xt7pvm42v70w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7pvm42v70w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1961-01-04  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January  4, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, January  4, 1961 1961 1961-01-04 2015 true xt7pvm42v70w section xt7pvm42v70w rf

Top Newsmakers
Arc Reviewed;

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See Page Five

Unlvenlty of

Vol. LIE, No. 47

LEXINGTON,

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Russia
Aids Laos Rebels

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United States today
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (AP)-T- he
accused Russia and North Viet Narn of airlifting weapons and
Vietnamese soldiers to Red rebels in Laos.
President Eisenhower met at the
combat rations, and other

White House with top foreign affairs, military, and intelligence ad- was the third meeting in
ylsers It
four days on the emergency.
Shortly afterward, the State De- partment issued what Press Of- ficer Joseph W. Reap termed ' first
class, absolutely authenticated In- -

5

.

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'

The new one
I'nlversity Northern
Center at Covington waa occupied in early December. The new building, on a bluff overlooking
three cities, contain 39.000 square feet of floor
million-doll-

apace, 12 classrooms, and a recreation area.
About 500 are enrolled there now. A paved park-in- g
Jot will be completed by spring.

University's Northern Center
Boasts Million Dollar Building
"It's a fur cry from the old
rented space in Covington's
First District School where students had to climb three flights
of steps and he contented with
child-sizdesks and soot and
grime," says Thomas I,. lank-indirector of the new Northern Center.
e

1

s,

The new million-dollbuilding,
located on a bluff overlooking Cincinnati. Covington, and Newport,
Is large enough to accommodate
3,000 to 3.5C0 part-tim- e
students
e
or 2.300
students. Classes
are held frcm 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
The ultra modern, three-stor- y
building, which opened in early
December, baa vast expanses of
glai on all four tides, all but

eliminating the need for artificial
light during the day.
The center's lobby, located on
the first floor, has walls of light
red brick and inlaid linoleum flooring and the furniture is arranged
In conversational
groupings.
At the end of the lobby is the
glassed in library, running the entire width of the building. It has
cream colored walls and light red
furniture.
Also located on the first floor
are:
Administrate offices, a bookstore, a seminar-facult- y
lounge
with a long, boat shaped conference table, and a student recreation room. Behind the recreation
room is a room containing automatic vending machines, including
those which dupen.se soup and
sandwiches.

Soviet and North Vietnamese
flights since Dec. 3 carrying "ex
tensive war material" and sub
stantlal numbers of military per
sonnel to the rebels.
The State Department said It
made public this "hard evidence
. . . concerning the extensive So- viet and North Vietnamese partici- In view of the serious- patisr.
ness of tre current situation in
Laos."
Most American allies have tak- en a skeptical view of claims by
the Laotian government that out- side Communist aid is reaching the
rebels. U.S. officials have been
hampered in their efforts to get
allied action by lack of evidence
concerning the fighting in the re- mote country.
The State Department statement
said:
1. Most of the flights have been
IL-1- 4
trans- made by Soviet-bui- lt
port planea, similar to the Convair.
2.. Of the nine Soviet planes
whose registration numbers have
been obtained, five are the same as
those used by the Soviets in their
airlift to the Congo
last year.
3. The planes have brought 105- millimeter howitzers, ammunition,

...

The ground floor contain? an
s
room
lecture,
with permanent auditorium style
seats: music rooms with permanent risers; and botany, physics,
chemistry and bacteriology laboratories.
The center's second floor has 12
classrooms. Two, which seat more
than 100 students, can be divided
by screens into four,
rooms.
The second floor also contains
consultation offices and a psychology laboratory complete with
a one-wa- y
observation mirror.
Mrs. Irene H. Young, a grandmother now a freshman at the
Center, expressed typical student
reaction to the new building: "The
Center is the greatest thing that's
ever happened to Northern
auditorium-physic-

