xt7h18342n53 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7h18342n53/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1958-10-15  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 15, 1958 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 15, 1958 1958 1958-10-15 2013 true xt7h18342n53 section xt7h18342n53 J

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Bennett Cerf Pleases
Record Crowd Monday
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titters, giggles, guffaws, knee
slappers. and inspired belly taught.
He collects stories from every
corner of the earth and returns
them to a world he fears has forgotten how to laugh.
"Alive today. Will Rogers would
be arrested for subversive thought
By DAVID I SLACK
and action." And later on. "John
The International Patron of Foster Dulles should laugh at himHonor, Bennett Cerf. mused his self, once in a while. He is like a
way through two hours of leisurely-pacebull that carries his own china
wide range chuckles, and shop around with him."
left Monday night's Concert Series
These and other salient points
audience in a benign mood. Mr. highlighted a lecture in which
Cerf is a tranquilizer that Squib Mr. Cerf sought to chastise the
and Upjohn should try to bottle. morbid masses. He did not swerve
A tranquilizer is precisely what preachment. Only in the latter
Mr. Cerf desires to be; he is the part of the talk did he become
gentle antidote for poison: Quemoy momentarily serious.
poison, Little Rock poison,
Most of the lecture was con- shotgun cerned with the aura of humor
poison, angry-bepoison. . . .
surrounding IBM. Adplph Rupp.
Cerf fights this mental malig- Arlene Francis. .TV. Iowa- governancy with a flaming sword of nors, plagiarism, Eisenhower and
EDITORIAL NOTE "The largest crowd we have ever had to hear
a lecture," John L. Carter of the
Concert and Lecture Series said
of the assemblage to hear Bennett Cerf. "We estimate it at about
8.000 persons."

d,

V

Bennett Crrf (left), with II. Joseph Houlihan, who introduced him
at the Central Kentucky Lecture, saying: "Mr. Cerf has chronicled

his own biography In his books, such as in Try and Stop Me.'
Certainly any man who has brought as much pleasure and enjoyment to the American public as Mr. Cerf should not be stopped."

at

-

Harvard Assistant Dean
IsJLeadership Consultant
Chafee E. Hall Jr., assistant
dean and director of admissions
and student personnel at Harvard
Business School, will be consultant
for the annual UK Leadership
Conference Friday through Sunday at Camp Daniel Boone.
Dean Hall will deliver the keynote address Friday evening. A
series of workshops on student
problems will be conducted Saturday morning. A faculty panel con- "

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:

sisting

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i

Chaffee Hall will be consultant
for the UK leadership Conference Friday through Saturday at
Camp Daniel Boone.

Education
Produces
Leadership
An Intensive study made by Dr.
Russell R. Renz, University of

Kentucky area coordinator in the
College cf Education in his pubLearning
lication,
for Educational Leadership," indicates that a student-directe- d
class
in educational administration produces better leadership qualities
than a"mcre formalized course.
The study points out that in a
student-directe- d
type of relationship, students become more receptive to sell and others, and they
will not change their concepts of
ideals, such as a democratic educati"Self-Direct-

on:--"

ed

.

The

ID PICTURES
lat day ID pictures

has not had his picture taken

should bring his yellow registration blip to the front lobby of
the Ccliseunt

--

A

After interdenominational servSunday morning, President
Thomas Sprageans of Centre College will speak to the group. The
meeting will be closed with an
evaluation session.
The conference is sponsored by
Mortar Board, senior women's
honorary; Omicron Delta Kappa,
senior men's honorary, Links, junior women's honorary, and Lances,
sophomore honorary.
Members of the committee in
charge of the event are Sidney
Crouch, Chairman; Sue Chandler,
registration; Cynthia Beadell, recreation; Janie Walsh, correspondence, Sid Fortney, evaluation,
Bettie Renaker and Norma Crawford, publicity.

