xt7pnv998t19 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7pnv998t19/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1961-04-12  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 12, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 12, 1961 1961 1961-04-12 2015 true xt7pnv998t19 section xt7pnv998t19 Number Of Farm Families Reaches Record Low
Special To The Kernel

For the first time in history,
loss than 10 portent of American families live on farms, the
1961 Britannica Year Book reveals.
Citing the 19C0 decennial census,
only about 16 million person were
counted on about 3,703,000 farms.
This Is a decline of 30 million persons from the 1940 figures, and reflects In part a new and more rigid
definition cf "form."
But It chiefly reflects the decline

of farming as an occupation, the
Brltannica annual discloses. Only
1,800.000 of the properties classified
under farming In the 1960 census
were actually "commercial" farms.
"Not unrelated," the yearbook
article "Agriculture" continues, "It
was reported that of the 411.000
student In U.S. agricultural colleges only 31,000 were studying agriculture."
Though the gross income to all
farmers was up somewhat in 1960,
the net was about the same as
1959, approximately $11,300,000,000.
In some areas
of

farmers'

had
increasing fraction of
farmers undertook to work a
week In Industry, operating
their farms In their spare time.
The number of farm workers
declined lant year to the record
low of 8,344,000, which was-- 5 percent less than 1959 and 40 percent
less than 10 years preriously.
'
Farm families contributed
there were
5,694,000 workers;
3.650.000 hired laborers. The farm
workday averaged 8.9 hours for
hired workers and 98 hours far
Jobs.

wives

An

500 U.S. Educators
To Hold Conference

University of Kentucky

27-2-

tions may be woven to produce a
more satisfactory world in which
we

ran

live.

"Never before in the history of
our nation have we been as language conscious as we are now."
Registration will begin Thursday
afternoon In the Fine Arts Building and the first general session
will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
in Memorial Hall. Gov. Bert T.
Combs will present the welcoming
address to the delegates In the
general session.
Dr. Dickey will greet the conference members at a dinner Friday
night In the Student I'nion Building.
The meeting will consist of 38
sessions, some dealing with the
teaching of many languages including Latin, Greek, French,
Spanish, Portuguese. Italian. German. Dutch, Scandinavian, Celtic,
Slavic, Hebraic, Arabic, and Oriental.
Other sessions will be held concerning medieval studies, linguistics, and biblical and partlstic stud-

Vol. LII. No. 90

LEXINGTON,

KY., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12,

By PRESTON GROVER

MOSCO

W, Wednesday,
April 12 ( AP) Ixindon's Communist paper, the Daily Worker, reported last night that the
Russians shot a man into space
orbit six days ago and brought
him back to Earth suffering
from "after effects of the
flight."

and Western correspondents could
find nothing to bear out the story.
A spokesman at Tass, official
Soviet news agency, said reports
abroad of a Soviet space man came
entirely from unofficial sources
and no official statement was contemplated.
Asked if an announcement would
be published
this morning in
Pravda, the Communist Party
newspaper, he said it would not
be.

The Tass spokesman did not
flatly deny, however, that there
had been a flight.
A spokesman at Britain's Jodrell
Bank Radiotelescope Observatory,
which keeps track of space ships
and satellites, said he had no
knowledge of a new Soviet launching.
Communist newspapers In Europe, including Rome's L'unita,
which often Is first with news from
Moscow, had not received stories
similar to the London Daily Worker's.
The Cincinnati Symphony
The London Daily Worker,
its Information to
Military service veterans at the University and others in Orchestra, under the direction
sources in Moscow, her
the' Central Kentucky area will have the opportunity to learn of Max Hudolph, will present
a concert in Memorial Coliseum
of proposed legislation to obtain school lenefits for "cold-war- "

veterans at a meeting today.
Robert W. Sailing of Frankfort.
cf education for veterans
in the State Department of Edu- will meet with students
cation,
and prospective students at 3:30
p.m in Room 200 of the Funkhous- er Biological Sciences Building.
Salllng Is also president of the
National Association for State Ap- proval Agencies which Is directly
concerned with securing educational beneiits for military men
who served alter the Korean conflict.
A secondary
purpose .of the
meeting is to enable UK veterans
to talk further about forming a
University organization.
Purposes ol the proposed organization will be to provide all veterans with a voice in student affairs,
provide a social outlet for members, provide iniormatlon which is
of particular interest to veterans,

