xt72z31njx1f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt72z31njx1f/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1964-09-04  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  4, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, September  4, 1964 1964 1964-09-04 2015 true xt72z31njx1f section xt72z31njx1f Ralph McGill
Dicusses Gold water;
See Page 6

J

University of Kentucky

Vol. LVI, No. 2

LEXINGTON,

UK Yearbook
Wins Award
The Kentuckian,
University
yearbook, has once again received an
rating from the
National Yearbook Association.
Announcement of the rating
was made by N. S. Patterson,
founder and director of this professional service directed at helping yearbook staffs and advisors
produce a more journalistic and
artistic yearbook.
"It's imaginative, beautiful, and
thorough as usual," Patterson
said. The Kentuckian was one
of six in the nation to receive an
A
rating last year.
score
The rarely given A
means that a book is excellent to
highly excellent in all phases
editorial, pictorial, layout, development; as well as displaying
staff ingenuity.
The competition is nationwide
and numerous colleges and universities participate in the program. Schools are classified in
divisions according to the population of the campus.
Editor of the 1964 Kentuckian
was Ann Withers. Ted Kuster,
this years editor, was Managing
Editor and Dick Ware was chief
photographer.

I

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,.

President Meets Freshmen
and Registration

Oswald Authorizes
SC Committee

University President John W. Oswald authorized Student
Congress President Steve Beshear to organize a student committee to study the registration and fee payment problem.
Meeting with framers of a petition calling for an increase in the original framers of the petiStudent Insurance
facilities and personnel dealing
tion, Jerry Conred, a senior eduThe deadline for purchasing with registration and fee paycation major from Falmouth, and
Student Congress Insurance has ment. Dr. Oswald said he acBin Milan, a junior electricsJ
been extended until October 1. cepted the petition, in the conengineering major from Russell-villThe cost Is $16 for twelve months' structive spirit in which it was
The two said they had colcoverage. Interested persons may conceived.
lected more than 800 signatures
contact the Student Congress of"I am aware of this petition on since Wednesday at 3:15 p.m.
fice, room 102 of the Student campus and wish to respond," Dr.
Conred said he and six other
Center.
Oswald told leaders of the group. student colunteers would conIncluded in the meeting were tinue collecting signatures
through noon Saturday. The
petitions and a tenatlve plan for
With Constructive Spirit
registration Improvement will be
e.

Oswald Receives
Student Protest
Dr. John W. Oswald, president of the University, today
accepted a petition of protest from students on the manner in
which registration and fee payment was conducted.
Dr. Oswald said he accepted
the petition concerning registra
tion in the same constructive
spirit in which it was presented."

The petition was presented by

Jerry Conred, senior education
major, and Bill Milan, junior

education

major, who have
been collecting signatures since
Wednesday.
The petition which was addressed to President John W. Oswald and the Board of Trustees
read, "We the undersigned members of the University of Kentucky protest the total lack of
adequate facilities and personnel
for registration and fee payment
of this the fall semester of 1964.
Dr. Oswald said that reglstra- -

Phone No. Additions

Students who failed to fill In
their phone numbers on the long
registration cards should report
to the Public Relations Office,
Boom 205 of the Administration
Building before Sept U to complete the form.
iwmtffWMWBiwratffrii

ID Cards

AU student entitled to an ID
card who have not had their picture taken a yet miul report to
Room 213 In the Journalism
Building Sept. 12 between 9:30
ajn, and 1 p.m.
Either a paid fee slip or a
completed schedule card inttst be
shown in order to have your pic-

ture taken.
Students who have already had
their photos made may pick them
up Monday through 1'riday in
the lobby of Memorial Colirum.

