xt7pvm42sf78 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7pvm42sf78/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1959-11-24  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 24, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 24, 1959 1959 1959-11-24 2013 true xt7pvm42sf78 section xt7pvm42sf78 'Enil Of Tradition'
Cited In Editorial
Page 4

nis

University

Camera Records

"rt is J
of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY TUESDAY, NOV. 24,

Vol. L

Homecoming
See Page 8

1939

No. 37

FACULTY MULES
AGAINSTEOLIDA
dismissal motion 'was made when
Kernel Managing Editor
the Faculty voted to allow a Kernel
There will be no holiday reporter to attend the meeting.
Wednesday.
A Faculty member said this was
The University Faculty decided the first time a press representayesterday In a special meeting in tive has been allowed to be present
Lafferty Hall to permit no devi- at a Faculty meeting.
ation from the. University calThe first Faculty member to
endar.
speak said that while he was not
UK President Frank G. Dickey, in favor of dismissing classes conFaculty chairman, explained to sideration should be given to a
the body a misunderstanding in practice followed by some Ohio
the rule governing dismissal of colleges.
They dismiss classes at noon beschool for state holidays led to
last year's dismissal of ' school fore holidays to allow students to
without a Faculty ruling on the start heme before highway traffic
matter.
becomes too heavy.
year Gov. A. B. Chandler's
No action was taken on such a
Last
proclamation of a state holiday plan.
following the Tennessee victory
Faculty members defending the
was taken as having the weight holiday cited the likelihood of the
general public and students misof an executive order.
Investigation since last fall understanding a decision ruling
showed school dismissal following against a Wednesday holiday.
a gubernatorial proclamation of a
state holiday to be a permissive
By BOB ANDERSON

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Homecoming Royalty
rilc Priest, tponsored by Alpha Gamma Rho, was crowned Homecoming qufen by Preside nt Frank G. Dickey during the halftime
game Saturday. Miss Priest
ceremonies of the Kentucky-Tennesse- e
is a Kappa Alpha Theta from Hartford, Ky.

invitation has been
extended to the University football
team for participation in the annual Blue Gra&s Bowl at Louisville.
Coach Blanton Collier disclosed
at a Monday afternoon press conference that a bid had not been received and that the rumor that a
bid had been received was completely unfounded.
Collier added that if an invitation is received, it will be taken
up by the Athletic Department for

7.

Students Riot Over Holiday

consideration.
By BILL NEIKIRK
In Sunday editions Lexington
Kernel Editor
papers quoted D. B. Murrell, chair- A howling mob of UK students
man of the Blue Grass Bowl committee, as saying that Kentucky last night converged on the StuUnion Building yelling "We
had been extended an invitation to dent a holiday."
want
meet Alabama in Louisville In the
The mob, estimated at roughly
December 12 bowl game.
1,000, carried signs condemning the
Collier fctated in a press con- University
Faculty for voting
ference following the game that
against having a holiday Wednesthe players would have the right to day.
vote on the impending bowl bid.
President Frank G. Dickey, callThe Wildcats, who had a more ed out of the annual football banimpressive record lastfyear turned quet held in the SUB Ballroom,
down a bid to perform in the post faced the howling mob and told
--

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1

tirht preregistration schedule

which goes Into effect today as a
reason for holding class tomorrow.
Another member said the people
.of the state cart be told the governor's holiday proclamation is a
permissive one which may be ruled
on by the Faculty.

