Writer
"An intermediate step toward a total computer registration
system" was one of the three plans proposed by the Student-Facult- y
Registration Committee for the Fall, 1965, registration
process.
registration. The motion for total
The committee, which met prcrcgistration was made and
Monday to initiate planning for passed by the committee.
Dean Elton said that under
the fall registration, is the same
the proposed plan all students
committee that made the refinewould fill out schedule cards and
ments in last semester's registrathese in turn would be punched
tion.
The intermediate step toward by the computer according tothe
total computer registration was classes and hours desired.
The schedule cards would
explained by Dean Charles F.
Elton, dean of Admissions and then be turned into the registrar
Registrar, as a system dependent and the cards would be processed
on an effective and complete pre- - assigning students to classes. Although class section numbers
could change if one section of a
class is filled, desired class time
for particular classes would not
be changed.

To Snowball Fight At UT
ll

fraternity

Computer' Seen

2 More Deaths Attributed
By The Associated Press
KNOXVILLE, Tenn.-Pol- ice
attributed two deaths, and possibly a third, yesterday to a raging snowball fight that erupted
Monday near the University of
Tennessee campus during a snowstorm.
A university freshman, Mar-neGoodman, 18, Swampscott,
Mass., was shot fatally by an
irate truck driver whose vehicle
was pelted by snowballs thrown
by students.
Police said Goodman was shot
over the right eye with a .22
caliber pistol.
Another truck driver, Walter
Lee Yow, 55, died Tuesday at a
doctor's office where he had gone
for treatment of ear injuries suffered when struck on the head
by a snowball during the incident.
Roland F. Lawson, 58, died
of a heart attack seconds after
his car was pelted by the snowballing students. His wife blamed his death on the snowball
fight.
"There's no doubt about the
deaths of Goodman and Yow,"
said Police Chief French Harris. "They are a direct result of
the snowball fight.
"I can't say about Mr.
death. Rut I think his wife
has every right to blame it on
what occurred out there near
the university."
Harris threatened mass arrests of university students in
any such future snowball affair.
The university also threatened
disciplinary action.
President Andrew D. Holt of
the university ordered an investigation of the snowballing which
led to the fatal shooting of Goodman.
Police said truck driver William Douglas Willett Jr., 27,
Creeneville, Tenn., was charged
murder and
with
released in $2,500 bail.
Willett told police he didn't
mean to shoot but added: "They
kept throwing snow in my eyes
fired a shot to scare the
and
gang as they closed in on me."
Harris said police had been
receiving complaints for years
about students throwing snowballs at motorists along West

Alpha

Two.

Sex" is on asset in interviewing for
0 job: Pogc Thrce

'TW

A student referendum concerning Student Congress' affiliation
last week with the National Student Association has been rt guested by the UK Young Repul lican
Club.
President William Arthur of
the Young Republicans called for .
the vote in a letter to the Congress, with copies to University
President John Oswald and the

Chi

"adopted" little brothers:
SAS has captured

new

I: y

.1,

Lambda

"I didn't mean to do it. They
threw snow in my eyes and I
fired a shot to scare the gang
away as they closed in on me.
I was afraid," Scruggs quoted
Willett as saying. Willett said he
fired only when the students tried
to drag him from the cab of his
truck.

Coed Treated
At Med Center

After Accident
Miss Linda Rankin, 19, of Ft.
Thomas, was taken to the Medical Center for treatment of head
cuts and a concussion after being
struck by an automobile yesterday. Her condition was listed this
morning as satisfactory.
Miss Rankin, a sophomore in
the college of education, was
struck in front of the Fine Arts
Building on Rose Street about
4:45 p.m. The driver of the car
was Robert Douglass Griggs, 33,
of 462 Rose St.
Griggs told police the girl
stepped in front of his vehicle
from between cars stopped in traffic in the lane next to the one he
was in.

House Works
On LB J's
School Bill
The Associated Press
WASIIlNGTON-AHou- se

Education subcommittee, with a
whirlwind round of hearings behind it, gets down to work today on President Johnson's
school aid bill.
Chairman Carl D. Perkins
hopes to have a bill ready
for the full Education Committee within two weeks, but the
way no longer looks as smooth
as it once did.
The bill, a centerpiece of Johnson's "Great Society" program,
came under increasing attack on
constitutional grounds as the
hearings went on, and early hopes
of avoiding a clash over the
church-stat- e
issue appear to be
waning.
$1.25-billio- n

D-K- y.