tion had been a trying experience for everyone and added, 'we
must, as we grow larger, devise
means of handling students in
as individual a way as possible."
Dr. Oswald assured the petitioners that steps were being
taken to improve the registration process.
"Steps have been taken to extend fee payment deadline to
Friday, Sept. 11 without fine,"
he said. "It has already been
decided that in the future the
fee collection process will be separated from the registration
process," he added.
Dr. Oswald also noted that
steps would be included to get
the constructive ideas ci the
students and faculty in a remedy
of the registration problem.
"I am also asking the Student
Congress president to appoint a
student committee to meet and
make constructive suggestions,
from the students' standpoint,
about future registrations," Dr.
Oswald said.
Dr. Oswald said a faculty committee would also work with the
student committee to work on the

submitted to Dr. Oswald Saturday.
"I realize the registration problem is a part of our growth and
we have to gear up for that," the
President said.
lie added that he could not
comment on specific problems In
registration and fee payment, but
indicated a longer fee payment
period without assessment of a
penalty would be Included in
plans for second semester regis-

tration.

Coach Charles Bradshaw today confirmed Moorman's departure, saying, "Our biggest regret
is for him in that he could be
almost assured of an outstanding collegiate career."
Six other football players listed
on the team's roster Tuesday are
also known to have left the squad
for various reasons.
The six are Bob Duncan, sophomore end; John Porter, sophomore guard; Wesley Simpson,
sophomore guard ; Gordon
Thompson, sophomore quarterback; Bob Ashworth, junior halfback; and Jim Boiling, junior
halfback.
Bradshaw said as far as he is
concerned Moorman's departure
is permanent.
Moorman, a
tackle, has been called the finest prospect among

pros-po-

et

linemen since Lou Michaels. He
had been playing on the first
team during practice this fall.
Bradshaw said Moorman left
for "personal reasons," but h
did not elaborate. The Associated
Press reported that Moorman's
mother said in Louisville they
have not decided whether he will
return to the University.
At Saint Xavier High School
in Louisville Moorman won
honors under the tutelage of coach Johnny Meihaus.
He also was twice named to
first string teams, leading
his team in 1962 to the state AAA
All-Sta- te

title.

Coach Bradshaw said, "We will

readjust personnel to absorb his
loss and continue in our quest
for an outstanding 1964 football
season."

Dr. Hartford Heads
Community Colleges

Taking higher education to the grass roots level is now
the main responsibility of Dr. Ellis Hartford, new dean of the
University system of community colleges.
Dr. Hartford, with 34 years of
work,
experience in education
holds an optimistic view of formal education in general and
community colleges in particular.
In a recent interview, Dr. Hartford expressed pleasure in seeing
the end of an era of educational
innocence. This era ended, he
said, after World War II when
parents of all economic classes
began aspiring for higher education for their children.
Now, Dr. Hartford explained,
Jife demands that those who will
do the work of the future be

i

-

.

:

-

trained beyond the high school
level.
The community college plan, as
Dr. Hartford sees it, is threefold.
It must provide two solid years
of education for those who wish
terto continue, offer a
minal program for those who will
become semi - professional workers, and after continuing adult
education programs.
"Community colleges promise
to meet the unprecedented demands of parents and their children for education beyond high
school," Dr. Hartford said.
two-ye-

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matter.

"Before our next registration,
there will be a planning session
concerning the registration process, to which representatives of
the special student committee
will be Invited to make recommendations for improvement of
future registrations."
Corned and Milan drafted the
protest against registration and
organized a station to gather signatures.
Conred said no one asked him
to remove the petition stand.
"Even some of the professors
signed the petition," he said.

Coach: Departure 'Permanent'

Maurice Moorman Kentucky's most outstanding line
in years-h- as
left the Wildcat football squad.

!,

President Oswald greets students at an informal open house in the
Student Center Ball Room. The reception followed a student convocation on Wednesday night.

SC

Sixteen Pages

Moorman Leaves
UK Grid Squad

I

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Low 60's

KY., FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1964

,13
I

Tonight's Weather:
Partly Cloudy, Warm

lf

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students have started a petition In protest of registration procedures. They
are pictured at tbe booth they set up near the

A gToup of University

-

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Student Center to obtain signatures for the petition. They have thus fsr gotten more than 400
names on the prtitton.

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sqt.

2

4, 1961

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept.