Illegal Campaign
Disqualifies Queen

question.
Because class dismissal is a permissive ruling, one which Is to be
decided by individual schools, the
Faculty was called to reaffirm the
ruling they made last year.
The Faculty last year vetoed
dismissng class the Wednesday beThe winner of last week's Homeseason contest at the Louisville fore Thanksgiving, but did not coming queen contest was disqualiFairgrounds. Alabama was the oppose the governor's holiday fied because of illegal campaigning
by the fraternity which sponsored
proposed opponent in the 1958 proclamation.
A voice vote decided the ques- her.
game.
The decision was made by the
tion yesterday. Although no count
game was was available of Faculty members Homecoming Steering Committee
Kentucky's last bowl
in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas on for or against the motion to per- last Friday after 15 hours of deno deviation from the cal- liberation.
New Year's Day, 1953, when they mit
endar, it appeared the body was
June Moore, candidate put' up
beat Texas Christian University, strongly in favor of the motion. by Phi Delta Theta and winner of
20-A precedent was set before the the contest, declined the queenship

UK Receives No Bid
To Blue Grass Bowl
No official

One member said the situation
"goes back 13 months to a series
of instances which have brought
a serious situation."
He favored a holiday for reasons
of "public relations aspects in the
state" as well as among students.
"One day out of a year will not
make much difference in the long
run," he continued.
He suggested that the Faculty
"go on record as granting the
holiday."
A Faculty member speaking in
favor of the motion disallowing
a Wednesday holiday cited the

them he "could not personally re
President Dickey then said. "If I
voke the (Faculty's) decision."
had my personal Inclination, I
A cross was burned in front of would go ahead and have a holithe SUB during the course of the day."
The crowed cheered, raising a
action and the students, crammed
deafening racket.
in the main floor of the SUB, conHowever, Dr. Dickey, added,
tinually cheered "We want a holi"Your shouts were premature, my
day" and "We want Chandler."
Dr. Dickey told the hissing group inclination is not one that does
of students he expected them not the trick.
Then came chants and hisses,
to act like a "group of rabble rous-ers- ."
more boos and jeers.
but like mature individuals.
The crowd gathered at about 7
One student yelled from the
p.m. and then marched all around
mob, "We won the game and we're
'"
skipping school."
Continued on Page 3

when informed that Phi Delt
pledges had campaigned for her in
the SUB.
Miss Moore won the election by
461 votes to 400 over Pixie Priest,
who reigned as queen in her place.
The electioneering rules of the
SUB say that no campaigning may
be carried on in the building during an election other than for Student Congress.
The committee, headed by Becky
Carloss, said Phi Delta Theta
representatives accepted the decision of the committee but quietly
and claimed ignorance of the
rules.
However, she said each fraternity had been informed of the

rules and that ignorance should
not have been any excuse.
One of the committee members
said that overexuberance on the
part of the pledges might have
been the cause of the illegal campaigning.
The committee gave this story:
The pledges appeared at the
voting booth in the SUB Thursday
and were campaigning for Miss
Continued On Page 2

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EVEN SMOKY appears apprehensive at meeting a Wildcat,
as he halts before entering the camp of UK thcci leaders.

DOWN ro the UK goal
following the game.

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CX)LL1ER GETS A RIDE as a UK cheerleader

jubilantly displays the fabled beer barrel.

� 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 21, 1959

'La Traviata' Termed Uneven Trustees Accept Gifts
the. sets it
When considering
must be remembered that a traveling company must make do" with
as little scenery as possible.' But
even given this fa.ct the scenery
seemed inadequate. It set no' moods
and created no illusions. The final
act center set reminded me more
of a temple entrance in "Alda"
than the bedroom of ' a Parisian
courtesan.
Taxi orchestras are notoriously
deficient and this one was no exception. At Its best. It was com- pete.it,. but most of lha time not
even that. The violins played badly In the Prelude to Act I and not
even an excellent 'cello solo could
l
recoup the loss.
estimate
of the orchestra's ability was not
proved incorrect by later developments.
A vocally fair, instrumentally
poor, performance of "La

tones,
tresslng habit, on- long-hel- d
of growing louder and then cutting
off the note very abruptly.
She was at her best in solo pas-- i
qges but the voice could not hold
its own in strong ensemble sections.
The tenor, 'Eddy Ruhl, did a
competent Job as Alfredo but alto
had some Intonation difficulties,
and tn his blf arias, his high notes