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

ices

Volume L

Lexington, Ky., Wednesday, October

Numler

15, 1058

14

Downing To Preside
At FFA Convention
Howard Downing, Nicholasville,
national president of the Future
Farmers of America and a junior
In the College of Agriculture at
UK will be a busy young man this
week presiding over the 31st national FFA convention in Kansas
City, Missouri. Downing is the son
of Mrs. Agnes Fletcher, Nicholasville.
More than 10,000 FFA members

from

43

Officers for the 1958
class of the Phi Deuteron Chapter
of Phi Sigma Kappa were elected
Monday night.
Those elected were Ron Reule,
president; Bob Easley, vice president; Johnny Fitzwater, secretary;
Bob Easley, treasurer; and Harvey
"The licensing of professional
Huff, sergeant-at-arm- s.
Pledge meetings are held by "engineers is adding prestige to the
engineering profession," said Prof.
the class on Wednesday nights.
Charles Krauss in an address before an assembly of civil engineerKeith To Speak
ing students in Memorial Hall
Tuesday morning.
To Travelers Club
Quoting from the Kentucky law
Dr. Charles A. Keith, Richmond,
past grand master of the Ken- on the registration of engineers,
tucky Masonic Lodge, will be the Prof. Krauss went on to give a
principal speaker at the October brief resume of the procedure for
meeting of the UK Travelers Club, obtaining a professional engineer's
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in room license. He emphasized the importance of getting the license and
128, Student Union' Building. Students and faculty of the Masonic listed the qualifications for getting it.
order are invited to attend.

icensins:

Is Prestige

The University of Kentucky College of Agriculture will be well
represented at the convention. Bob

w

Fulgham. president, and
Bob G. Todd, Eubank, vice president of the Kentucky association
of FFA are official delegates to
the meeting. Ray Prigge, Boone
County, State secretary, is an
alternate delegate.
Scott.

1?

Bob Franklin. Lewisburg. is one
of four FFA members in the United
States named to receive a farm

electrification
convention.

award during

the

Douglas Downing, Nicholasville;

Dean Wilmoth, Cecilia; Charles
Watson, Princeton, and Joe McCarthy, Eddyville, will be awarded
American Farmer degrees during
the Tuesday afternoon convention
program. The American Farmer
degree is the top degree in the
organization. Only one Future
Farmer out of each 1.000 members
is eligible to apply for the degree.

Eight Get
Engineering
Awards

Howard Downing, junior in the
College of Agriculture, is presiding over the national convention in Kansas City, Mo., Oct.
13-1- 6.

SC Weighs

Students'
Insurance
A $500

medical reimbursement

plan, was discussed by the

.6

f

Witness For The Prosecution

Sandra Sue Smith, Miss Kehtucky, U receiving the full
treatment from James MlnUrd at the Law School's
practice trial last Friday. MLs Smith, portraying Prudence Virtuity,
cross-examinati-

proved to be a willing and capable witness.

on

repre-

sentatives from the Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America and
members of the Student Congress
Monday night.
Under either the compulsory or
voluntary plan the student would
be fully covered in case of accident
or sickness.
Parents are assured by the company that money for the students
education will not be depleted by
severe medical bills.
This proposal includes: miscellaneous hospital expense, surgical
expense', physician fees. It covers
all types of accidents on or off
campus. All regular enrolled students would be eligible.
Two versions of the proposal
were discussed. A voluntary student participation plan covering
nine months would cost studenU
$5.45 per semester.
A twelve-mont- h
voluntary policy

Five graduate
students and
three seniors in the UK College
of Engineering were awarded student memberships in the American
"
Society for Testing Materials
Friday.
The awards were given at a
Joint banquet of the Ohio Valley
District of ASTM and the Blue
Grass Chapter of the Kentucky
Society of Professional Engineers.
D. F. Capelli, mining engineering,
L. B. Claxton, metallurgical engineering, and L. S. Hardin, civil
engineering, were the three honored seniors.
Graduate students receiving
membership were Milton Evans Jr.
and A. D. May, civil engineering,
and W. K. Brown. J. B. Whitlow, would cost students $7.25 and
and II. L. Mason, mechanical en- would include summer vacation.
gineering.
With 100 per cent participation
Kenneth B. Woods, national the cost would be $6.&0V Both polipresident of ASTM and head of cies would cover students who
the Purdue University School of transfer schools. The plan does
Civil Engineering, addressed the not cover a married 'student's
family.
group on various problems faced
The North American Co. has an
in the construction ot highways, office In Lexington which would
railroads and buildings in the make possible
lck settlement
of claims.
arctic and subarctic.
.

may

be taken is Wednesday, Oct. 22.
Pictures will be taken from
12-- 4
p.m. (CDT). Anyone who

Jokes.