National Student Group Backs
Congressional Investigations

Work Begins
On Building

For Institute

verslty of Chicago, University of Wisconsin, Stan-

Special To The Kernel

EVANSTON, 111., Jan. 3- -A national organ- ford, and Tulane.
Construction woik has
"The central issue has now
John Kolbc, 20,
ization of college students defending Congress become whether orsaid, Congress will continue to
not
on the Spintlleiop Rehas been formed, it was Investigate matters free of the arbitrary controls
search Institute administration investigatory power
with which its opponents seek to shackle it.
announced here today.
."It is no longer an attack on one or two combuilding with completion proCommittee for Congressional mittees," he continued. "They (the opponents) have
The Students'
jected for next summer.
Autonomy, which will attempt to counter the sup- declared war on both the
n

Groundbreaking ceremonies were
lield early in December.
The one million dollar structure,
a 20,0(10 square foot monumental-typ- e
building, will be constructed
on the west side of the farm, located on the Ironworks Tike.
The institute will be the nucleus
of an industrial research complex
in which an estimated $1.3J7,500
will be invested.
After its completion, private industrial firms will have use of the
institute's laboratory facilities.

d
drive to abolish the House
Activities Committee (HUAC), will be
headed by two brothers attending Northwestern
University here.
They are James Koine, freshman majoring in
political science, and bis brother John, a senior
journalism major. Both are from Patagonia, Ariz. .
d
Eighteen-year-olJames, a tovr er pape in the
Senate, said the committee will '.ry to organize
support for HUAC wherever it holds its hearings. Its
purpose will be to prevent displays such as the
riotin in which students participated during the
HUAC hearings in San Francisco last year.
The committee already hai student representatives on 30 cumpuses, including Harvard, Yale, Uni- -

posedly

Communist-le-

Kegular Classes To Meet
The Day Before Finals
By HILL MARTIN

irr

a

congressional prerogative
to inform itself and on the people's right to know.
By properly serving a public education function, we
hope to bring an end to that war."
In a letter to all members of Congress released
today, the brothers asked the legislators t: "join in
this fight to protect the autonomous right of Congress to inform itself and the American public of
the persons and practices which would corrupt or
destroy our way of life."
The two youths feel that Communists and "many
individuals and organizations" would
benefit the most from the weakening of Congress'
investigatory power because congressional committees "have been so successful in uncovering the true
nature of their operations."

Dr. Morris Scherago. chairman
of the University Faculty commit-- .
tee on scheduling, could not be

reuched for comment.
According to the spring semester
schedule book, finals are listed for
Tuesday through Saturday, the
week of May 23.
Dean l.lton gave two reasons
Continued on Page 8

gasoline,
war gear to the rebels. The air
rraft. also nnrarhiitpH rtr lnnHp1
North Vietnamese mililary venaam
nel to heln rebel CaDt. Kong Le in
the battle for Vientiane.
4. Heavy Soviet transport planea
nave
Inr throu h
Rfd ChInalntoVNorth
Viet Nam.
backing up the illegal airlift into
Laos."
He said it would be up to the
Laotian government to protest to
the Russians.
Meanwhile, the rovernment of
Laos accused North Viet Nam of
unprovoked aggression.
Laotian Ambassador Sisoult Na
Champassak, told Secretary-Oen- erai Dag Hammarskjold that North
viet Nam forces, estimated at six
batalllons, had crossed into Laotian
territory and were aiding Laotian
rebels.
The Laotian representatives ask- ed that his communication be
brought to the attention of all
u.N. members. The note was made
public late today as Hammarskjold
prepared to leave for the Congo,
The
Laotian gov- ernment of Premier Prince Boun
Oum claimed last Saturday that
seven Red Vietnamese battalions
had invaded northeast Laos to supPathet Lao
port
guerrillas,
Much of the evidence of Com- munlst Intervention issued by the
United States today has already
been known and to some extent
discounted by U.S. allies concerned
with Southeast
Asian affairs,
Britain has favored a Russian pro
posal for a revival of the International Control Commission, first
step up for Laos after the Indochina war ended In 1954.
Asked about a report that the
Laotian government itself also
wants revival of the three-natio- n
commission, Reap said, "Our views
on the usefulness of the ICC have
been conditional upon the position
taken by the royal Lao government." Previously U.S. diplomats
had complained the commission
had been used as a tool by the
Communists.
Reap also said the United Nations was one possible avenue toward peace in Laos, although he
noted the Soviets' frequent use of
the veto.
He also spoke of the Southeast
Asia Treaty Organization, an eight
nation defense alliance for Southeast Asia.
"What we have been seeking,"
he said, "is the must workable
means of securing and maintaining
the integrity of Laos, which has
been seriously threatened by the
Illegal introduction of outside Communist assistance to the rebel
Communist forces."

