xt7qrf5kbd42 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7qrf5kbd42/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1959-11-11  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 11, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 11, 1959 1959 1959-11-11 2013 true xt7qrf5kbd42 section xt7qrf5kbd42 'Expert' Spoofs

Ron Cain Called
'Mr. Versatile';
Sec Sports Page

TV Investigation;

Editorial Page

University of Kentucky
LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, NOV.

Vol. L

(

ill'::
'.
MS

isl

No. 30

Committee To Study
Dishonesty Problems

v

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I

11, 1959

i

Off To V.N.

Pat Stewart (right), Arts and Science freshman from 'Lexington,

and another unidentified student, prepare to leave for New York.
About 35 students Tislted New York on the United Nations trip
sponsored by the YMCA.

The University Faculty Monday
unanimously approved a motion
calling for the Faculty Rules Committee to study problems concerning student dishonesty in classroom work and related matters.
The motion was presented in
three parts, the first two made by
Prof. John E. Reeves of the Political Science Department, and the
third by Dr. William S. Ward,
head of the English Department.
Prof. Reeves' first provision
asks that the Rales Committee
study and report on "Cheating and
related offenses, with a view to
making a proper distinction between cheating In the classroom
and more serious offenses that
may be committed outside the
classroom but have a close connection to classroom work."
The intended meaning is to dis

tinguish between a case involving a student's looking at an
answer on another paper and the
buying, stealing, or pilfering a
test from an office, Prof. Reeves
said yesterday.
Such a rule would not apply to
past exam files in the possession
of some students.
The second point to be studied
by the Faculty committee is
"proper communication between
the University administration and
faculty members and ' academic
departments in relation to any
disciplinary problem where the
faculty member or department
may have an Interest In or knowledge of the particular offense In

the faculty member or department
has been consulted."
Prof. Reeves said ha felt the
parties involved could add information on facts and circumstances
the admllstratlve groups might
not be informed of.
Dr. Ward's addition called for
the study of disciplinary probation to determine the restrictions,
If any, which should be placed on
students who are placed on disciplinary probation.
Dr. Ward said he was seeking
the answer to the question, "What
does disciplinary probation mean?"
The football player placed on
disciplinary probation is still playing football. Under University
rules, students on academic probation may not take part in campus activities of any type.
Prof. Reeves said his motion was
prompted by the attempted theft
on an examination by a football
player Oct. 22.
The theft attempt took place in
Prof. Reeves' office and was discovered by him when he returned
to his office to make out an exam.
The prowler slammed the office
door shut In the Instructor's face
as he entered his office.
Police traced the would-b- e robber
by football tickets bearing hl
name found outside Prof. Reeves'
office. They were said to have been
dropped as the
prowler dived
through the office window to

question."

Beatniks And Plays
Highlight UN Visit SC Faculty Advisers
By BOBBIE MASON

Straight from the pages of the
New Yciker came 37 sleepy-eye- d
UK students returning from the
United Nations trip to New York
City Sunday night.
"My, things are quiet on Times
Square," ere coed remarked upon
observing the back of the Student Union.
The gr cup, more or less chaperoned ky YMCA director Fred
Strache, rptnt the three days In
a variety of activities that would
overrate a generation of UK Homecomings.
Almost

nothing was left

touchedvisits

to

Radio

un-

City,

Rockefeller Center, Staten Island,
St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the
Metropolitan Museum of Modern
Art, plus .shopping at Macy's and
the chance to see TV deception
first hand.
"I think the view from the top
of the Empire State Building impressed me most," said Emery
Emert, Junior In the College of
Arts and Sciences. "There you can
see the whole island and have an
Idea of hew big it really is."
The Broadway plays were one of
the prime rources of entertainment, the most popular being
"The World of Suile Wong,"
"Flower Drum Song," and Tennessee Williams'

"Sweet Bird of

Youth."

'I think acting such as this is
the very best type of entertainment," said Judy Howell, soph-

omore from Campbellsvllle.

Pat Stewart, freshman math
major (who, incidentally, slept in
the luggage rack of the bus during
the trip) was delighted with the
opera, "Carmen."
"I didn't understand a word
they were saying, though," she
said. "It was all in French!"
Dale Loar couldn't understand
the elevators that took off before the passengers did.
"They take off like they're trying to crash the sound barrier,"
he complained as he got up from
the floor. ("You do wonderful
work," a lady said to the elevator
operator.)
The subways were a source of
amazement to many of us. An
Continued on Page 8

Kyian Portraits
Today Is the last day senior

portraits

for the

Kentucklan

be taken,- according to
Perry Ashley, Kentucklan adviser.
Ashley said they will be taken
on a first come, first served
basis. They will Include all those
students who have not had them
taken previously.
will