Dean Elton explained that
this type of registration system
could not be considered a true
computer registration since the
computer would not adjust class
times.
He estimated that "3,000 to
4,000 students would go through
the registration process exactly
as their schedule cards called
for." The completed schedule
cards would then be mailed to
the students informing them of
their fall schedule.
Students whose cards did not
go through the computer completed would be processed again
in an attempt to determine the
need of additional classes. After
this second processing with the
additional classes added, the students' schedule cards would then
be sent through the computer
again.
More students would then receive complete schedule cards,
and there would be no need for
them to go through the Coliseum
either.
It is inevitable that not all
students would get their schedule
cards completed. These students
would get the schedule cards
during the summer with a notice
of the omission of classes.
These students would have to
complete registration when they
returned to campus in the fall during the two days provided in the
Coliseum.
Students with the uncompleted schedule cards would be able
to trade IBM class cards as currency in an attempt to get the
desired courses.
Continued On Page

8

Kernel To Seek

Staff Members
Students
ing on the
vited to an
at 7 tonight

interested in workKernel staff are inopen staff meeting
in the Kernel office.

Room 114 of the Journalism Building.
The Kernel, chosen for the
last three years as the South's
most Outstanding College Daily,
is eager to comprehensively cover
all aspects of student life. By
drawing from students in all col-- ,
leges, at UK, this coverage can be

possible.

Any UK student is eligible to
work on the Kernel staff. Refreshments will be served at to-

night's meeting.

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb. 3,

19C5

ROTC To Explain

NEWS IN BRIEF

Sen. Gore Calls For Troops
To Withdraw From Vietnam
Albert
MIAMI, Fla.-S- cn.
has called for a
Gore
negotiated settlement of the war
in Vietnam that would permit
withdrawal of U. S. troops and
avert total war with Hed China,
the Miami Herald said today.
Gore was quoted as saying
that the goal of sucji a settlement should be neutralization of
the Indochina peninsula, and
that Soviet participation in the
settlement should be encouraged.
The Herald reported on
a Miami Beach interview with
Gore, a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee and
chairman of a subcommittee dealing with Vietnam.
The story on Gore said in
part:
"Short of major conflict, ' he
said, "a negotiated settlement
is the best we can hope for
and this only through the active collaboration of the Soviet
Union."
The situation in Vietnam today, Gore said, "is like having
a bear by the tail. We haven't
found an honorable way to turn
loose."
(D-Ten-

Investigation Sought

SELMA, Ala The publisher
Hos-we- ll
of the Selma Times-Journa- l,
L. Falkenbcrry, has sent a

telegram to President Johnson
asking that a congressional committee be appointed to "investigate the actual conditions existing in Selma at this time."
He said that the white community in Selma was making
conscientious efforts to comply
with the Civil Rights Act, but
that what he called "professional agitators" had come to Selma
to provoke local Negroes.
"We believe that the Congress should determine for themselves the true facts without regard to race, tradition or propaganda," the publisher said in his
telegram Tuesday.

Labor Party Survives
LONDON-Pri-

Minister

me

Harold Wilson's Labor government survived a move by the
Conservatives to overthrow it
Tuesday night, but created another crisis by announcing plans
to buy American aircraft.
The Conservatives tried to
bring down the government with
56-CeDebt Unpaid a censure motion that said WilNEW YORK -- The city of New son's first 100 days in office were
York says it will not pay a
filled with "hasty and
debt.
decisions.
Charles W. Chaney of AlbuDuring the rowdy debate,
querque, N.M., was notified Tues- Conservative leader Sir Alex
note Douglas Home declared, "The
day that the
which has been handed down in honeymoon is over. If the governhis family for generations is ment had a shred of political
worthless as a creditor's slip.
integrity they ought to resign."
The note was issued by the
During the session, Wilson
New York Water Works Jan. 6, announced Britain would scrap
1776. City Comptroller Abraham two partially developed military
D. Beame replied to Chaney's planes and buy similar aircraft
inquiry that the note probably from the United States. The fu- has considerable historical worth.
City and state laws, he said,
forbid payments of such notes
more than 20 years after they fall
due and that this issue was redeemed Jan. 2, 1876. Anyway, it
was not an interest bearing note,
Inc.
Beame said, and in any case
wouldn't be worth more than its
Radio Equipped
face value.
nt

56-ce- nt

four-shillin-

g

New

British
ture of the
aircraft industry is a touchy political issue.
The Laboritcs, which have a
majority of only three in the
House, defeated the censure
motion by 17 votes. Nine Liberals abstained and five Conservative scats arc vacant. The count
was
hard-presse-

d

306-2S- 9.