r.v

SEATO Asks Laos Settlement
Members of its third week, defiantly called for more mass rallies
in the streets tomorrow.
Ignoring appeals to call off the strike, the Socialists tried to scrap the austerity program in parthree-natioliament after hearing Premier Gaston Eyskens denounce the mass walkouts as political. The conservative coalition beat down the Socialist motion. 121-8reported willing
Coltlwater Position Questioned
allow the commission to resume work but under conWASHINGTON, Jan. 3 ( AP) Sen. Jacob K.
ditions that may be unacceptable to the communists.
Y., today raised the Issue of unseating
Javits, R-Strikers Attacked In Belgium
as chairman of the
Sen. Barry Goldwater,
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Jan. 3 (AP) Police with RepubUcun Senatorial Campaign Committee.
sabers and clubs fought strikers in Brussels and
Javits said he asked at a closed conference of
other major cities today as Parliment opened de-b- all GOP senators today for a similar caucus to dison the object of the workers' wrath a rigid cuss whether Goldwatpr should continue to head a
pconomy program.
party organisation devoted to helping Republican
Socialist leade-- s of the general strike, now in senatorial candidates.
BANGKOK. Thailand, Jan.

3

(AP)

Regular University classes will meet on Thursday, Jan. 19, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)
in spite of the fact final examinations begin the next day, Dr. want a political settlement of the civil war in Laos,
Pote Sarasin said today.
SEATO Secretary-GenerCharles V. Elton, Dean of Admissions and Registrar, announced
n
One solution could be reactivation of the
International
Supervisory Commission to
yesterday.
to finaIs nd 8(udellts nad m wet.k.
work out a truce. Informed sources in London said
In reply to a question as to why end in which to prepare,
Tremier Boun Oum of Laos is
to
finals were being split over a week- end this semester. Dean Elton said
he was not sure
thought It
Just worked out that way.
This means that students who
have a 5 p.m. class on Thuriiy,
Jan. 19 will have 13 hours to study
for finals. The practice in the past
lia been to devote one full week

Eight Paget

U.S. Says

ipililjiil
pp

IS IL

KY., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 4. 1961

f

iliil!!!!!!!!

Today's Weather:
Partly Cloudy, Cold;
Low 20, High 37

M

� 2

THE KENTUC

KY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 4,

11

LEGEND
liittlif

ril o

!'

Judging Team
Places Third
At Chicago

Graphics 60 Opens

With New Works

New works have been add?d to
the "Oraphlcs 60" exhibition which
reopened yesterday and will continue to run until January 22.
The intaglio works of Stanley
'
y,
William Hayter, Mauriclo
and Oabor Peterdl are
featured in the contemporary art
show.
Each artist has been connected with important art tichools in
the United States and is represented in the collections of tho
principle museums dealing in contemporary art.
The Art Gallery is open each
week day from noon to 4 p.m.;
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Baturday;
5
p.m. on Sunday; and from
9
p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday.