Cerf favors spontaneous humor
over the planned, gag writer',
type. To this "humor-laureate- "
ot
America, "laughter is healing."

answer questions placed before it
on Saturday afternoon.

'

One generally held belief which
Dr. Renz's study indicated was not
true is that in this type, of relationship a student will become
less prejudiced in his own likes
and dislikes. On the contrary, the
study shews that his personal reactions are net changed.

rs

,

States, Hawaii and Puerto
Rico will register for the convention which opens Monday evening and ends Thursday at noon.
pledge

ni

and-answe-

ut

of President Frank G.
Dickey, Dr. Charles Elton, dean of
admissions, Dr. L. L. Martin, dean
of men, and Mrs. Sharon Hall, assistant to the dean of women, will

Pledges Pick
Officers
ULawW6ai;iwo

pancake makeup. There was much
corn and even reference to the shaggy do and airk
joke. (Mr. Cerf wants it clearly
understood that there are no new
jokes, only cyclic interpretation).
We played an anemic questions
game at the end of
the session. 'The queries were uninspired and a tedious antlcllmix
ensued.
In conference afterward. Mr.
Cerf listed James Thurbor. E. B.
White, and Dr. Seu.vs (the Litter
for children) as his favorite Amerl
can humorists. His next persAiut
achievement will be called "The
Laugh s On You." It is a collection
of his own stories. Mr. Cerf deplores the smutty and minority-Jibin- g
out-and-o-

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERN EE, Wc!ius1.n, Oct.

10 S

Science Meelinjf
To lie Addressed
Iiy UK Faculty

Andiology Clinic Slaff
Aids Handicapped Persons
n.r LAURA TRIOR

by an evaluation to determine the
Directly across the street from degree of organic hearing loss. As
the age of three, trainthe College of the IMblo nt 020 early ns rending and use of speech
ing in lip
South Limestone, one of the Unilanguage should begin.
versity's most unusual depart- and
The clinic does not have a
ments, the Audiolofry Clinic, is

Jcrafed. The Aucliolosjy Clinic is
it
n
organization sponsored by the Lexington Council of
Jewish Women, the Kentucky Society for Crippled Children, and
the State Department of Health.
Its three responsibilities arc
teaching and training, research,
o'nd educational rchabflitation of
hearing for handicapped children
rnd adults. Clinical services arc
offered to over 500 children and
adults annually.
The clinic relies on fees for a
portion of its operating expenses.
Faculty, staff and .students of the
University are entitled to services
without a fee. The fees which are
charged are in proportion to the
person's ability to pay.
The average examination by the
Clinic requires approximately two
hours to complete, and includes
such tests as the Psycho-galvanfkin response method and delayed
auditory feedback, which const!- tute two of the most recent advances In testing hearing.
The Psycho-galvanskin re
sponse audiometry is a method for
measuring hearing that does not
necessitate a voluntary response
Jrom the subject. Infants as young
as six months can be tested by this
approach. It's principle of opera- - j
tion is based on the use of a basic
audiometer coupled to an ampli- tier and a graphic recorder. By
conditioning the subject to a tone
followed by a mild shocks which
causes small changes in skin re- distance, his hearing chart can!
be plotted when he begins to respond-to
the tone alone.
The delayed auditory feedback
is an electronic method of delaying the talker's speech a fraction
of a second while he is talking.
As the subject reads or talks, he
hears his "delayed" speech over
headphones. This disturbs his '
talking, and by noting the ap-- 1
proximate level at which his
speech is disturbed, it is possible
to determine the relative degree '
of hearing loss for each ear.
'
The development of speech and
language is necessary for all chil- dren who have a handicapped
hearing loss. If a child does not
adequately hear speech and other
environmental sounds, speech and '
language will not develop without
special training, and recognition
of sounds will not take place. The
first step toward rehabilitation in
these instances is a medical ex- animation of the ears, nose and
throat. This should be followed

training program for deaf

dren of school age. Intensive, daily
training such as can only be ob- tained in a residential school for
the deaf, or similar facilities, is
necessary for the older child.