Germany Seeks Break
BONN, Germany Chancellor
Ludwig Erhard met with West
Germany's ambassador to Cairo
today to consider whether this
country should break off diplomatic relations with the United
Arab Republic.
The ambassador, Georg
returned Tuesday to report
on the U.A.R.'s invitation for a
state visit to Walter Ulbricht,
leader of Communist East Gervisit is to
many . The
start Feb. 26.
Fed-ere- r,

six-da-

y

West Germany claims it is the
legal government for all of Germany. President Gamal Abdel
Nasser of the U. A.R. was reported
angered by West German arms
deliveries to Israel.

DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,

Inc.

UNDERWOOD ELECTRIC, IBM,
ALL MAKES
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124 N. Broadway
Ph. 255-012- 9

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OFFICER

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the Cadet
1894, became
Begun
the Kecord in 1900. and the Idea in
as the
1908. Published
continuously
Kernel since 1915.
Published at the University of Kentucky's Lexington campus four times each
week during the school year excent during holiday and exam periods. Published
weekly during the summer term.
The Kernel is governed by a Student
Publications
Board, Prof. Paul Oberst,
College of Law, chairman; and Stephen
Palmer, senior law student, secret rv
Entered at the post oft ice at Lexington, Kentucky as second class matter
under the act of March 3. 174.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail-S7.- 00
Per copy, from files $ .10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2321
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Socials
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EMPLOYMENT

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ASK YOUR FRIENDS

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training will be held at Ft. Knox.
After successfully completing
the summer training the cadets
will enter the Advanced ROTC
program in the fall.
Capt. Ernest G.Kcrby.USAF,
outlined the Air Force program
as being similar with the exception that the base or bases for the
summer training have hot been
selected yet.
The Army ROTC unit will
hold a short meeting on Tuesday,
Feb. 2, at 7 p.m. in Room 111 of
the Student Center to explain the
program to all interested students.
The Air Force will also hold a
meeting at the same time and
date for the same reason. Their
conference will be held in the
Student Center Theater.

--

LKD
LKD entry and racing forms
are now available at the LKD
office, Room 116 in the Student
Center. The deadline for submitting an entry is February 15.
Entries may be mailed or left
in the LKD office.

Program

ar

By TIM LYNCH
Kernel Staff Writer
The Air Force and Army
ROTC units have implemented
the new two year program for
college juniors and seniors.
The program, designed primarily for junior and community
college transfers, is open to any
student who has a minimum of
four academic semesters remaining at the University.
The qualifications an applicant must meet arc basically the
same for both services. Capt.
Donald F. Stine, USA, explained that an applicant must take a
qualifying exam, which must be
completed by May 15. The student must also pass a physical
examination which will be given
at Fort Knox. The Army will
provide transportation to and
from the base for this exam.
The aualifled students will
then enter a six week summer
course which will run from June
14 to July 23. This
portion of the

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb.

'Sex Is Asset
9

'Mademoiselle' Announces
Board
Collegestudents are Members
Two
the

In Job Interview
Editor's note: This semester,

many University women will begin looking for both temporary
and permanent employment as
May and diplomas
approach.
Here, perhaps, arc some helpful tips to remember when sitting through those sometimes tedious interviews.
An employer is not merely
interested in typing speed when
he hires a woman according to
a candid employer-s-ey- e
view of
the job interview from an article
in the February isse of Mademoiselle magazine.
For years, articles have stressed the importance of office skills,
experience, not chewing gum or
saying "ain't," ad infinitum
girls hunting for jobs know the
dicta by heart. Finally, someone has been explicit about what
everyone has always known: it's
sex, albeit latent and subtle, but
sex nevertheless, that makes the
difference. The other attributes
are important,
but Nicholas
Breckenridge, (a pseudonum for
a recognizable name in the
b
TV-pu-