Symphony
To

Appear
Friday Night

WOULD NEWS
AT A GLANCE

'

create an effective lobby group
for legis,atjon which directly
cprn8 lts DlemberSi and promote
opportune, for development of
leadership
A
Ynth men ftnrt
men who served for at ,east gix
months in any branch of the ser- vlce are eligible for membership
provlded tn,.y have an overal, ac.
ademic standing of 2.0.

..

Weather
The 11. S. Weather Bureau at
Blue Grass Field forecasts cloudy
and cool weather for today with
rain late tonight. High 55, Low
42.

for the next
Temperatures
five days will average from 8 to
10 degrees below normal for the
Lexington area.

DcCaiille liesiunes lVace Talks
AP' President Charles De Gaulle reopened the
PARIS. April
door to peace talks with the Algerian nationalist rebels today. He
with Fiance and threatened
offered aid to a future Algeria
reprisals should the North African territory go it alone.
In a statement on Algerian policy to a crowded news conference,
the president said colonies were outmoded and too costly in the present
world and poke of a possible accord with the rebel regime.
11

(

Friday night.
,'v

r

The c o n c a r t
will be presented
Y; as a bonus tor

Eight Pager

mpmhpri nf the
Central Kentucky
Concert - Lecture
Association. Admittance will be
for season ticket
holders and students with ID
cards.
MAX Kl DOI.l'II
Xhe Cincinnati
is the fifth oldest symSymphony
phony orchestra in the country.
orchestra
Today, the
gives approximately 100 concerts
"at home" and on tour each season.
Mr. Randolph, former conductor
and Artistic Administrator of the
Metropolitan Opera, became the
music director of the symphony
in 1958.

fori

An exhibition of lithographs by Kalston Crawford will open
Sunday in the Art Gallery of the Fine Arts Building and continue through May 7.
r.
pfr,,nCes at AJanta in India.

Crawford will speak to the
Art Club at 1 p.m. Friday.
The majority of the lithographs
on exhibition, assembled by the
Art Department, will appear as illustrations in a monograph, "The
Lithographs of Ralston Crawford."
soon to be published by the University Press.
are autobio
His lithographs
Journal re- graphic entries in
cording his thoughts in places such
as New York, Paris, New Orleans,
Minneapolis, and Barcelona. These
thoughts are colored by his ex- -

Kennedy Wage Hill Intact

WASHINGTON, April 11 (AP) President Kennedy's
wage bill, shredded by the House last month, emerged from
committee today with almost all his pet provisions intact.
By a 13-- 2 vote, the Labor Committee voted to raise the
wage, now at $1 an hour, to $1.25 an hour and to extend that
to four million more workers.

Cuban Press Ignores Ketl Hloe
11
The

minimum
a Senate
minimum
minimum

government-controlled
(AP)
press today
April
ignoied the possibility of assistance from the Communist bloc in reattacks from abroad. Instead it proclaimed widespread Latin
pulsing
American support for Prime Minister Fidel Castro's regime.
Castro also appealed to be quietly mobilizing his
defenses again, including the workers militia. But the press and radio
clumped a tight blackout on news that Cuban exiles in the United
States are preparing for an invasion.

HAVANA,

alded "the first man in space" in
splashy big headlines and said the
astronaut was the test pilot son of
a leading Soviet aircraft designer.
The story said the astronaut "is
understood to be suffering aftereffects from his flight," and was
under constant attention and observation of leading Soviet medical
specialists and space scientists.
The paper said he completed
three orbits around the Earth some
200 miles out in space last Friday
before his V, ton vehicle returned to Earth on command.
The story appeared only a day
after rumors swept Moscow that
the Russians were about to announce the completion of a manned space flight. Communists newsmen here apparently had been
tipped off from some source to ex- -.
pect an announcement.
No statement was issued, however, and a Foreign Ministry,
spokesman said Monday that he
knew nothing about It.
Some correspondents here raised
questions, when no announcement
was forthcoming, whether something might have gone wrong.