non-prof-

ic

chil-

i

Collins Wins Awards
At FFA Beef Show

The Maysville baby beef show
and sale Wednesday, Oct. 8, proved
very profitable for Glen Collins,
vocational agriculture major at
the University of Kentucky.
After winning approximately
$180 in premium money in addiOct.
tro- Faculty members from each de- - tion to various ribbons and
1
Phies, the Mason County youth
Y
,,.'
nnr.tTn't
giVC l0C,UreS
l thls olcl his champion for $.53 a
fJVl" T
pound or $500. Olen and his cham- - -- - - pion had taken the Grand Cham- t
iviuini
iook laugning gas.
pion place in the Future Farmers
Representatives of UK depart-- i
ments of bacteriology and medical
technology, biology, chemistry, en- gineering, and psychology will at- -'
tend a meeting of the Kentucky
Academy of Sciences in Lexington
17-1- 8.

,,--

--- --

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StcwarlTo Speak

Serious Music
Is Presented
By WBKY

At Alumni Council

Mil.

,lnv.U. 0,1.

KrUNri..

KI NTl'CKV

moyii: ;i
AH!!I.ANI).-"A- U

At

:::)

iik
Soa."

27-2- 8.

205-20-

TolI

'

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2 0.1.

he

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.STRAND
Ri-'f-

and 8:45.
'Deadlier Than The Male," 3
i..)0 and 10:10.
BEN A LI "Damn Yankers." 12.40.
2 ;").). 5:10. 7.25 and 9.40.
CIRCLE 25' Raw Wind In Eden."
7.00 aiul 10 25.
"New Orleans After Daik." 9.05.
FAMILY "Thunder Road." (3.5
and 10:20.
"Toughest Gun In Tombstone,"

."

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7
ii

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07
:

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Cin't Hun

arid
X

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IM-.S-

11
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9 27.

Cat On A Hot TV.
1:1). 3.24. 5:30. 7:3) nc

9 45.

Stewart, rxecutive
Stewart has served as director
Ernest
of the American Alumni of the American Alumni Council
director
Council, Washington," D. C, will since the group set up a central
WBKY is offering a vanetv of
te principal speaker at a banquet office in 1951. Prior to that time programs featuring serious music
(hiring the Kentucky Joint Alumni he was editor of the Princeton thts c.ir. Music for the Collector
Alumni Weekly in Princeton, N. J., which features seldom heard works
Council meeting Oct.
Miss Helen O. King, vice presi- and assistant Cfty editor of the of the world's greatest composers
is one of the most popular pro-- ;
dent of the group and director of j Indiana. Pa. Evening Gazette.
He is a graduate of Phillips grams among WBKY listeners.
University Alumni Affairs, will
FiTsldc at the dinner at 6:30 p.m. Exeter Academy and Princeton Music for the Collector is n.r-- j
rated by Henry Hubert and is
6
Oct. 27. In Rooms
of the University .
heard every Wednesday evening . 8:52.
Student Union Building.
from 8:00 until 10:00 p. m.
KENTUCKY "Kings Go Forth."
Other features of the meeting
12:27. 5:03. 7:21 and 9:39.
Slay Willi Flocks,
This week's program will feature
v:U include a breakfast given by
t lie
following
selections: Four LEXINGTON "The Night Heaen
President Fank G. Dickey at his Pastors Arc
k
.Brass Canzonas by Gabneli;
Fell." 7:07 and 10:21.
home. Maxwell Place; a luncheon,
BERLIN (AP) The Evangelical
Variations by Kodaly; Over"The Hard Man." 8:49.
at which Penrose Ecton, president
cf the Lexington Chamber of (Lutheran) Church is warning ture on Russian Themes by Bala- -'
Connmrce, will speak, and panels pastois not to abandon posts in kirev; Piano Music by Schoen-berRed ruled East Germany under
and Die Hurnur.ue do Welt
and discussions.
by Hindemith.
Communist persecution.
Persons .attending the sessions
fiom rach of the six
educational institutions will
BELTLINE DRIVE-Ibe the presidents, alumni directors
THEATRES
cr secretaries, presidents of the
Electric
Heaters
alumni associations and two dele-t-itIf Necessary
from each association.
HELD OVER! HELD OVER!
Officers of the group are M. O.
Wrathcr, Murray State College,
That Gal
Wow!
T.