The University dairy judging
team finished third highest of 17
collegiate teams competing in the
Live Stock ExpoInternational
sition Dairy Show at Chicago.
As a team, the four UK students
placed first in Judging the Jersey
breed; third In Holsteins; third in
Brown Swiss; and fifth in Milking Shorthorns.
Iowa State University won the
contest and Kansas State finished
FIVE NEW PARKS . . . The. map above shows location of live new state parks to be finances
second.
by the $10 million bond tnsue panned by voters in the last election. All existing state
parks wll
Kentucky amassed a total of
ce improvements and new construction resulting from the bond Issue.
1,924 points out of a possible 2.250.
Barney Hornback placed third in
judging Jerseys, fifth in Milking
Shorthorns, ninth in Brown Swiss,
Elvis Presley is my generation's
and tenth in Holsteins.
Donald Colvin was second high- James Dean. Joe Smith.
est in Judging Milking Shorthorns
and placed as 12th high individual
on unity i:M pm.
Judge in the entire contest.
Other team members were Bob- Dr.
By WHIT HOWARD
ting the women attending State, are beginning to skyrocket. At the by Wall? and John Frazier.
audi Avwin
one advertiser
offered "ladies' same exclusive men's store that Robert Walton, assistant professor
Tuesday News Associate
NOW SHOWING!
of darytnc, is team coach,
At the Majestic this week. New furnishings. Notions, White Ooods in the early 30's were offering
"SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER"
and Embroidery, Art Needle work their suits at $22.50, their cheapest
Ehttbtlh Tlylor Manly Clitt
York's greatest sensation, "Pic"ALL THE YOUNG MEN"
suit now is $39.50, with topcoats
tures that Talk' with refined and High Class Millinery."
Try not to trump your partner's
AUn ltd
Si4fr Poitwr
Also for the women a dancing
ace. C. Orabout.
at $46.50.
going
singing by Mr. and Mrs. Henry class oirerea a
"special on prilate of Dreamland. The
Hurchlngs,
vate lessons on the Merry Widow
public will be treated with the
Bosutmost courtesy by the manager. Waltz, Barn Dance, and the
ton without extra charge."
Admission flv cents.
Taking a swing up to the 1931's
This was one of the advertisements that appeared in the first an exclusive men's store offered
at
edition of the Kernel, then called "suits, topcoats, and tuxedos
down the
the Idea, published in October, $22.50." While Just were
street women's hats
being
1908.
offered from $1.95 to $4.95. with
Going back over some of the a special sale on "rayon undies at
old advertising that appeared In Just 33c, bloomers, chemise, vests,
the paper, the following ad from, and panties."
one of Lexington's men's clothGirls were also urged to "keep
ing stores appeared.
kissable with cigarettes. No artiair" is character- ficial flavors to taint the breath
"The college
istic of our young men's suits. . . . or stain the teeth."
Coats with cuff sleeves, patch
For the weekend entertainment
pockets, peg trousers, and large three shows were
featuring, Elissa
cuff bottoms. This, with college
in
Helen Twelve-treehats decorated In giddy ribbons Landi and Wicked," Cortez in "Bads
Recardo
and "Nettleton" shoes are the kind
Company", and the Vodvil theatre
all' the fellows wear.
For the economically minded "lines and lines of chorus girls at
students of 1908 "Put your duds our midnight show."
Moving into the early 1950's you
in Cropper's suds and you'll be
happy." Not completely forget- - can't help but notice that prices

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Early Century Pages Of Kernel
Yield Interesting Advertising

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SOUTH LIMESTONE AND EUCLID AVENUE

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan.