By HENRY IIUHERT

-

Last Thursday evening tne
Kentucky Concert and Lecturt
Eeries presented a performance of
by the
Traviata"
Verdi's "La
Wa?ner Opera Company.
The opera based on Dumas play
"La Dame Aux Camelias," was first
performed in Venice In 1853. Verdi
composed "Traviata" in four weeks
while he was also at work on "II
Trovatore." The first performance,
done in contemporary costume
with a hoarse tenor and a plump
soprano (supposedly crying of tuberculosis), was a shambles.
Thursday's performance fared
better, but there was much desired.
The soprano, Josephine Ouido,
attractive and believable as the dying heroine, disclosed a light,
pleasant voice. She had a tendency
to sing sharp, however, and a dis- Cei-tr-

al

'

sounded. quite strident.
Hernan Pelayo, singing Olorglo
Oermont, was by far the most
vocally competent member of the
cast. His rich baritone voice was
not marred by intonation problems
and his phrasing was always impeccable. The only element In his
performance that might be criticized was his stilted mannerisms,
which occasionally became embarrassing. Opera singers generally are
not noted for their acting ability
so this criticism may be lightly
.

,

It Pays To Advertise In
The Kentucky Kernel

The-initia-

passed over.

For Engineering Fund

UK trustees accepted $100 and
shares of capital stock of the
American Air Filter Company, Inc.,
Friday to 'establish a "William
Maxwell Reed Prof feasor ship of
Mechanical Engineering."
The gift was from Mrs. Grace P.

400

Illegal Campaign
Continued From Tage 1
Moore when they were asked to
leave.

Later, Miss Carloss said, the
pledges returned and again began
campaigning. They were asked to
leave again. Once they had a
poster, she said.
When the votes were counted,
the committee immediately met to
attempt to decide what course of
action should be taken.
Finally, Miss Moore was called
in and Informed of the charges
against the Phi Delt pledges. She
then declined the title.
Committee members all expressed praise for Miss Moore.
They said she took the decision
"like a lady should."
They said the acceptance of the
Homecoming title by Miss Priest
"certainly put pressure on her."
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"HOLIDAY FOR LOVERS"

neth Harper.
But, she added, each allowed
the decision to be made by the
steering committee.
Besides Sipple and Miss Carloss.
members of the committee were
Tom Harrington, Bob Shultz.
Charlie Schimpeler, Marlene Pit-ze- r,
and Bob Wainscott.

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21

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DAILY 1:30 P.M.

Of IN

now on.
"We did not want to punish
anyone," Sipple said, -- but under
the circumstances, we .felt it was
the only decision we could make."
Mis? Carloss pointed out the
committee had asked the advice of
Dean of Men Leslie L. Martin,
Dean of Women Doris M. Seward,
and Assistant Dean of Men Ken-

I

1-

1953.

LAST TIMES TONIGHT!

Garryl Sipple, member of the
committee, said that It "wanted to
set a precedent" tn standing up for
rules of Homecoming and assure
a clean Homecoming contest from

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He was Instrumental In a better
government move In Louisville and
long supported better education for
Kentucky. UK awarded him an
honorary Doctor of Laws degree in

cision.

no single filter can

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equipment that ranges from, atr
filters to pre heating systems for

but under the circumstances they
said it was the most admirable de-

It filters as

'

Reed as a memorial to her husband, a prominent Louisville industrialist and civic leader who
died in 1956.
Dean R. E. Shaver of the College-o- f
Engineering said Income from
the funds will be used to aujmrnt
the salary of the William Maxwell'
Reed professor who will promote
development tn the 'air conditioning field through teaching, re';
search, and" Writing.
income from' the stocks and
mdney will be added to the principal until it reaches an amount
where it can be used as a salary
supplement in filling the professorship, Dean Shaver said.
From(lhe development of an air
filter for his small automobile paint
shop, Reed constructed a multimll-lio- n
dollar concern manufacturing

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FREE PARKING
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GARY

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CHARLTCII
HESTOII

muniumuiitvtocoM

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tucwlay, Nov.
t

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UK Student Mob Riots

'V:.