Exhibition OfLithographs
Opens Sunday In Gallery

Kennedy Urges Latin Aid

WASHINGTON, April 11 (AP) President Kennedy said tonight
"if we don't move now" to aid Latin American nations, Cuba's Prime
Minister Fidel Castro "may become a greater danger than he is today."
The President also asserted that Latin America "Is In a most
critical period in its relations with us."
Kennedy made these remarks in a television interview taped for
nationwide broadcast by NBC.

1I

Russian Orbits Earth,
London Paper States

There was no official confirmies.
Dr. Jonah W. Skiles. professor of ation of the report here, however.
ancient languages, is the director
of the conference, and Dr. Norman
H. Binger, associate professor of
modern foreign languages, is the
codirector.

Veterans To Discuss
GI Benefits Today

astronomy to veterinary medicine,
medicln
wine production,
and roology.
Added features of the 1961 year-boartiare two feature-lengt- h
cles: "The Voice of Latin America,'
William Benton, publisher and
by
chairman of the board of director
of Encyclopaedia Brltannica, and
"Healthy Added Years," by Dr.
Edward L. Bortz, revealing th
enormous growth In numbers of
older people today and describing
measures to solve the problem
Inherent In this Increase In long
evity.

C1E IEJRTCE IL

Some 500 educators and language teachers from the United
States and foreign countries are expected to attend the 14th
annual Foreign Language Confe rente April

The DcpaJtment of Ancient Languages and the Modern Foreign
Language Department wilt be hast
to the many high school language
te.tchers. collet
and university
professors, foielgn representatives,
and many others Interested in
languages.
Several foreign representatives
will speak at the conference including W.M.Q. Halm, Ambassador
from Ghana; Andre Michalopoulos,
advisor on American affairs. Royal
Greek Embassy, Washington, D.C.;
and S. E. Smethurst, Queen's College. KingMon, Ontario, f'anada.
Dr. Walter Cair. professor of
ancient languages, and associate
director cf the conference, said
that the purpose of the conference
Is to provide information and Inspiration fcr the teacher of languages and help them with teaching methods.
The theme of the conference is
"National Ampliations
Woven on
the Loom cf Languages." UniversPresident Frank O. Dickey exity
plained this theme in an Introduction in the printed program for
the conference.
Dr. Dickey raid, "Linguistic differences are a perpetual source of
International
but
through the loom of language national and international
aspira- -

operators. The composite farm
wage was 81 cents an hour.
The 1961 Brltannica Book of the
Year is the 34th In the series of
annual
covering
encyclopedias,
principal events of the preceding
year, produced by Encyclopaedia
Brltannica to keep owners of Its
publications up to date.
Containing 880 pages with 1,000
articles, the yearbook has more
than one million words and more
than 500 Illustrations.
The subject matter covers the
spectrum of human affairs, from
advertising, archaeology, art and

logne in Germany, Bikini Atoll,
San Francisco, Honolulu, Key
West, and other places.
"Few artists have ranged so
widely and brought back so much,"
commented Richard B. Freeman,
head of the Alt Department.
Ralston Crawford reacts to and
comments on the world around him
in the language of 20th Century
Art oi.rl In torivtu thuf ura
larly we guited t0 his tempera
ment," said Mr. Freeman. "He
pours into his work the hopes and
fears that excite him as he surveys the world with a sensitive eye,
a compassionate nature, and an
Intellectually disciplined mind that
is in command at all times."
The exhibition will circulate to
museums duilng the next six
months, starting at the San Francisco Museum of Art in July and
August, and later at the University
of Nebraska, the University of Iln,
linois, Wesleyan University,
Conn., and the University
of Maine.
The clean cut lines and immaculate surfaces of his work have
earned Mr. Crawfoid a prominent
place In a painting exhibition
called "The Precisionists," organized by the Walker Art Center of
Minneapolis, recently on view at
the Whitney Museum in New York.
It is liuw at the Deliuit Institute of
Arts.