NEW YOHK (AP)
You
with a hieh fashion I ' () ' will
.
.
.
be very smart indeed m the
In I960 women outnumlx'rccl men at the polls, won
supple, simple lines of next
Olympic mol;i!s, made the most of Leap Year.
spring's styles.
Soap operas went down the drain, but housewives carried
but you may need to Ixine
on bravely.
up on style detailing a bit if
tried
They
liquid diets, wore purple, kept their you are to make the
grade in
heads about high fashion's sooty
,
h
f,
selecting proper accessories for
and culottes for town
Oe makeup
Athletlcg. OIympic hrrolncs we that
new wardrobe
Wllma

Births, Ballots, Bachelors

e

Just

IS'o

sprinter
Rudolph, figure
skater Carol Heiss. swimmers Chris
Von Saltza and Lynn Buike. An
Brit-mou- ld
0ider amateur, Russian-bor- n
lsn physician. Dr. Barbara Moore,
56, walked 3,387 miles acrcss the
United States in 185 days, mostly
munching grass. Uncounted were
the women who bounced on tramp-Elizabeollns in their backyards or cxer-Prlncised passively on oscillating
couches in their boudoirs,
Literature: Margaret Leech won
her second Pulitzer Prize for a
history book. This one: "In The
Days of McKinley." And the ghost- cd putoblographies of glamorous
women continued haunting the
bookstands.
ENGAGEMENTS

RKC'I.NT

R w Fivl(ls of
announce the recent en- Ragement of their daughter. Mary
LoUi to Tom Cambron. son of Mr.
and Mrs 11lornas Cambron, Lex
ington.
Miss Fields is a member of Alpha
Delta Pi Sorority and a Junior
elementary and special education
major.
Mr. CamDion, a member of Tri- rrateinuy. is a senior major-lo- st
in ln industrial management,

Mr and

-J

How To Spruce Up Spring Styles

Looking Back Over 1960:

And they had famous babies,
The index of influential infants is
hard to pin down, but any list
include:
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr.,
who.se proud parents will move him
Into a White Kouse nursery Jan.
20; Prince Andrew, son of Queen
II and Prince Philip;
Reza Koorosh All, long- awaited heir to the peacock throne
cf Iran, born to the Shah and
Queen Purah; Prince Naruhito, son
cf Japan's Crown Prince Akihito
and Crown Princess Michiko.
The Steven Rockefellers
Anne Marie Rasmussen) and Brig- itte Bardot had boys, too.
Other vital statistics of the year
included prominent divorces: Sir
Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh
cf the British theater. Lucille Bull
and Desi Arnaz of the American
TV screen. Sex symbol Marilyn
Aionroe croKe on ncr marriage
with playwright Arthur Miller.
Maybe Leap Year had nothing
to do with it. but the world's First
Spinster
popped the question
British Princess Margaret Rose
had to, of course it was protocol.
She gained a commoner husband,
Anthony Armstrong Jones, but
a butler, Thomas Cronin. The
perfect servant felt his master
didn't measure up.
Along with Leap Year, every
fourth year comes the presidential
lection. And the 1960 political
arena at times resembled a Daisy
Chain so many women got in the
act
wnn ineir
ampaigning
candidate
husbands Were Mrs.
Richard Nixon. Mrs. Henry Cabot
Lodge, and Mrs. Lyndon Johnson.
Jacqueline Kennedy stayed home
to await Junior, but her youth.
trau'y. and taste in clothes kept
her controversial at coffee klatches.
The talk tempo stepped up when
she became First Lady-elec- t.
Margaret Chase Smith of Maine
over Miss Lucia
M. Cormier in the lirst
tenate race.
Neither were women abroad
slackers politically. Japan got its
first woman cabinet member, Mrs.
Masa Nakayama, welfare minister.
Ceylon got the world's first woman prime minister, Mrs. Sirimavo
And the U.S.S.R.
Bandaranaike.
made its topranking woman Communist, blonde Ekaterina Furtseva
minister of culture.