-

Of this point. Prof. Reeves said,
"Action should not be taken until

Lose Committee Vote
Student Congress faculty ad- would be limited to what the comvisers will no longer vote in SC mittee approved and nothing else.
meetings,
Committee
Executive
The assembly set Dec 2 as the
congress acting Vice President date for the SC fall primary elecPhil Austin reported to the as- tions. Because Campus Party will
sembly i Monday night.
choose Its fall slate of candidates
Austin said the decision to re- by a convention, only Students'
lieve faculty advisers of their Party will participate in the privotes In the committee was agreed mary.
upon by both the student commitGeneral elections will be two
tee members and the advisers.
weeks later on Dec.
The faculty advisers had begun
the practice, of voting In the Executive Committee during meetings to determine the procedure
to be followed concerning fraudulent practices in last spring's SC
elections.
Austin also read a statement
clarifying the question of bringThe UK Air Science Department
ing up business in the congress.
announced yesterday that approxi- The statement was aimed at
mately 325
cadets
clearing up misunderstandings participate AFROTCVeterans'would
Day
in the
concerning business not Included
approved Parade today.
In the meeting agenda
Among the units participating
by the Executive Committee.
are the 293rd Cadet Group, the
Earlier In the semester it was
Cadet Police
felt by some that, under the Cadet Band, the Sponsor Corps.
Squadron, and the
method of having to have proThe department also said Col.
posed SC business approved by the
R. W. Boughton, head of the Dewith six
Executive Committee
faculty members voting, the legis- partment of Air Science, had been
to sit in the reviewing
lative business of the congress invited

before the Christian era.

They were sunflower growers,
and by utlng the sunflower seeds
to add to their food supplies, they
were able to develop a more com-

plex culture.
The Mammoth Cave Indians also
have provided a prehistoric puzzle.
In 1935, the mummified body of
an Indian killed while mining
gypsum more than two thousand
years ago was found In the cave
by two guides.

n
A
boulder had fal'en on
him while he was chipping gypsum
from the walls, doubling him over.
Today the mystery of why he
wanted the gypsum is still unsix-to-

solved.
Gypsum, a salt formation, is
used now to make planter of paris.

Radiocarbon dating last year indicates the miner was killed 300
B.C.
About 800 B.C., the culmination
of the early farming period was
reached In the central and northern parts of the state, primarily
north of the Kentucky River.
This cultural period is called
the Adena, and lasted until approximately 800 A.D.
The burial customs show how
development of part time farming
allowed the Indians to evolve a
more complex culture.
For example, the Adena Indians
had some form of social system.
Most of the dead were cremated,
but a select few were burled in
tombs surrounded by logs and covered by bark.
Their houses would be burned
--

1

The punishment meted out to
the athlete has not been disclosed,
but sources say It was mild.

325 AFROTC Cadets
Will Parade Today
.

stand during the parade. lie Is the
only faculty member from UK who
will participate In the parade.
Cadets from the University' will
Join the parade at 10:25 a.m. at
over the tonihs, and earth would Broadway and Main and will re- be mounded over the site.
The people who received such f.
burial treatment may have been
.: i
political or religious leaders.
The Adena culture produced the
first pottery found in Kentucky
V
copper
and also made
bracelets and rings.
The males averaged about 5 ft. 6
In. and had roughly the same life
span as the earlier Archaic Indians
about 27 for males.
They also had more cavities
a fact possibly attributed to the
increased complexity of their diet.
Some of the graves have trophy
skulls in them an extra skull
found Interred with a skeleton.
'
The trophy skulls may represent
slaves reburied with their masters,
or they might represent the skulls

Indians Hunted Wild Plants

By RONALD J. BUTLER
Associated Tress Writer
The Archaic Indian culture in
Kentucky was based on hunting
and foraging for wild plants.
But. by 1500 B.C., a revolutionary trend began.
It aroe from the idea that
plants could be' cultivated for a
reliable food source.
The idea was slow to take root,
covering some two thousand years
in its development.
The first real example' of this
development comes from the Mammoth Cave Indians, who inhabited
the region in the first millenium

escape.

well-shap-

4

port back to UK by 11 ajn.
The 293rd Cadet. Group Is corn- manded by P. J. O'Brien; the Cadet
Band by D. C. Mitchum; the Cadet
Police by H. R. Bishop; and Anna
Owen is in charge of the sponsors.
The parade Is sponsored by the
Lexington American Legion posts.
Units participating in the parade
will march from Broadway to Rose
Street. The reviewing stand will
be at Union Station.
Three bands will participate in
the parade. Marching units are
from the University, the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 680, American War Mothers and Millersburg
Military Institute.

'

.,

ed

of enemies.

Anthropoligists regard the burial

mounds as evidence of great polled
resources.
It took a lot of manpower and
cooperation to fix a mound, one
of the signs of an expanded culture made possible by plant do- -

mestlcation.

This prehistoric Indian was killed In Mammoth Cave about 300
B.C. when a six ton boulder fell on him while he was chipping
gypsum from the walls. He was a member of a culture that was
Just beginning to cultivate a few plants to supplement hunting.