Vft:
I'.

HKY

I',.

XT namT
UL

Wcd.-Thu-

ft

M

I

IvtSlON

lw I iCillN

Oct.

r.

15--

1

6

DEADLIER THAN THE MALE

Jin

Djnicl Dclormc

Gabin

Alto
ALL AT SEA
Alec

Pea-;coc-

Guinett

lrcn

Browne

g;

.

--

state-support-

ed

OVER

N

"In-Car-

2nd

"

es

Miss Kinir. vice piesi-nt, and W. II. Goodwin, Ken-- t
cky State College, secretary.

.

In

Colorscop"

--

t

P

f

h:r

'..:

HELD OVER

"ivN

r-'-

3RD L'lG

'VJ

WEEK

STARTS TONIGHT
TENM-JSShi-

Available

Jack Lemon

June Allyson

TONITE!

"YOU CAN'T RUN AWAY
FROM IT"

For
PARTIES

Color

Sal Mineo

15

Scope

1

I

.

no

Cflt

2nd

Jas. Whitmore

v'A

mgm ... ,

1

LAV

HOLD! DAKINCJt

onaJiof Tinlloof

.

;'

Feature

GEORGE MONTGOMERY

IT'S HULA FUN AT THE BEN ALI
FRIDAY NIGHTS
KRESGE'S HULA-HOO- P
CONTEST

in

"TOUGHEST GUN IN
TOMBSTONE"

0)
n1

L

U

WILLIAMS

;

"THUNDER ROAD"

"THE YOUNG DON'T
CRY"

For Information

1ST RUN!

ROBERT MITCHUM
KEELY SMITH
and JIM MIT CHUM
(Ky. Moonshine Saga)

Also
2-90-

-

(Bourbon
$frcc! Ccn Can! Strip
Joints! Dolls! Dolls!
dand Eands)

PIKE

..

PHONE

ic-

DARK"

,:..;r: y.
Also .

v;

1ST RUN!

TPNITE!

"RAW WIND IN EDEN"
2nd feature
"NEW ORLEANS AFT?

"THE HARD MAN"

DANCELAMD

v.

MASTS LOLA GETS J

JEFF CHANDLER
ESTHER WILLIAMS

Scope

Aho Cuy Madison
Valeric French

..

OLD FRANKFORT

ENDS

"NIGHT HEAVEN FELL"
Color

Dar.cc at

WHS

BRIGITTE BORDAT
In

C

BIG WEEK

mi

VvD

no

ill

r

COME NOW TO

YOU HAVE

THE
ONLY UNTIL

November

SECOND FLOOR
JOURNALISM

4

BUILDING

To Have Your

Picture Taken

7
,a

if,.:

Sitting Fee - $3.00

,

Hours
For The
9-1-

2;

1:30-- 5

1959 KcEVfL'dcian

Monday - Friday
.,

.

1

:

i

x

Don't Be Left Out Of Your Kentuckian

I

� The Kentucky Kernel

t

The Readers' Forum

Umvfrmty of Kf.nht.kV

nrrnnd d
mttrr nl r the Act of Mrch 3, 1879.
Kntnrd t thf Tnt Office at I.inetnn. Kmliuky
hool yrar fieri holidnl nd
k during th rrgulur
Fuhllnhrd four limn
SIX IX)LLARS

A

Jim Hampton,

Andt

Errinso,

SCHOOL

Editor-in-Chi-

YEAR

fm.

ef

LAnr Van Hoose, Chief Sports Editor
Chief Sews Editor
Ann Robebts, Society Editor
Norman McMullin, Advertising Manager
John Mitchell, Staff Photographer

rwwT.AsHXET, Business Manager

Marilyn Lyveri and Judy Tennebaker,

Proofreaders

NEWS STAFF
Weissingeb, Editor
Joanie

WEDNESDAY'S

Jaum Nolan,

Associate Editor

Larry Van Hoose,

Sports Editor

campus. For a time, they were
shown in Guignol Theater, but conflicting schedules with dramatic rehearsals and productions forced the
series to continue in Memorial Hall.
The impossibility of satisfactorily
showing a movie in this hollow chamber was immediately noted, however,
as the poor acoustics there echo
everything said once or twice, making it quite difficult to hear and im- -