UK Students Housed

In

YMCA

The Second Street Branch of
the YMCA has been approved by
the University to house men students
This branch
now has accommodations for 75
students.
Located at 535 W. Second St.,
the Y has 47 double rooms, two
triples, and two single rooms. The
costs per semester are $141 for a
double room with adpoining
bath; $125 for a double room
with a private lavatory; $105 for
a triple room with private lava- -

Russian Books
On Exhibit
The

best Russian

books

of

are on exhibition for the
first time in the United States at
the University Library.
Included in the UK exhibition
are nearly all of the titles on the
1963-6-

3

Soviet Union's list of best book
of 1963 and about half of those
selected in 1962.
Dr. Lawrence Thompson, UK
Library director, commented that
Russian books In many respects
are inferior to those of the West.
This, he said, is largely attributable to the demands of mass probecause Soviet press
duction,
runs are "fantastically higher"
than those of Western publishers.
Dr. Thompson also pointed out
that some of the best efforts of
Russian typographers and book
designers have gone into the production of foreign works such as
Shakespeare, Heine, and Robert
Burn.
The current UK exhibition also
includes books containing photographs of art works found in the
Soviet Union, France and the
Netherlands.
The exhibition will continue
through September.

19&1- -3

COME ON! COME ON!

Building

The Second Street Branch of the YMCA has been
proved by the University to house men students
This branch now has accommodations for 75 students.

4,

LET ME SHOW YA

ap-

WHERE IT'S AT!

tory. These fees include the use
of a linen service.
The Yi facilities include a TV
lounge on each floor, tile floors
and private lavatories In each
room; two large baths on each
floor with private showers and
tubs; canteen service on the
main floor; free parking; individual closets, desks, and dressers
In each room.
Through special arrangements
with the Dean of Men's Office,
freshmen may have their cars on
if they live at this
campus
branch of the YMCA.
A $10 key and damage deposit
is required which will be refunded at the end of the semester of
the room is in good condition.
Students may occupy their rooms
between semesters at no extra
cost if they pay for the following semester.
Two counselors from the University will be assigned to each
floor of the Y.
The Second Street YMCA is
walk
located about a
from the University, is on city
bus lines, and Is available to all
men students registered in the
University.

.

TfjE

SHOP
CLOTHES FOR THE
GIRL IN THE KNOW

Ilathorn Appointed
Humanities Chairman
The University College of Arts
and Sciences has appointed Dr.
Richard Hathorn chairman of
the UK Department of Classics,
to additional duties as chairman
of humanities.
As chairman of humanities, Dr.
Hathorn succeedes Dr. Jacob Ad-lwho recently was appointed
chairman of the Department of
English, Speech, and Dramatic
Arts.

31 . .

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We hope you will drop in and
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� KENTUCKY

T1IL

KERNEL. Iiulay, Sept.

ll

1,

society
edited

ly Frances Wright
Sorority Rush Nears End
...