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Continued From Tagf 1
the campus. Their final stop was
the women's dormitories before
they arrived at the SUB.
The rolling crowd Jammed Into
the first floor of the SUB and
Dr. Dickey stood at the top of the

v

stairs facing them.
Before the president began to
speak, the students howled and
hissed. One student said, "Hey,
just a minute, there is such a
thing as being rude."
The students milled in front of
the Student Union Building. Many
of them had signs.
A student carried in a large dummy, labeled "Faculty." The figure
was hanging on a noose.
Another effigy, also labeled "Faculty," was brought into the SUB
lobby mounted on a cross. It was

-

later burned.

-

i

"No school

Wednesday," "The
revolution," "Strike,
no school Wedensday."
Glenn Ed Shaw, Wildcat
then attempted to quiet the
students, but to no avail.
The
then took the
beer barrel and said, "Give it back
to Tennessee."
The crowd picked up the chant.

Poses Problem

great Nov.

AeroDr. K. O. Lance, left, director of (he V. K. Wenner-Grr- n
nautical Research Laboratory, and Tony Dillender, a research
assistant, are looking at a scale model of the simulator which will
be used In testing reactions of humans riding a space buffeting

25

in,

simulator.

mob-leade-

r

One student began to perform
for the crowd, cartwheeling In the
middle of the street. They cheered.
Police armed with riot guns were
nearby waiting for the students to
start something. The .fire department then came.
There were signs which read, "To
hell with the Faculty."
The crowd was beginning to
dwindle by this time.

President Dickey then disappeared Into the banquet room.
The crowd proceeded downtown. Police arrested three of them
in front of Stewart's for breach of
peace.
The group then converged upon
the City Hall and Police headquarters yelling at the police and
shouting insults.
Police with a loud speaker
told the crowd to go back to Stoll
Field if they wanted to parade.
The crowd included many UK
coeds and other
girls and had
doubled by this time.
The students proceeded down
Walnut to Main Street. Police had
an alley blocked with men armed
with riot guns.
A car. with a women driver was
caught in the crowd. Students
climbed on it and began rocking
it. One student was clubbed by a
policeman and taken to a hospital.
They then staged a
strike in front of the Lafayette
Hotel. About 200 students were

w:ll be used to check pulse pressure
ni:d rate, respiration, blood, oxygen
m ura" tkm, heart sound, galvanic
kin" response, patella reflex, and
to run electrocardiograms.

Laboratory
The V.'enner-Gre- n
director said the instruments will
while the subject
tel reactionsWright Air DevelopIs riding, the
ment Center vertical accelerator
a niachine designed to subject aircraft pilots to the tame violent mo
lions they would experience on
reentry from space.
The extension Is the. second ex- -

US COD

Pf Force and brings
had
the contract total to $167318-43Development of devices to protect the body again the vibrations
was also called for in the contract.
Dr. Lange said test results taken
while the subject Is riding the
vertical accelerator will be compared with tests taken before and
after the ride to measure the
effects en the human body.
Under previous contracts,. UK
has" defined physical parameters
anything that can be measured,
lQf)wLa

devised means to measure physio
logical changes, and provided per sonnel for the operation of the
vertical accelerator in Dayton,
Ohio.
An apparatus to check visual
acuity following the buffeting was
devised under the previous contracts and Dr. Lange said the
device will be adapted for tests

Preclassification for students
who first entered the University
this fall begins today.
These students should go to the
Office of their academic deans for
preclassification materials. They
should next see their college adviser and complete their proposed
during buffeting.
The instruments will also be schedule of classes for the spring
used to check the physical reac- semester of 1960.
tions in tests Involving "aaequil-ibriuAfter the student has copied his
chair a device used to approved schedule on all of the
simulate airplane flight conditions. schedule cards, the adviser will
Dr. Lange said the Instruments sign each copy. The adviser will
will also be used in measuring the keep one copy of the college schedreactions of a pilot attempting to ule card.
"fly" the equilibrium chair when
The student should then return
it is attached to the vertical
to the office of his academic dean
where the schedule cards will be
Tofcimy Sharp will serve as. stamped with dean's approval and
senior engineer on the project, V. the dean's copy of the student
C. Currens as chief laboratory schedule will be collected,
technician, and Charles M. Sirrro- Gordon HPklns and
two IBM schedule cards to the
Dillender as research assistants.
m

At press time, the crowd, was
heading back toward the University
and

up
and was
Traffic backed
jammed In town for hours.