I,

Mrs,

Loul.sviiie

indorsement.
Common sense and next sea- son's silhouette (slim with the
merest fullness) tells you to pack
up your voluminous bouffants In
favor of sheath slips or petticoats
with a minimum of flounce.
Scarves
Stock up on all kinds, colors, and
sizes ior a variety of uses.
Wide, collarless necklines, stand- collars on
away or funnel-shape- d
coats and dresses demand scarves
as a matter of self preservation on
chilly days.
over- Tied around loose-fittin- g
blouses and dresses, long scarves
become colorful sashes looped in
front.
Draped around arms left bare by
this season's sleeveless dress styles,
long, long scarves are softly fern- inine stoles.
Belts
choices for their
Designers'
original costumes are self fabric
sashes or shoestring tics. To make
a switch, to nip in knits ana over- -

blouses at the waistline a bit, or
To be chic you wil wear short
,0 Cinch a coyfume drpss- - vou
Bluves with sleevelessness. But to
be able to buy the conforming kind, be warm in these wide shortsleeved
Brilliant hued leather sashes, ropes coats, you'll buy them to reach
strings are suitable for cinching past the elbow,
,n the "uld ,ook- Hats

Jewelry
ften tne designer has added all
decoraUve tuch
nepd
tacking on eye.catching buttons,
Bib buttons resembling eggs, bil- liard baIls. olives. and flat cookies
are stlye signatures on many lines,
But lack of button detail In
other spring costumes provide
these Jewelry opportunities:
Costume suits and coats call for
large vertival pins, Sleeveless
dresses provide plenty of bare arm
room for a brace of bracelets. Col- larless or standaway necklines.
narticularlv on oaunt ficures. need
necklaces. Loose
big, bold, bib-tyoverblouses, and fluid sheaths can
be accented by flapperish ropes,
waistline length and as bright as
nursery school baubles.
Gloves
sleeves,
Cape sleeves, short-wid- e
or no sleeves at all In this spring's
coats, dresses, and suits call for
a handsome supply of gloves all
lengths.

H
f

Mr. Frank Beauty Salon
Featuring a Complete Line of Cosmetology
The Latest in Hair Styling

KOHLER, Stylist and Color Artist, and MISS
EDNA BLACKWELL, a well known Operator in the
n field of Cosmetology, along with our Professional Staff
welcomes you.
ETHEL

LA FLAME

$17.50 Permanents on Special for $15.00

RESTAURANT

Make Your Appointments

941 Winchester Rd.

OPEN TUESDAY
BY

"FINE

FOODS, LOUNGE
AND DANCING

AT

Titkin Club
Pitkin Club will have a regular
oon nour meeting today at Max-wo- n
wcl1 stleet Presbyterian Church.

fl

Dog IJvliS Car
Miss
PAGELAND, S. C. (AP)
Mlckey Yount of Charlotte. N. C.
n th,ee 6"! friends were headed
etV5t n her smaU
oreiBn car when
a black and white hound walked
,nto the h'Bhway.
The little car hit the dog, flipped
over into a ditch and came to rest
with windows broken, windshield
out and chassis buckled beyond
repair. The girls crawled out, un- hurt. The dog?
"I think his tail was broken,"
said Xvliss Yount. "It seemed a
little bent as he trotted away."

1

I

Impress Your Date-T- ake
Her To . . .

MEETINGS
Dames Club
The Dames Club will meet at
7:30 pm. today Jn tn2 SUB Muslc
Room.
Mrs. Franlc a Djckey a special
Ruesti win present the Ph.T. (Put- tin(r Hubbv Throuah) Deerees to
wivp nr .Tnniiarv orarlnatp.:
Guest entertainer will be
Melnycyn. operatic tenor.
All wives of University students
and graduate students are invited
to attend.

Flapperish fashions call for the
wltn bllms
l'P icle
or back. Middy fashions are
mammoth-sized
by
emphasized
sallors wtth tilting brims. And
t.
,nose
or wispy, drapy
wmenls In the new spring col- lections will be dramatized by
ail
turbans, tall, tall, tall, or not-jajj

coch

A

AND THURSDAY
APPOINTMENT

f,

Early
EVENINGS

287 South Lime

Phone

EVERYONE
READS THE
rv n rzzD

A Cool Duel
The well dressed dog and his UK cat
Side by side in the grill they sat;
'Twas half-patwelve . . . how th
hours do pass
Not one nor the other had gone to
class.