Mrs. John Oswald Forsees
Progress In UK Centennial

"The Centennial program has
great potential for whetting our
Busy sorority members and weary rushces are now reach- Intellectual appetite and feeling
for the arts. I have great faith
the end of the 1964 Formal Fall rush period.
ing
that there will be a distinct carry
over," said Mrs. John Oswald,
More than 600
University
wife of the University President.
women have expressed an inher preference card Sunday
Now firmly entrenched in Kenterest in the Greek system by evening.
tucky, the Oswalds still refuse to
registering for rush, and soroImmediately following preferto their
ence parties, the rushee will sign compare the Bluegrass
rity members were on campus
California home.
eight days before registration a card listing in order of prefer"Each has its own appeal and
ence sororoities she is willing to
preparing for the onslaught.
it makes them impossible to
"We all crowded into the house pledge or indicating "no preferand slept on floors and unr, ence." Sororities turn in lists of compare," said Nancy Oswald,
the President's
members it will accept.
Rang," said one upperclasswomen,
describing the sororities' prepaMatching is an all day process daughter,
Mrs. Oswald said the greatest
ration sessions.
and is done by the Dean of
meaning of the Centennial would
Last night and tonight rushees
Women's staff.
be the establishment of UK as a
attend the second Invitational
The period of judgement and
short skits, waiting Is over Tuesday night center for the erchange of ideas.
parties, featuring
"The University will be imvaried cor.tumes, and more elawhen rushees receive their bids
so many
borate refreshments. Rushees can at the Student Center and are proved by the visits of
as many as three parties
met by their new sorority 6lsters. artists and scholars," she said.imattend
She said she Is very much
each night should she receive Wednesday morning the campus
Cenwill be spotted with shiny new pressed with the Student
that many invitations.
tennial Committee and their
"These are the most refreshing
pledge pins, backed by colorful
plans. "I am impressed with their
ribbons.
parties of all," one freshman
enthusiams, and ability
rushee commented. "I realize now
"There seem to be many truly thinking, and etcute
plans," she
that each sorority has its share fine women out for rush this to make
said.
of talented
and imaginative
year, which means each sorority
Mrs. Oswald has already workshould get a good pledge class.
girls."
Several rushees agreed that It should be a lift for the whole ed with the Centennial Committhe latest set of parties are the Greek system," a Panhellenic tee in planning the Junior Class
reception last spring and plaits
ones they have enjoyed most." member said.
Maybe it's because I'm a little
more used to it, or maybe my I
confidence is boosted since I've r
m
i
hi hit
come this far, but I'm much
more relaxed than at the open
onset," a transfer student said.
The open houses began Saturday with six parties on both
Saturday and Sunday. Every
rushee visited each sorority house
accompanied by her rush counselor.
The counselors are carefully
selected upperclass sorority women who have been involved In
rush both as a rushee and a
sorority member. They have no
contact with their sorority during rush and live in the dormitories.
Invitations for first round parties were distributed to the women in their rooms by the rush
counselors at dawn Monday. "I
never thought I could get up
early enough to greet my rush
counselor, but I was so nervous
I was up at 5 a.m.," a new student said. A rushee could attend
as many as eight of these parties.
First invltatlonals, calling for
simple school attire, are very
similar to the open houses. "I
felt like a real pro by the first
invitationals, mainly because I
could walk into a house and see
a few familiar faces and name.
iatTs," a coed said.
This wee Wrnd will be a time of
ittt'Uion fur both sororities and
as the
members
jiroNprctlve
double seks lion process draws to
in end. Imitations for prefer-eiuul;;hc prtis-s- , more formal
and .nlfiiui than any of the
Hill be tiMributtd.
others.
Though a rushre may receive as
many as si cards, she must
limit her choice to three, most
likely the ttiree she will list on
ii 'ii

i

to stay in contact with the committee.
"I've had a year to look around
and see what's going on and
now I am ready to become involved in some of the activities,"
Mrs. Oswald said.
Also expecting more Involvement in the University through
the Centennial activities is Nancy
Oswald. "With Betsy in college

WELCOME

I'll finally be the oldest daughter,
the one who gets to meet everyone," Nancy said.
Mrs. Oswald said shortage of
living facilities was the greatest
problem her husband would have
to face this school year. She
chose the 10 month working base
for faculty members as his greatest innovation.

BACK STUDENTS!

Tomorrow Night and Every Friday Night

COLLEGE NIGHT
OUR DOORS ARE OPEN TO COLLEGE
Couples

STUDENTS

Only

SWING WITH CHARLIE BISHOP'S BAND
From 8:30 to 12:30

DANCELAND
Only Two Miles From University

on tne Frankfort Pike

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lege Students
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� THE KENTUCKY

Marines On Campus
A
Marine OfTicer
Selection
team w ill be on campus through
11
September
interviewing men
interested in obtaining a Marine
commission after graduation.
The team is particularly interested in men with high academic and physical standards
that can qualify for Marine Aviation
Junior and senior women will
also be interviewed for the Marine Woman OfTicer Candidate
Course.
The team, headed by Capt.
Bruce M. MacLaren, is located
in the Student Center. Additional information concerning Marine programs may be obtained
from them there.

Dental Clinic
1

Opens Sept.