� 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wcdnmlay, April 12, 1961

Eichmann Is Impassive As Trial Begins

JERUSALEM, April 11 (AI)
Lich.nann, standing
.and impassive in
the InilMpnvof prisoner's clock
of a Jerusalem court today,
heard himself tlescriheil as the
of the Jews
during World War II.

"Adolf
d

It

was the first time In 2,000
a man accused of Inflicting suffering and death on the
.'jcws was brought to Judgment In
u Jewish court.
The atmosphere was electric
with drama even durinr the 70
when the indictment,
minutes
itemizing Eiehmann's alleged
crimes was being read by the
president of the court. Supreme
Court Justice Moshe Landau.
Legal arguments broke out Immediately after the reading of the
indictment.
Eiehmann's chief counsel, pudgy,
d
Dr. Robert Servatlus
of West Germany, challenged the

;'fars that

Jurisdiction of the special court
trying him In Israel, the Israeli
of 1950 ul)der whU,n Echmnnn
is being tried, and the circum
stances in which he was spirited
from Argentina to Israel Inst May
Israel's attorney general. Gideon
Hausner. discuted Servatlus' arzu- ment.
r ichmann, as chief of the Jew
ish affairs section of the Nazi
Urstapo during the war. is ae- cused of direct responsibility for
the catastrophe visited on the
jew
He stood In the dock-shie- lded
from the audience by sheets of
and
bulletproof
motionless as a statue.
He was wearing a dark grey
business suit, a white shirt and a
striped necktie that matched his
suit. He peered once through the
glass toward the audience, nodded
once to Servatius and the lawyer's
assistants.
Then he turned his head toward
the three Judges and appeared

'Dr. Alderson Will Speak
TV TMvvin

Languages at Transylvania College, will speak on family life
;'n France at 3:15 p.m. Sunday, in the Music Lounge of the
Student Union Building.
Alderson will tell In French
about some of the amusing exper- iences that he and Mrs. Alderson

The SUB Topics Committee of
CtiiHont TTitinn RnarH Is ennn.
oring i a photographic exhibit April
7i
n
.t- .'. j- -t
j
in me chm luiiuiui vi mc
Student Union Building.
The exhibit consists of pictures
depicting scenes of twenty-thre- e
college campuses throughout the
United States.
Ail of the photographs on display have appeared in various is- -i
ues of "Holliday Magazine."
Well known schools to be featured include Columbia, Cornell,
harvard, Yale, Bryn Mawr, Princeton, Smith, Vassal-- . Purdue, Dartmouth, Washington and Lee, Virginia Military Institute, University
of California, and Ohio State
4Vi-

had when they lived in France
Willi meir
uuuy.
The title of his talk Is "La Vie

ur

ramuir

w

,

it c ii

irainidiru

means family life. Dr, Alderson
will tell of the pleasures an d pit- falls of raking small chrildren a- broad.
Dr. Alderson recieved his Ph. D.
degree from the University of Tou
louse at Toulouse, France in 1951.
The talk Is sponsored by the
Alliance Francale and visitors
interested in speaking or hearing
French are invited to attend.

--

Such4 Avenue Chevy Chat.
.TODAY AND THURSDAY!

"ON THE WATER FRONT"
Marlon

Eva Mario

Brando

Saint

In

TODD-A-

t

Make-U-

CI

tllf llll

Now!

O

wmsm
Starts 7:24

Admission 7Sc
"THE WACKIEST SHIP IN
THE ARMY"
Jack Lemmon
R.ckey Nelson
In Color (At 7:30 and 11:16)
Al SO
"GIOEON OF SCOTLAND YARD"
Oi.inne Foster
Jack Hawkins
(At 9 2V

THEATRE

NOW SHOWING
Starts 7:24

Admission! 90c
Run Showing
Sailors Take ever a
Geisha House
"CRY fOR HAPPY"
Donald O'Connor
Glenn Ford
lln Color (.it 7 30 & 1.34)
ALSO
"THE MARRIAGE
Jamet Mason
Sutan Hayward
In Color (At 9 30)

Shirley MacLain
Dean Martin

The Diamondscopc

First

Four

IN

"All In a Night's Work"
TECHNICOLOR

p

Complexion
Perfection

S.