Dunn Drugs
Prompt
Reliable

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Prescription

basement of the administration ti
building. The Registrar's Office
will check and collect both of
"
these IBM cards.
The student is finished with
preclassification and will be assigned to classes by the Registrar's
Office on the basis of "first come,
first served."
Other students will preclassify
according to their standings. Grad- uate, Law. and Pharmacy students
will preclassify last.
I

CONTACT LENSES

3-22-

.

sitting and approximately 2,000
standing around.
A bonfire was started in the
middle of the street, but it did not
but burn very high and soon died

.

Phone

Maxwell-Place-

IT'S SMART TO DO BUSINESS WITH

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LEXINGTON

AAA Road Service

Nobody Can Launder A Shirt Like

V- -

SrrtJ

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picture.

sit-do-

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Look Better
See Better
with 1

photographer

University

Mitchell attempted to take a picture of a student being carted
away by police. He was pulled away
and was not allowed to take the

Aero Lab Gets Contract
Reclassification Begins
Extending Space Tests
For Some Students Today

A $69,478 Air Force contract extension has been awirded UK's
Wenner-Gre- n
Aeronautical Research Laboratory for the development of instruments to test reactions of humans undergoing simulated space buffeting.
Dr. Karl O. Lange. who will
diiert the Contract being administered by the Kentucky Research
Foundation, said the instruments

21, 19j7- -3

SAVE 15

ON CASH AND CARRY

SOUTH LIMESTONE AND EUCLID AVE.

I

� The End Of Tradition

5S

It didn't take long.