By J. M. ROBERTS
Preia News Analyst

Asfcciated

The United States

is assessing

the

ex-

as meantension of the Quemoy cease-firing the end ot the current crisis there,
and wondering where the Communists
will start creating trouble next.
Extension of the Quemoy truce from
one to three weeks represents a victory
for American pressure against the use
of force to settle jxditical arguments.
One of the chief results of the crisis
has been promulgation by President
Eisenhower of the idea that armed opposition to the use of force is now a
general American principle. Within a
relatively few weeks it has been applied
in the Middle East and the Far East.
For years it has been applied in Europe.
It vas applied in Korea. The strong
implication of Eisenhower and Dulles
statements during the recent passage at
arms with the Chinese Reds is that the
principle now applies everywhere.
The Chinese Reds are reiterating that
they do not accept the principle. "We
are free to fight when we want to fight
and stop when wc want to stop," they
said in their statement.
The fact is, however, that international
Communism wanted to stop its provocations in both the Middle Fast and the
Far East when the American posture became so Msi(ie that they could not
continue their tactics without risking war.
e

To The Editor:
not hard to determine the reason
for the current popularity of educational
television in American public education.
In many of our secondary schools the
shortage of qualified teachers has guaranteed almost any educational innovation a great deal of success. And the
current trend toward educational television is in line with the American tradition of public education which has always
produced a very large number of individuals neither able to read nor write.
Educational television will now make
it possible for an even larger number
of indiv iduals to discard their textbooks
in l.ivor of the
lecture
method which should have gone out of
existence with the invention of the printing press. This means that a very large
number of students will have failed to
develop the minimum degree of reading
skill necessary for future intellectual

It

ossible to enjoy a movie. So the
showings were discontinued completely, after much complaining from

the audience.
Extended Programs had charge of
Campus Cinema. It was a
venture. Tickets were 35 cents each,
or an average of about 20 cents
a movie if .you bought a season ticket.
Spokesmen for Extended Programs
have expressed an intense interest in
such cinema, and according to them,
the department is eager to renew the
scries, if Guignol or some suitable
auditorium can be used.
non-prof-

it

conversely, spokesmen for
Guignol still maintain, and apparlUit

ently rightly, that there is just not
enough free time in the theater, because of heavy demands from Guignol
dramatic productions, lilaer lectures,
music and drama festivals to 'schedule movies as well. They said it is
just impossible to work out a regular
schedule for the movies, and such a
program would require its own regular schedule.
So, the matter is temporarily at a
standstill. The whole problem could
be solved lit Memorial Hall were remodeled into a decent theater, with
acoustics and modern widely-spaceseats to replace the echos and uncomfortable chairs that now exist in
UK's only readily available auditorium. Moreover, many other programs such as queen contests, lectures and concerts woidd be greatly
benefited it the auditorium were
""
renovated.
d

The Quemoy

'I o The Editor:
Well. 'Hampton's Folly" has done it
again, so please tell me one thing: Was
the person vsho wrote the editorial "The
Wiltl Blue Yonder" one of those unfortunate souls who applied for air science
but was forced to take military science
instead?
(Name Withheld)
(No. --THE EDITOR).

Evils Of Educational TV

Campus Cinema
Lexington is generally regarded as
one of Kentucky's few cultural centers. It has gentlemanly racing, the
University, many first rate concerts
and lectures, plus places of historic
interest anil examples of excellent
architecture all within or near the
city limits, lint the city is noticeably
lacking in good cinema which may
be classed as artistic, or even good.
True, it would take a city at least
the sie of Louisville to financially
support a theater which confined its
showings to purely artistic films. It
should be the responsibility of the
University, therefore, to provide such
quality entertainment for the audience that undeniably exists in Lexington, especially among University
lacultv and students.
It wasn't long ago that such a
program was in effect on the campus.
Campus Cinema provided, for a very
nominal charge, both foreign and
American movies of very high caliber.
They weren't the most recently produced films, but they were good and
were quite popular.
They were discontinued, however,
because of a lack of a suitable theater-o- n

Who Wrote It?