U.

By

05
Are You Planning?

by Carl Heinz

Demonstration
Appointment

,s- -v

r
.

Phone

ttore ha been awarded
the coveted title Registered
Jeweler American Cam

VI J

PARTY

Smartest

11

DANCE
JAM SESSION

Poce

In Town?

1700 N. BROADWAY

Phon.

See or call Dick Wallace at

DANCE NITELY

DANCE NITELY

Richmond Road

for Information and Reservation!

First Run Showing

jf.

t-

SEN ALI
&

Featuring
with

Admission 90c

riotous, happy time
when four U.S. sailors take
overjt geisha house
A

.

Phone

.Ava

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT WED. Thru SAT.

The Upsetters

.V

COLUMBIA PICTURES
A WILLIAM COETZ

.

PRODUCTION

JIMMY BALLARD

BADERS ZANDALE

SERVICE CENTER

PHONE

GtW FOR- - nappy

Nicholasville Road and Zandale Drive
PHONE

NOW SHOWING
'101 Dolmotions"

'

jfk
A ttmrri JAMES SHIGETA tM
r
MIYOSHI UMEKI
rVMIIKO TAKA
IUH4f fc'lll

AM

5 Minutes From Campus"

"Just

Starts Saturday 7:00 p.m.

lrrtsausy

IRVING

(HON

Go-Mi- x

A

d

Outboard

fuel scientifically

designed

Fuel

ALSO

to t)ive more hours

'The

of smoother performance per gallon

rt,

M

fir

for

'We

"

Susan Hayward
James Mason
IN COLOR AT 9:40

Featuring
ASHLAND OIL PRODUCTS

i

Marriage-Go-Round-

Give Top Volue Stamps'

L

MVOMtU'

BRLCHER.MwsaMwsioeaicu(a
ti GEORGE MARSHALL

BOATERS SPECIAL

fcV--

W1

r.

CONGRESS INN

Society.

102 W. Short

Irlfc

DINNER
BANQUET
Why Not Try th

Our

BROCK'S

'"Wjrf,
KM

Admission 65c
DARK AT THE TOP Of
THE STAIRS"
Dorothy McGulre
In Color (At 7:24 Only)
At SO
"UNDER TEN FLAGS"
Van Hetlin Charles Laughton
(At 9 54)

Kentucky

Bring The Gang To

ist

Starts 7.24

"THE

Robert Preston

K1HTUCKT

ticatii uuitwi

ions

,

of ceremonies Bill Leyden as a
"summer missionary to Alaska."
The program consists of Leyden's
n
facts
announcing the
about members of the studio aud
ience, llie participants know notn-D- r.
ing of the format until their names
are called.
The University Junior received a
movie projector and camera for
his appearance on the show.
He will visit Alaska this summer
on a
missionary tour spon- sored by the Kentucky Baptist Stu- dent Union. He is a member of the
BSU.

Courtesy

ujH

TECHNICOLOR

NBC-T-

d

program, "It Could Be You."
.
h

valuo of a diamond it determined by rtt COLOR, CLARITY, CUTTING and SIZE. It i tor tliit reason
you may tee: '4 carat In a price-rancarat in a
$7S to S3S0
e
$160 to $660, 1 carat In
e
a
$400 to $1,600. We
have the scientific inttrumentt and
the professional training to detect any
defect which are price factort.

Beautiful

and

UN

rr-.-

iiti

TTr

"

"MOUSE THAT ROARED".
Peter Sellers Jean Sebere;

ttXIMOTOW

iVii'uiil

Jim Ilaynes, a junior preined- ical major from Cumlerland,
Ky., appeared yesterday on the

Tho

o

1:30 P.M.