those great proponents of education
hinted that students themselves have
Only about five minutes.
killed the traditions UK has had.
Five minutes and the
Bah. Humbug.
tradition was
If any one group has to be responkilled permanently.
sible for unity of the student body and
The University Facility, in a heavy
preservation of traditions, it has to be
vote, ruled that UK students would
the leaders of the University. The athave to remain on campus Wednesday
titude of the faculty and administrafor classes. This vote camo after stution bears heavily upon what type
dents had already been informed they
of student body we will have; if stuwould have a holiday. Wednesday by
dent opinion is suppressed, one can't
a proclamation of the governor.
expect to have students who think for
With the vote went the last ounce themselves. If anyone is responsible
of tradition that existed on campus. for student apathy, it is the faculty
The students' respect for the faculty and administration, not the students.
and for University policy and policyBut we are not going to get upon
making has declined. The faculty has our editorial horse and campaign for
ripped to shreds any hope for adea holiday Wednesday. We shall acquate student representation with its cept the decision of the faculty. We
vote.
shall attend classes and hear
We were told, in effect, by edulectures on why we did not need a
cators that the mature attitude would holiday.
fessors I don't want. Of course, there
A Noble Decision
be to uphold the faculty's ruling (we
We shall meditate in retrospect on
also is the possibility that all the secTo The Editor:
knew beforehand it was going to be tradition and try to rationalize ourAlmost continuously the women tions of certain classes will be filled,
no); that we should stand up for ed- selves into thinking, "Oh, well, it's not
second-stor11
students at Kentucky reinforce my and 1 be stuck with
ucation no matter what; and that we so important anyway."
g
esteem for the maturity and high safecracking and underwater
should not follow the mass emotional
And then we will curse the faculty
instead of certain classes resense of purpose of young women
But, in the same breath, again.
sentiment
today. A special incident has occurred quired for graduation.
Yes, the creator of this new, effiwhich I would like to put in writing
certainly deUniversity Soapbox
since in it two of our women students cient, streamlined plan
for a vivid imagination.
gave evidence of the finest qualities serves credit
I Ix't that he makes up cruelty jokes,
of integrity and honor.
too.
June Moore received a plurality in
Name Withheld
By BOBBIE MASON
ahead and does what it would have the voting for Homecoming queen.
Through no responsibility or knowlThe University Faculty has voted done anyway.
Dorm School Spirit
on whether to get paid for not workThey overlook logical reasons for edge on her part, some of her caming Wednesday or whether to get paid being dismissed, such as to get home paigners violated the rules of the To The Editor:
School .spirit! To the amazement
for working.
in time for Thanksgiving Day, and election procedures. June, therefore,
declined the honor, giving preference of a group of lxys in Bowman Hall,
Their decision proves that they are to avoid traffic. They don't even conthere seems, to be no show pf ennot even human.
sider the money saved by closing the to the importance of abiding by election procedures fair to all candidates. thusiasm permitted by certain of- "It's a matter of policy," they say.
dorms a day earlier. The Student UnPolicy heck. There's more policy in ion would save large quantities of Though I was not at the committee iiviti3 uj i uicr ijucn.ii aiijii aiait. lit
a cranberry scare.
leftovers' by not having to feed meal meeting where June announced her were under the impression that the
decision, I talked to her afterward. Tennessee game was "the game" and
It is incidental that a football player ticket bearers.
I think she would rather have been that every little bit of student parcan get away with what an ordinary
The Powers That Be, with great
would be appreciated.
citizen would have been jailed for. concern for our educational standards, Homecoming queen than almost any- ticipationthing else, but "the anything else" was What a disillusionment!
This, too, is an example of the Unicannot bear for us to miss a day of
With much scrapping aroiincl-'aniversity's fluctuating policy. If the classes. I say, improve the quality of the shadow cast on the honor by the
illegal campaigning.
a little begging at the book, store, we
faculty is so sour on athletics as to dethe lectures, not the quantity. Besides,
d
When Pixie Priest, the runnerup procured some
feet of that
prive us of a traditional holiday, why it's obvious that no one would learn
of the cirdestructive material, "brown
terribly
aren't they as strict with athletes who anything Wednesday anyway, amid in the election, was told
cumstances of June's withdrawal, her wrapping paper." After two hours of
have done something really offensive? all the excitment in going home and
first concern was June. "Can't someingenious labor witri the help of a
We the students, haven't done anyhostility to the Faculty.
thing be done? June would have won bottle of shoe polish our extremely
thing. We just want a holiday.
Thanks a lot, Faculty. But it really anyway. This situation must have hurt vulgar phrase- "fricassee Tennessee"
Dr. Dickey should have announced doesn't bother me. I'm going home
her terribly." When Pixie finally emerged. Admittedly Di Vinci would