1

is hin

job complex) writes:
"A stunning appearance. . .
is a help." Not, perhaps, what
the purist wants to hear, but a
realistic job and seeker won't
ignore the revelation.
Intelligence and skills are, of
couse, expected; good looks, by
nature or artifice, are the added
but apparently necessary attraction. The little gleam of sexuality
engendered in the interview is
"generally subdued, and in most
cases spends itself in innocent
byplay. . . says the writer.
He adds, "Not that executive
waisilinesand
ogres with
wattles are likely to lurch totheir-fee- t
and chase prospective girl
employees around their: desks, but
the impulse, however buried beneath layers of marriage, fat, and
timorous habits, is often there."
The clue is for the girl to
recognize it and divert it into
"harmless byways."
If a girl is graceful, poised,
and displays wit and a sense
of style she's several steps ahead.
Obvious acting would blow the
whole thing. But a good sob
story, about a broken engagement, for example, has been
known to land a job.
44-in-

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TYPEWRITER
SERVICE
ADDING MACHINES
OLIVETTI ADDERS AND
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS

ADDO--

One has to have the right
eyes for it, though, and a good
actress' sense of restraint or

underplaying.

..

Mr. Breckenridge

has a few
other practical words of advice.
Don't, he says, try to pad a resume with a long list of previous conditions of servitude
(such as summer jobs waiting
table) or a monologue on the
duties of a former job especially if they weren't yours. An experienced interviewer can easily
check on these inflated claims,
or detect them on the spot.
Merely squealing, "I know
I'd love the jobl" isn't enough.
A girl ought to ask intelligent
questions about it. Employers
look for intelligence over facile
shorthand. One gentleman says,
however, that scientific, mathematical, and business academic
backgrounds are particularly useful these days, and that the English major who types with two
fingers doesn't have an easy time
getting a job. She should at least
be a good typist.
A girl should be willing and
able to perform the lowly tasks,
without heaving a sigh of
boredom. She should convince
the employer that she is able to
run when the time comes to run,
but will continue crawling when

women
representing
University on Mademoiselle magazine's national College Hoard this year. They are
Dorothy Ann Hartlett and Jeane Landmm, both seniors.
The two winners were selected on the basis of entries they submitted to the magazine's annual College Hoard Competition. The
contest is designed to recognize young women with talent in art,
writing, editing, photography, layout, fashion design, merchandising, retail promotion, or advertising. The girls will remain on
the board until they are graduated.
College Board members, located in colleges and universities
throughout the U.S., Canada, and abroad, act as Mademoiselle's
representatives to their schools and serve as the magazines liaison
for fashion trends and fads in the various parts of the country.
Members of the College Board are frequently asked to answer
questionnaires concerning campus life, new ideas, fashions, and
fads. Material gathered from these questionnaire? is used for features and columns in the magazine.
Last year Miss Bartlett, who has served on the board for two
years, answered questions on smoking trends at UK.
Miss Bartlett was selected as a member after she submitted
fashion designs for a college wardrobe in 1962. Miss Landrum, a
more recent member, submitted plans explaining a college board
promotion at a department store.
As members of the College Board, each girl will be eligible to
compete for one of the twenty guest editorships awarded by Mademoiselle each May. To win, a member must submit a second entry
concerning some aspect of college life. This is judged on
its originality and the aptitude it shows for magazine publication.
The twenty guest editorship winners will work in New York
during June as salaried employees of Mademoiselle. They will
serve as advisers on campus trends, interview celebrities, and represent the magazine on visits to publishing houses, stores, and
advertising agencies.
The guest editors will be photographed for the August issue of
Mademoiselle. In addition they will receive consideration for future
staff positions with the magazine and other Conde Naste
For Your Perfect

necessary.

WEDDING

IT'S POSSIBLE:

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GHANA?

OR

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FOR WEST AFRICA

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Elizabethtown College, Elizabethtown, Pa. 17022

252-581- 1

FLOWERS
For Any
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DIAMONDS

IF YOU

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109 E .SECOND ST.
Lexington Kentucky

work.