In

Jews who had suffered at tho
hands of the Nazis.
"If there are Judges In the whole
world who can be impartial about
this crime, they are not fit to be
judges," Hausner said in a voice
steady but charged with reeling.
"But it Is right that Judges conceal their own feelings and consider the evidence presented. That
Is how I request this court to pass
judgment," he added.
"It Is good," said Hausner, "that
there is a place in the world
where the Jews have their own
government and laws and the possibility exists to bring to Judgment
a man who has committed crimes,
against Its people."
Concerning the abduction of
Eichmann, the attorney general
said courts in both the United
States and Britain have held that
the method by which a man
brought Into court does not impair
the court's right to try him.

was ordered to rise and asked If
lie was "Adolf lichmann, son of
Karl Adolf Flohmann."
"Ja wohl," the defendant replied, his voice steady and deep
over the public address system.
Then the massive Indictment was
read.
Servatius challenged the 1930
inw "for the punishment of Nazis
and collaborators," under which
Eichmann Is being tried, because
it was adopted after the alleged
offenses took place and therefore
was ex post factor, or retroactive.
This, he said, was Illegal.
The defense counsel also charged
that I'.ichmann was kidnapped in
Buenos Aires and brought to
Israel on orders of the Israeli
Government, a charge the government
has denied. Servatius
charged that the kidnaping was
illegal.
Replying for the state, the attorney general said the U. N.
Security Council, when Argentina
haled Israel up for Eiehmann's
capture, "stated that Eichmann
will face this court.
He added that in the declsions
of the Nuernberg Tribunal as well,
"this was alreacJy declded ,one
ago." And he said neither West
Oermany nor any other government had requested the right to
try Eichmann.
The attorney general then turned
to Servatius' assertion that Eichmann could not get a fair trial In
a Jewish court because of the
depth of feeling on the part of

mi

o
OPEN DAILY

Prcmpd Student SvCIl

nationally-televise-

On Family Life In France
Al.Wnn hnad nf tlw rVtvirtmPiit nf Modern,

PJiolos Exhibited
rsP
Xy oUl) 1 OJ)lCS

never to take his eyes off them.
The courtroom. In Jerusalem's
Community Center, is a theater- like room with 716 seats. All of
them were Tilled 20 minutes before the ftart of the trial today
at 9:01 a.m. Most of the spectators
were newsmen.
Concealed television cameras
brought the proceedings to various
points around the building by
closed circuit, and to a theater a
ock
away where 700 people
watched.
The trial is being conducted In
Hebrew, Israel's official language.
cimallpna ,ranii,attnn
,...,
no,,
r.a,h
radios tunable
ramM
were used
tQ aU four languages
by tne spectators,
A, the trJai oppned, Eichmann

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, April

3

12, 19(il -- 3

Social Activities
Meetings
DELTA

Tin-M-

TI
Kappa Delta PI, national education fraternity, will meet for elect-Io- n
of officers at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the library of the Taylor
Education Building.
RESEARCH CLl'B
The University Research Club
will hold a luncheon meeting at
noon tomorrow in Donovan Hall
Cafeteria. Dr. Paul V. Kenny of
the Department of Physics will
speak on "UK Research in High
Energy Physics."
NSID
The National Society of Interior
will meet at 5 p.m. today
Design
at the Ellen H. Richards Home
Management House. Miss Marian
Bartlctt will be the guest speaker.
ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
The Blue Grass Astronomical
Society will meet at 8 p.m. today
in Room 111. McVey Hall.
Dr. Joseph R. Scwendeman, professor of geography, will discuss
weather cycles. Dr. Schwendeman
Is the author of several texts and
articles in the field of geography
and related subjects.
The meeting is open to the
public.
KATPA

;

.

J

'

f

I

t

Carolyn Rand, urnior intrrior design major from Ilrriford. models
thr Arrs she made for her Interview with officials at the
School for Fashion Career. Miss Rand ha been accepted
for graduate study at the school.