the University's policy as soon as the Tudsday anyway.
agreed to serve as Homecoming not claim it, but we are extremely
angovernor made his
queen, she requested that all stuproud of our creation. We liad no
nouncement. Instead we wait around
KERNELS
dents know that June had received, intention of mutilating our "glorious"
for the Faculty to vote on its already
coeds who are a plurality of the votes and that be- state property, but we cannot hang
For career-minde- d
established "policy", and our plans
While in the process
a sign in mid-aifor going home are left suspended. also interested in marriage, we've cause of the irregular activity unknown to her of some of the persons of displaying our contribution fo
In a dictatorship, decisions that ought found the perfect solution.
Girls, just perambulate the halls of supporting her candidacy, June was school spirit we were told politely but
to be made quickly are made slowly.
And vice versa. Maybe the governor the Home Economics Building until not accepting the title of Homecoming firmly not to do 'so. Why! The only
conclusion we can come to is that
could put the faculty on probation you find a football player who catches queen.
In the total enterprise of the Uniit might mar the outstanding beauty
your eye. By the looks of things over
for ignoring royal decrees.
versity in the world today, the role of the quadrangle.
deThe Faculty is a separate entity, there, the entire team must have
Beware! Men of the quadrangle, the
separate and unequal, towering over veloped an interest in cuisine. If it of Homecoming queen is probably not
the students. The students, by far a weren't for the delicious aromas emit- of primary importance, but the subtle ax has fallen, contributions to school
ting from the cooking rooms, you integrity and high principle of these spirit are frowned upon here at UK.
majority, have one representative.
The Disillusioned Boys
might think you were in the locker two girls merit our thoughtful apApparently student representation exprobation.
ists to let the Faculty know where the room at Stoll Field.
Doris Seward
students stand and to make us feel
Imagine the possibilities a
Registration
Dean of Women
represented while the Faculty goes
husband who can cook.
To The Editor:
It seems to me that the University
Cruelty Jokes, Too?
could devise a much more sensible
To The Editor:
plan of registration than the one anIn the midst of preparations for nounced recently. Why can't seniors
University op Kentucky
going home for Thanksgiving, I want register first, then juniors, sophomores,
Entered at tke Post Office t Lexington, Kentucky sj second class matter under the Art of March 3, 1879.
Published four tiroes a week during the regular school year except holidays and esams.
to take time out to personally conand freshmrn lavt? Afrr nil cmnr
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR
of the new
gratulate the creator
occasionally need courses that get
Bux Neikuuc, Editor
plan.
filled early, and freshmen have anBob Anderson, Managing Editor
Stewart Hedcer. Sports Editor
I'm looking forward to returning other three years in which to choose.
Paul Zimmerman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editors
Dick Ware and John Mitchell, Photograpliers
Alice Akin, Society Editor
to school to three harried weeks of
Besides, what is so unpleasant about
Stuart Coldfarb and Paul Dykes, Advertising Managers
'
Bevehly Cardwell, Circulation getting a perfect schedule in order going to the Coliseum to do this? It
Ferry Ashley, Business Manager
and then waiting hi anxiety until certainly beats walking three miles
.Bob Hehndon, Hank Chapman, and Lew Kinc, Cartoonists
Staff Writers: Jerry Rtngo, Jim Phillips. Bobbie Mason. Linda Hockensmiih. Robert Wenninger,
February to see what results.
(probably more). I rather enjoy getGeorge Smith. Kobert Perkins, Edward Van llok, Hod Tabb, Lawrence Lynch, June Byers, Ann
Harris, Beverly Cardwell, Diana Capehart. Al Koyster, Jan Berryman, Bob Jobe, Mary
I can console myself with the
ting out of my office once in a while
Miller. Herb Steely. Norris Johnso i. Bob Fraser, Emajo Cocanougher. Michelt Fearing, Pat Huiker,
Hedluud. Chrtla Finley, Allen Travis,
Curtis Smith. John Fitswater Cafnett Brown,
thought that at the very worst I can and registration at the Coliseum proSua McCauley, Phil Cox, Kobert Had ford. Beverly Pedigo, and Maxiiie Cates.
have or! six 8 o'clock classes, five vides a delightful (?) change.
TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
Name Withhfld
Warren Wheat, Associate 5 o'clocks, and 17 hours, all with pro
Palmlr Wells, Seus Editor
;1cat-Ten-nessee-ta-

ke

45-min-u-

The Readers' Form

te

y

basket-weavin-

UK's Fluctuating Policy

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r

30-od-

-

over-anxio- us

r.

6-- 4,

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250-poun-

d

The Kentucky Kernel

pre-registrati- on

Kit-har-

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

UK Coeds

Receive

Temper Tantrums
By DEE DEE DAVIS

university woman can learn
to master her emotions to become
a success while in school and also
In later life.
A

She will realize, as a business
or professional woman, women
who are mature get ahead fastest.
This does not mean the coed
But what?
leaves her feelings at home, but
He was not a very original wolf.
i
He decided to throw the garbage that she learns to control them
while she Is In public.
back at her.
There are many situations in
He did and she shot him.
which she will find herself needing
used Browning multi-pac- k
Sh