A dental clinic is scheduled to

KERNEL,

Ag Engineer To Study Sanitation
extension

A University

agricultural engineer will start
a study in September on rural
The 12 - month
sanitation.
study project, by Kermit C.
Mills, will be supported by a
$7,400 predoctoral fellowship
grant from the Division of
Water Supply and Pollution
Control of the Public Health
Service.
Farmers used to have few if
any problems with livestock
wastes. The earth where animals
grazed was the depository. When
barns and feeding lots were
cleaned, the wastes were used as
fertilizers on croplands.

open Sept. 1 at the University
College of Dentistry, Dr. Stephen
F. Dachi, chairman of the colThis is still true on many
lege's Department of Oral Diagfarms Mills says, but severe
nosis, announched.
Dr. Dachi emphasized
that problems exist where there are
care rendered by students in the large livestock enterprises and
concentrated
systems are
college is of the highest quality. confined to feeding small areas.
relatively
Students receive thorough labGetting rid of huge waste ac- oratory training in all dental
before they treat
procedures
patients.
Patients accepted for treatUK Closed Monday
ment will receive complete dental
care at the clinic.
President Oswald announced
in being yesterday that all classes and
Those interested
treated at the clinic may call University offices will be closed
University extension 2849 for an Memorial Day, Monday, Sept. 7.
appointment.

cumulations

often is not simple.
"These problems have become
so acute that some operations
have been eliminated by court
order," Mills said. He pointed out
that a number of different systems are being employed to dispose of animal wastes but that
most are inefficient, make-shimethods.
ft

Mills said that dumping wastes
into streams is one practice that
definitely should be halted.
He is particularly interested in
noting if a physical breakdown of

animal wastes will enhance
decomposition. For this
he will use a fine
process such as might
be employed in sand
grading.

bac-teii- al

If reduction of bulk to minute
particles
up destruction by
bacteria, then stockmen and
large - scale poultry producers
might be afforded processes
whereby wastes could be more
easily disposed of without violation of sanitation laws, Mills
said. He mentioned that some
stock farms probably could find
ready fertilizer markets for processed wastes.

Friday, Sept. 4,

AIR TRAVEL
INFORMATION
RESERVATIONS
STEAMSHIP RESERVATIONS
"NO EXTRA CHARGES"
Phone
WILCO TRAVEL
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GIFTS
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AVENUE

Lexington, Kentucky
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163 E. Main

Sec PHIL COMBS
Our Campus Representative
at Hymson's

10

Will Dunn Drug

Discount on all Footwear
for all U of K Coeds

This offer through Sept. 12th
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Corner of S. Lime and Maxwell

The College Store
FOUNTAIN

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for appointment? d -

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Ofcn 'til Nine Monday Niyht

� You Think

'Fundamentally9
Speaking
It is encouraging to observe that
a portion of our student body is
demonstrating a kind of intellectual
maturity a concern for the truly serious issues that has made this country
really great
When matters of grave import
arise, so do they.
Let others concern themselves with
the bomb, with civil rights, etc. The
things that strike a responsive chord
with people, which inspire them to
statements and acts of protest, are
much more basic much more fundamental, you might say.

that other jazz. But
better be careful who you
you'd

Tlu-r-

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Ahv Cluinco We'll ttv Displaced?"

each year these people have had to
do this, and they're about fed up with
it. Grim mutterings are heard among
the discontented petitioners, drawing
followers to their banners, which proclaim: "Remember Station SixP
You remember back when the Faculty voted to take away the holiday
after our boys beat Tennessee in football? This was a time for angry young
men to take their cause to the people
. . . and they did. They went tromping
around all over the place, united in
singleness of purpose, crusading for
a basic principle. Who can forget their
stirring battle cry: "We want a holi-dayl"

You can have

make stand in a long line to register.
Once every semester two whole days

It echoes still, a grim reminder to
any who would challenge their rights
to be treated as adults.