Coed Becomes Third
UK Grad To Attend
Tobe-Cobur- n
School

Coffee

ZTA To Have
Fashion Show
o9

& Co., will
Miss Rand went to New York In sponsored by Embry Nell Freebe Joan Benton, Cora

February for her Interview.
The senior In the College of man, Phyllis Lilly, Mimi Mytinger,
Pat Schultz,
Home Economics said she was Phyllis Patterson,
Marilyn Stargyk, and Betty Law
Tau A1na mem
- a" Zeta
cepted at the school which has had Jnomebers.
only 2,000 graduates In Its history.
Marilyn Swift, a member of the
"I'm looking forward to my stay
will
in New York City," Miss Rand Embry college fashion board,
said. "And I understand that Tobe-Cobu- give the commentary.
"
i
exchanges dances with
T'
I'
West Point Academy which should
S Oil I
LjIII
make It even more interesting."
Miss Rand will live In a hotel
rear the school. She said that the
school requires attendance
at Three area
chapters of Chi
Broadway plays and operas. Stuare Joining In
must wear suits or dresses, Omega sorority
dents
founder's day celebrations this
gloves and hats to classes.
weekend.
Miss Rand said that she first
Chapters from UK, Transylvan- became Interested in a fashion ca
reer when
representauve from
the New York school visited the
sinia luncheon Saturday noon at
campus last semester. She said she the
Holiday Inn. Local alumnae
plans to become a buyer for a are also participating in the celestore, a Job which could include bration.
annual trips to Europe.
Mrs. Sarah B. Holmes, former
"After graduation, the school se
dean of women, will
cures positions in some of the most University
.
be the guest speaker.
,
Following the luncheon, a tea
their graduates," Miss Rand said. will be held in the Chi
chapter
room at Forrer Hall, Transylvania
THE NEW YORK LIFE
Colege.
AGENT ON YOUR
CAMPUS IS A GOOD
MAN TO KNOW

jrCCl

Elections

RESTAURANT
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Her To . . .

Politics is the science of how
DESSERT
AND DANCING
Alpha Delta Pi sorority enter- - who gets what, when and why.
Hillman.
tained Kappa Alpha Order with Sidney
a dessert last night at their home.
ZTA FARMHOUSE
Farmhouse fraternity will host
a dessert with Zeta Tau Alpha
sorority tomorrow evening at their
SAVE ON GAS AT
chapter house.
A DPI

American

i

Mrs. James Douglas Foster and daughter, Nancy, are present for
the unveiling and hanging of the portrait of their late husband and
father at the University's Dairy Products Building. Mr. Foster
headed the inspection for the creamery license section before his
death in 19(i0. The portrait and a memorial scholarship were
donated by friends in the dairy Industry throughout Kentucky.

Desserts

J

,N

BCRKE

Marilyn Mclntire, a member of
Alpha Delta PI sorority and a
an
senior education major from
dllcan t0 Petcr Burke, a January
graduate in engineering from Lo-- to
tust Valley, N.Y. and a member oZ
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.

KAPPA PSI
SOCIETY REMINDER
Upsilon chapter of Kappa Psl
pharmaceutical fraternity recentNews of pinnlngs, engagements,
ly elected Preston Art. a junior
club meetings, and
from Paint Lick, to serve as re- - marriages, of social interest any
are
other news
welcome for this page
Other officers Include Wendell always
Engagement announcements and
Holloway, Eddyville, vice regent;
will be published. Pictures
Bill Barrett, Princeton, secretary; pictures
must be furnished by the indiviHerschell Gray, Owensboro, trea-theduals.
surer; Gary Graham, Louisville,
Phone Ext. 2285 or mail news to
chaplain; Ronald Johnson. Allen.
historian.

For Founder's Day

V:.

Engagements

McINTIRE

FOSTLR TORTRAIT HUNG

A coffee hour for all applicants
for the Student Union Board will
be hi Ki from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the SUB Social Room.