WATCHES

Mortar Board, a national
honor society for senior women,
sponsored its annual "Smarty
Party" at 6:30 p.m. yesterday in
the Student Center. Approximately 150 junior women having minimum standings of 3.0, and, thereby, eligible for membership were
invited.
Sophomore women eligible for
selection to Links, local junior
honorary, were entertained from
3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. January 28
at a Coke Party.
Cwens, national honorary for
sophomore women, invited nearly
200 freshmen with 3.0 and better
standings to a tea Feb. 2 at the
Student Center.
New members of the three
organizations will be announced
March 10 at the "Stars in the
Night" program sponsored by
AVVS. Any woman eligible for
membership in one of the honor-arie- s
who has not been contacted is asked to check with the
Dean of Women's Office for information and applications.

If interested, please write to:

ABC TYPE SHOP

vocation-

s.

Are a graduate with a strong major in one of the following: a. chemistry, b. physics, c. biology, d. engineering, e. mathematics, f. French,
or g. have a Master's Degree in English.
2. Are a U.S. citizen, in good health, less than 55 years of age, desire to
teach at the secondary school or junior college level.
3. Are single; or are married and with no more than one child.

Traditionally beautiful
and so sensibly priced!

"what-I-look-for-

Parties for women students
with 3.0 or better standings have
recently been given by Mortar
Board, Links, and Cwens honor-arie-

1.

Thermograved by

The writer surveyed some
business colleagues and came up
with these
that won't be found in the
al-guidance
texts. One friend
lauded his secretary, saying,
she can spell. She can read my
handwriting, and she manages
to make my letters more gracious
than 1 dictate them.
Another looks for young girls
because they are more likely to
become really involved in their

Ilonoraries
Give Parlies
For Coeds

NIGERIA

TEACH IN

INVITATIONS and
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Another paradox facing the
bright and educated girl is that
the more interesting jobs offer
lower pay to a beginner. . .It's
sad, but true.

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7

� "You're So Strong And Masterful
Well Make A Lovely Couple"

Inklings In Congress
Circumstance obscured a most
significant action taken by Student
Congress last week affiliation with
the National Student Association.
In interesting contrast with the
uproar which greeted past proposals
to join NSA, this time the
suggestion was met with little or
no opposition from the representatives.
Perhaps presentation was the
key to success. SC President Steve
Beshear relied on a thorough investigation in committee to avoid
possible controversy. Then too, the
matter-of-famanner in which the
proposal came to the floor discouraged hostile questioning.
Representative Winston Miller
raised a valid question when he
asked whether NSA compared favorably with another, younger student
government association. Obviously
he, and the other representatives,
were satisfied with the answer that
was supplied. We were not.
SC member Larry Kelly replied
Miller's question by producing
to
a student government manual published by the new group. He implied that this was all the new
group had to offer. In effect, he
dismissed the question as super-

nature of an empty gesture toward
the necessity for legislative debate.
Congress has demonstrated on
occasion this year the capacity to
discuss intelligently, and to arrive
at a consensus. Witness the "great
insurance debate."
Congress indicated maturity in
d
referring the protest of Martin
to the Student Publications

T71

Gut-freun-

Board.
Also,

and perhaps most important, it broke with the tradition
of campus political nonsense in voting to affiliate with NSA.

ct

fluous.

Miller's was the lone questioning voice, and even his was the
query of one who had already made
a decision but who wanted to eliminate a small remaining bothersome
question. It came much in the

It is most unfortunate that these
inklings of progress are countervailed by frequent lapses into childish
prattle. It is all too apparent that
Congress has not yet achieved the
proper perspective that it has yet
to understand the scope its title

implies. It continues to limit its
field of vision within the boundaries of the campus, and it continues
to avoid achieving depth in its considerations.
We have yet to see Congress involve itself in the actual problems
of campus life; we have yet to see
programs developed which will enhance the intellectual climate on
campus.
The NSA vote is a step forward, certainly, and we applaud
the decision to affiliate. But we
long to applaud a discovery by
Congress of its budding potential
for leadership.

thst

WAs-HTOr-

t

Post

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College. Daily

.

Univfrsity of Kentucky

Coolness From Europe
new season of coolness may
be setting in between the United
States and West Germany. Events
of the last few weeks point the
diplomatic weathervane in that diA

rection.

With the Unite