GOP Bolt In Kansas City
At Sea With Goldivater
By RALPH McGILL
Sen. Goldwater, speaking from a"
yacht at sea, complained that President Johnson has withdrawn from foreign affairs. The charge was echoed
by Vice Presidential nominee Miller.
While these accusations were being
made the Kansas City Star, referred
to by Republican conservatives as
"Maker of Presidents," was preparing
an editorial.
For the first time since 1892, a
span of 72 years, the venerable, conservative and highly respected Star is
supporting the Democratic ticket. If
Sen. Coldwater is still not all at sea,
he may have read the Stars reasoning:
"We are convinced that the cause
the world peace would be better
served by Mr. Johnson and his foreign
policy, with its roots deep in both
Democratic and Republican administrations,' said the Star. "It would be
safer to keep Mr. Johnson's finger on
the nuclear trigger than to place the
awesome responsibility on Sen. Gold-wateWe fiankly fear the Goldwater
philosophy, transformed into presidential policy, might plunge the world
deeper itno the uncertainty of greater
international tensions. We believe that
to entrust the peace to a Coldwater
administration would le an unnecessary and undesirable gamble for the
nation to take. . . ."
The Star noted, too, the unbending insistence on Sen. Coldwater's part
that he is, in all cases, absolutely
right, that lie has simple answers to
all questions. The fact is that Sen.
Goldwater continues to reveal himself
as an appallingly uninformed and
superficial man. He talks of the Johnson administration as withdrawing
from foreign, or international, affairs.
r.

Sen. Coldwater's naive indictment
comes at a time when the President
is more deeply involved in the inherited problem of Viet Nam than ever
before. An American fleet is in and
near the Bay of Tonkin with an awesome supply of weapons-includi- ng
senator apparthe nuclear. The a
does not know that we still have
ently
some 400,000 troops in Europe, committed there as a block to Communist
aggression, and that they have been
there for 20 years. We liave nuclear
warheads for missiles at various European bases manned by U.S. troops.
Our troops liave been in Korea for
almost two decades. The senator

blandly charges withdrawal at a time
when a second U.S. fleet stands off
Cyprus and our diplomats, and the
President himself, are deeply engaged
in trying to work out a solution of
that crisis. It is a dilemma that both
Greece and Turkey could have solved
or quieted long ago but for the indeampendent, Communist-influence- d
bitions of President (and Bishop)
Makarios.
Yet Sen. Goldwater sees withdrawal. His description of the air strike
on the North Viet Nam naval base
following a torpedo boat attack on a
U.S. destroyer, was that it was an example of "extremism." The Senator
continues to reveal his superficiality,
radicalism and lack of moderation
and information. A New York Republican leader, who reluctantly had
agreed to suport Goldwater, said privately at the time of the New York
State convention to nominate Sen.
Kenneth Keating, "The greatest job
the Republican National Committee is
going to have is to find a way to put
and
Goldwater in a straight-jacke- t
him away from press conferkeep
ences or questions. He simply can't
be left to his own thoughts and words.
If he is, we will move toward a real
disaster."
The American people are interested in world peace. The thought of
perhaps 200 million persons being
destroyed in about 60 minutes of
nuclear exchange is a matter of concern. A Birch-typ- e
rightwing extremist has been quoted as saying, seriously, "Peace will begin when 400
million (Americans and Russians) are
dead."
The thought of Sen. Goldwater, as
President, distributing nuclear weapons suplies to field commanders to
use at their discretion, liis woeful lack
of knowledge about international affairs and politics, his almost smart-alec- k
assumption that he does, as the
Star noted, have all the answers and
that he is absolutely right, all add
up to decisions such as the Kansas
City Star has made. There iss nothing
of moderation in the man and no concept of the values of patience and
compromise. Certainly he does not
draw Americans together.
The conservative Star's conclusion
that we canot afford a dividend country is und imputable.

Deformities Plague
Football Players
To an outsider a person who
takes no interest in the cult of the
pigskin sports pages are coded messages beginning early in September.
The uninitiated and the uninterested
alike must share a disgust with the
'footballese to which many sports
writers and many coaches are addicted.
For example, a quick survey of the
sports section could give the uninformed the impression that football
players are usually deformed that
their bodies suffer gross handicaps.
Our own Coach Bradshaw said not
too long ago, in describing his charges,
"The boys were a little ru