Miss Rand Is the vice president
Br JOHANNA DRAPER
Carolyn Rand, a senior in In- of the local chapter of the National
terior design, has become the third Society of Interior Designers.
UK student to be accepted at the
Tobe-Cobur- n
School for Fashion
Careers.
Miss Rand, a transfer student
from Hanover College where bhe
was a member of Phi Mu sorority,
will begin her graduate work at
Fashions" will be the
the New York fashion school In "Spring the
of
style show to be held
September.
6:30 P mthe Zeta Tal
n Marfan
w.t-- H
AIPh
Avenue, requires personal inter- frority house.

.hi

nour

es

at

Juanell Freeman, New Albany,
Ind., to "Sandy" Woford, Junior
radio arts major from Danville,
and a member of Phi Kappa Tail
fraternity.
Carol Roach, sophomore
education major from Athens, Ga.,
John Fitzwater, senior Journa- lism maior from Somerset, and a
member of Kappa Sigma.

Sophomores! Juniors!
Live and stud in
Europe next year
Send coupon
TODAY

.

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A

A man with Alopecia Universalis

doesn't need this deodorant
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� The Kentucky Kernel
of
University

Kentucky

lit

Lexington, Kentucky.
paid
Published lour timn a week during thr reKiiljir whonl year exrrpt during holiday! and exama.
SIX DOl.LAK.S A SCHOOL YEAR
Swnnd-clns-

Hob Anderson, Editor
Newton Spencer, Sports Editor
Mamminn Editor
Hoiihie Mason, Assistant Manuginx Editor
Lew King, Advertising Manager
Beverly Cardwfll and Tom Lennos, Society Editors
Skip Taylor and Jim Chanson, Cartoonists
Business Manager
Nicky Pope, Circulation
Ferry Ashley,

Mile Wenninger,

WEDNESDAY NEWS STAFF
Tevh Bennett, Sews Editor

Ed VanIIook, Associate

Bill Martin, Sports

See You At The Pole
Shades of handle bar mustaches
and shaving mugs! The governor has
proclaimed this week Barbershop
Harmony Week. And what's more,
Gov.. Bert Combs has been joined by
President John Kennedy, governors
of other states, and even some mayors.
AH these dignitaries have come to the
aid of the SPEBSQSA.
Are you wondering what is the
SrEBSQSA? Shame on you. You
should recall the meaning of that
abbreviation as readily as you do that
of the letters YMCA, for the worthy
organization is celebrating its 23rd
birthday this week with more than
28 thousand members. It is none other
than the Society for the Preservation
and Encouragement of Barber Shop
Singing in America (Inc.).
But getting back to the governor's proclamation, we think it should
not be taken too lightly. Barbershop
quartet singing may be corny and
even its heartiest advocates do not
attempt to classify it as one of the
finer arts, but its value as a morale
booster is unmatched by few other
activities.
Considering the current
epidemics of cold war jitters,
and other gruesome "mental diseases," it would be good for
everybody to get together with
friends in groups of four and let loose
several baritone bellows or tenor
s,

squeaks. Tin's form of therapeutic
treatment is recommended for the
ladies, too, for the SPEBSQSA also
encourages the organization of female
quartets. Perhaps a SPEBSQSA chapter could be organized at the University.
We'll meet you at the nearest red
and white striped pole.

Kernels
They who mutually injure the
state, mutually support each other.
Herodotus.
Those who wish to appear wise
among fools, among the wise seem
foolish. Quint iaian.
For there is nothing more silly
than a silly laugh. Catullus.
To remind the man of the good
turns you have done him is very
much like a reproach. Demosthenes.
The man who acts least, upbraids
the most. Homer.
If Cod did not exist, it would be
necessary to invent him. Voltaire.
My dandying days were extended
a decade by the toupee.
John

THE READERS' FORUM
Not Kesolved
To The Editor:
Prof. Mcllcnhriich's recent letter
raised the question of whether the
recent controversy has (inearthed
"Communist plants" and "fellow travelers" on this campus.
I would like to suggest that a final
answer to this question may come
only after we determine whether we
have moved so far from sanity and
basic principles of freedom that we
can neither agree with a Communist
nor disagree with a fellow
as our individual conscience
dictates. If this is our true condition, then the Communist exercises
more power in our society than I
would wish him to have. We could
only approve of what he opposes, we
could only