Cease-Fir- e

The Red claim to retention of the
initiative is within itself one of the best
reasons lor believing that the Quemoy
ceasefire has now become the de facto
truce to which Secretary Dulles referred
as a prerequisite to international consideration of the Red territorial claims.
A voluntary resumption
of the
tensive bombardment would lead other
Asiatic nations to a sure judgment as
to who is responsible for the trouble.
This will become especially true as the
United States begins to reduce the force
recently built up in the area.
Many Observers would not be. surprised
if the international Communist campaign
centered for a while on Europe, through
propaganda connected with the jssue of
nuclear testing and disarmament in general. These are topics to which the Reds
have especially addressed themselves at
the current meeting of the United Nations General Assembly.
1 he Geneva
Conference on a testing ban will begin
soon. The Reds always make an effort
to divide the United States from her
European allies on these issues.
The Communist stirring spoon will also
be discernible soon in the boiling political
jm(s of Pakistan, Burma and again in the
Middle East.
Whether these or some other trouble
spots will again evoke the Washington
policy of lout against force remains to
be seen,
in-

is

lime-honore-

development.
I do not exjKxt cducatioii.il statistics to reveal this, however, since the
majority of students graduating in the
past were not required to do much reading and the graduates of television education will be no worse off in this
respect. The important fact is lhat educational television is now being
as the solution to most of the
ills of public education and the fact
is that it hasn't even attacked the central
problem the inability of students to read
and comprehend the material lhat they
must master in order to make further
development possible. An individual cannot stay in school all of his life for the
purpose of being spoon fed by bis intellectual superiors.
Sincerely,
Gerald K. Sort ell

Kernels:

"The only people who arc doing
anything to 'sell education are the
football players. They ate doing
noble woik, especially when wc consider how lew samples they carry."
IJ. K. Sandwcll. From the Daily Cavalier University of Virginia.

d

Asked what kind of exercise he
took, a fit looking elderly gentleman
answered: "1 get my exercise acting
as a pallbearer to my friends who
exercise." The Reader's Digest

University Soapbox

Military Minds Defended
(The following article was submitted
the Continental Army which helped win
by Michael Warren Brown, a member of our independence,
Gen. "Stonewall"
Pershing Rifles and ROTC. In it he Jackson's brilliant march around the
argues against a recent "Kernel" which Union forces at Chaneerloisville, Gen.
ejuoted author Herbert George Wells' Dodge's effective supervision of the conviews of military minds. While our opinstruction of the Union Pacific transconion is diametrically opjosed to Brown's, tinental railroad, Gen. Marshall's nation-savin- g
we are presenting the latter's argument
economic plan and Gen.
in the interest of fairness to those who
skillful and respect-winnin-- THE EDITOR). demilitarization
share Brown's feeling.
and reorganization of
11
you were told that Gen. Robert Japan as childish feats of mental incomE. Lee and Gen. Thomas "Stonewall"
petents. Logically then, his first stateJackson were unimaginative men of low ment must be historically untrue.
intellectual quality, would you believe it?
Nonetheless, it is with an undeniable
I wouldn't, and 1 was most surprised
ring of authority that Wells then declares
to learn that there are individuals here that "no man of high intellectual quality
on campus as well as elsewhere who have would willingly imprison his gifts in such
thoughtlessly answered "yes" to the above a calling." And yet, from what I've been
question by accepting as valid an opinion able to gather from various cticyclopcdiac,
of II. G. Wells' which maintains that
Wells never experienced the life ol the
is by
"The professional military mind
professional military mind.
necessity an inferior and unimaginative
It is apparent that he knew nothing
mind; no man of high intellectual quality
of such intangible enticement as service
would willingly imprison his gilts in such
to country and satisfaction of the prea calling."
eminence desire, one of the strongest
By agreeing with Wells, these unthinkdriving forces nr the human being. We
ing individuals have automatically placed must assume also that he was totally unsuch men as Washington, Wayne, Scott,
aware of the present-datangible beneLee, Sheridan, T. J. Jackson, Pershing,
fits of a military career: retirement iir the
MacArthur, Marshall, Eisenhower and a highest