Pa

Justice

TUCSON, Ail. (AP)
Johnny
McDonald told police thieves took
of him ln stealing a
advantage
pistol and watch.
The thieves took the goods from
McDonald's home while he was
.trving a sentence in the city jail.

(I

...

wasn't there; I simply state
was told to me by a helpful
mate.)

what

I

In the Kernel they read as they sat and

thought
Of things to be done and clothes to
be bought;
Of shows to see and food to eat . . .
And places to go where friends meet.

(In case you doubt what I have just
said
Without UK this town would be dead.)

l

ATMOSPHERE

DINING

MWSii

I

RESTAURANT

Tj

DANCING

JJJL
KJL

(J,

DRINKS
I

Closed Sunday

J

f

rMi

)V?

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W

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LIVE MUSIC NITELY

I
H

n

0ne of Kentucky's Finest
Steak Houses

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OPEN 11:00 A.M. TO 1:00 A.M.

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the 10,000 students who need
many things
The Kernel daily, a sales talk brings.
So to get your share of the UK dollar
Juct call 2306 for an advertising
scholar.
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(A successful advertiser told me so
And that is hew I came to know.)

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� THE READERS' FORUM

The Kentucky Kernel
of
University

curses louder,
gin. He sings loudly,
and dances till dawn; but can't tell

True Tragedy

Kentucky

frcond cUu mntiT nnrtir the Art of March 3, 1879.
Eotrrrri lit th- pot offir at Lrnington, Krnturkv
nil ezaml.
th- - rr pilar k honl yrar
dunng holidays
PubUihrd lorn trnet a wwk iliiriniiFxU.LARS
YEAH
A SCHOOL
SIX

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To The Editor:

the time or what campus
the day
welcome you on your return from he's on. Local bars or "the grill" arc
Bob Anderson, Editor
Newton Spencer, Sport$ Editor
Mike Wenninger, Managing Editor
vacation, Mr. Roberts, and I trust
Bobbie Mason, Assistant Managing Editor
full benefit of Xinas
Stuart Goi.rrARB, Advertising Manager you received the
Alice Ain, Society Editor
cheer. Nevertheless, I must reproach
WEDNESDAY NEWS STAFF
you for a mistake you made in your
Miciiele Fearing, Associate
Meriutt Deitz, News Editor
last letter! For one so intimate with
Stewart Hedger, Sports
the theater you seem blissfully unaware of one major element of
tragedy. Mr. Aristotle would have
sneered at the impudence, you exSince some sports writer first getful five" for the team that shows hibited in calling mere peril of
Wildcat basketup for a game sans trunks, or "filchtagged the 1946-4womanhood true tragedy. True tragball team with the name the Fabing five" or one whose members are edy must involve greatness, at the
ulous Five, less original writers have caught stealing final examinations.
very least potential greatness.
carried on the search for the proper How about "foulmouthed five" when
If you desire to hear a real tragalliterative label to hang on every a team member, at the proper psychoI shall unfold a tale of woe
lull in a edy,
UK basketball team. logical moment during a
subsequent
unparalleled in literary history and
Succombing to an omnipresent poetic game, inadvertently emits a violent
truly tragic in nature. It concerns the
urge, they have come up with such oath? There could always be a student Ixxly of a well known, local
gems as fiddling, fledgling, and feeble "febrile five" for a squad racked by state university. Within its massive
various viruses. And perhaps one day
fives.
numbers lurked the potential greata "Freudian Five" made up entirely
As our contribution to this great
such institutions, but
ness of
of psychology majors.
literary undertaking, we have atalas, its only boast was a scrappy
But even these aren't quite
and courageous basketball team little
tempted to foresee future situations
apropos for teams representing an
appreciated by faculty and students his
some suitable adjectives institution
and provide
striving for academic receveryday homes, and seductions
alike. What, Mr. R.? You've not seen
in advance.
We need something that
and fights follow wherever he roams.
ognition.
a word picthese students? Perhaps
will be more representative of our
A quick glance through Webster's
See him now, Mr. R.? Yes, certure will sharpen your insight.
a wealth of colorful initial intellectual atmosphere. Our suggesreveals
tainly you do, but look around him
of a passI see a young student
of both sexes,
adjectives limited only by one's tion is something like facete,
ionless race oblivious to insults flung there are 6,000 more,
The great untapped reflatulent, factitious, or fainOh no. each one
imagination.
his face. lie is "cool" or he's too. Conformists?
into
source includes, for example, such eant five.
belongs to one or two of the hunin kind, and
And then when all the obvious "neat" or a brother
future possibilities as facile, fair, fat,
dreds of little, ineffectual, rival camspeaks never softly nor never well
which are devoid
faint, or ferocious fives for teams labels are exhausted, by hedging just timed. His tests are "real
myths" or pus organizations
can begin again with the
a little, we
of purposes, or are useless in any
meeting appropriate qualifications.
his profs are "unreal," his date was
If these are too prosaic for some "Phenomenal Phive."
Failure most assuredly ata "swinger," his adviser's a heel. No manner.
The possibilities are phrightening.
then we suggest "for
but our
lefined tastes,
him will you tends their every endeavor,
"gentleman 'C'" from
man grins, and he laughs, and he
find, he sweats for a "D" when he's
down the same
not on a bind. He rarely can tell goes one more day
aimless path in the same aimless way.
where he is or has been, he's either
Wes Morris
The end of the football playing run. in tnese circumstances it is nor sleepy or drunk or disgusted with
season at our colleges and universisurprising to find Dr. Edgar F. Shannon, president of the institution
ties frequently marks the beginning
founded by Thomas Jefferson, under
of the football coach firing season.
considerable pressure to get rid of
In some circles, notably where
was a moment when the United
his coach. The pressure, as Dr. ShanBy J. M. ROBERTS
excited and loyal alumni gather, firing
States wavered over any more supnon puts it, comes from "a group
Associated Press News Analyst
a coach because he loses games is
of alumni deeply interested in the
The United States is preparing
port for anlody in Laos.
natural and proper. College football
athletic program."
her military and political positions
Laos has been virtually a
is University's
is Big Business, they argue. It
"I have advised them . . . that for whatever may develop in Southin the Southeast Asia desimply a matter of principle, or getthe contract stands."
fense st tup. Not a member of SLWTO,
east Asia, but with no such decisivea fair return on money invested
ting
Dr. Shannon continued:
ness and snap as accompanied the but an area to be defended under
in a huge stadium and sturdy halfIt is important and proper
the treaty, with no organized econLebanon incident in 19S.
backs.
that our players, as part of their
The
government of omy and with a people vitlually imAltogether too often college presieducation here, know that honor and Laos is either not wholly frank or mune to political concepts, she stands
dents yield to the pressures, and fire
is woefully uninformed about what
go d conduct are not only taught but
primarily as a buffer state between
emaway. Year after year excessive
the Communist sphere and much of
practiced. . . . The University of is going on in the fighting area
phasis on victory leading to the firthe latter being highly likely in a Southeast Asia, ller own Communists
Virginia does not break its contracts."
ing of coaches leaves a grubby smear
Dr. Shannon, to his everlasting
were never disarmed alter the Indocountry so devoid of communications.
of commercialism on the face of
china war, and North Vietnam, which
credit, is concerned with something The Southeast Asia Treaty Organizahigher education.
more important than a return on tion has little on which to base a me is Red China and Red Russia,
But the fust flurry of action in financial investment or the illusive decision regarding interveniton.
used them constantly to'kccp
ha
this year's coach firing season has prestige of a winning season. His
This is the second time that Comup military action