� 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Nov. 11, 1939

i;

Four UK Students
A re Nigh t Flyers

it

Faculty Fireside

They have recently flown to such
cities as Louisville, Cincinnati,
Chicago, and Nashville. In the
near future they will fly to St.
Louis and Rochester. N. Y.
140. that is.
The four young men all have
The four Kappa Slf pilots, Kurt a ultimate goal In their flying
Fromnif, Bob Sttickert, Dick futures.
Steckler, and Al Royster are mrm-be- rs
Fromme'i ambition is to become
s.
of the Lexington Flying Club. a captain on one of the major
Both Steckler and Stuckrrt
Fromme is the instructor of the
group and holds a commercial are planning to continue flying In
pilot's license. There are other the Air Force.
Royster hopes to use his flying
students In the club, but presently
experience when calling on clients
these four are the the only ones
in his advertising profession.
doing night flying, said Royster.
pilots do
most of their
The
night acrobatics In the club's

Late at night while most of the
UK students are up In the air over
their studies, the "flying. Kappa
Slgs" are Just up In thealr.
Up In the air In their Cessans

U

Tersons Interested In attending
the Faculty Fireside meeting on
Thursday evening at Dr. John
Carpenter'! home should meet In
the "Y" Lounge at 5:20 p.m.
Dr. Carpenter, head of the Zoology Deparmtent, will speak on
'Creation and Evolution."
Those planning to go may sign
Office by
YHCA
up In th
Thursday morning.

air-line-

Aerial Night View

University photographer, John Mitchell, took this aeral photo of
Lexington one night last week while flying with the Kappa Sig
pilots.

Nation Pays Homage
To Veterans Today

Dr. Ryland
Has Article
In Magazine
1

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CABOft

Kim Novak, Fro4. March I If

'Middle of tht Night'

KTMKUlM

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RENTAL SERVICE
For ALL Occasions
MEN'S

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CLAIMS
CLAIMS
CLAIMS
But It Is the
Words Arc CHEAP

Facts That COUNT
Fly with UK students your own age

at

ONE-HAL-

the

F

cost that certain flying services charge you.
young men and women with whom you have some
thing in common.
Here's some of the things you will do when you become afnember of the LEXINGTON FLYING CLUB:
1. Fly flour friends to away sports events.
2. Fly to Louisville or Cincinnati in approximately 40
Fly with

minutes.

ce.

Choy

Ckoao

Today and Thursday!
Brigitto

FELL"

Stephen
Bardot,
Alida Valll (Color)

at night at no extra charge.

IF YOU CAN FLY CHEAPER ANYWHERE IN

LEXINGTON THAN WITH THE

"THE NIGHT
HEAVEN

5. Fly

LEXINGTON FLYING CLUB

Boyd

'THE WAYWARD GIRL"

PHONES: DAY,

Marcia Hcndarson
Potor Walkor, WMt Bistoll

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Avtnm

Cuclia)

Living.
He has had four story translations from French, in Playboy,
in February, March, May, and
October.

i

Debbie REYNOLDS

self-confiden-

ening.

This article, illustrated by five
photos taken by Dr. Ryland, shows
the steps by which he had his first
tomatoes last June 6th, almost a
month ahead of regular fruiting.
Ills method is to raise the plants
in large pots so that the plants
already have small tomatoes on
them when they are set out.
This is Dr. Ryland's sixth publication in "slick" magazines for
this year. In February he had an
article, "How to Be a Good Neighbor," in the Journal of Lifetime

1

AFFAIR

3. Acquire a new feeling of
4. See the UK campus, Merrington Lake, etc. from

DAILY IrtO P.M.

MM

M1im, Gary Crosby U

Sl

'PRIVATlS

NOW!

m mcoi mwvoim

CVA

than drive to it.

mm

it tu Hambltr Amtrtcan

4 door teJun

wheel-bas- e
h
convenience in the
Rambler American for '60. Save on price, on
gas, on upkeep. Get highest resale value. Easiest to
turn and park. At Rambler dealers now.
Drive the New Standard of Basic Excellence
4-do- or

1

Glenn FORD

When this happens, he explains,
the plane ceases to fly and drops

Dr. Hobart Ryiand, UK French
professor, has an article entitled
"First Tomatoes in Town" In the
November issue of Popular Gard-

HfTIW QtXDWY

I

s,

section, and at the hour traffic
stops and all in the vicinity stand
with bowed heads. Three volleys

y

I

MAN'

DQG

IHOUN

2

destroyed.

rapidly toward the earth. They
then release the pressure they
have applied to the controls to
are then fired, followed by the place the aircraft in the stall, and
bugle call and taps.
the plane again attains flying
At the Tomb of the Unknown speed.
Soldier a national observance beAfter a few stalls the pilots go
gins at 11 a.m. with the tradi- on to other little "time killers."
A few of these, Royster said,
tional two minutes of silence and
taps. This is followed by a na- are 180 degree, 360 degree, and 720
and
degree turns, climbs, laxy-8'tional program broadcast.
New York City the Legion the hardest of all, take offs and
In
holds the usual exercises to the landings.
At 5,000 feet the runway looks
Eternal Light in Madison Square.
like a bottomless pit between two
Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a rows of lightning bugs, and you
law which made Nov. 11 a legal
that the young flyers
holiday in the District of Columbia can be sure phychological
barriers
had many
in 1938, and now it is a legal to overcome before they started
holiday in all the states, and in
doing suitable landings, Royster
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Is- stated.
lands as well. The name. ArmWhen we asked Kurt if he
istice Day, was changed to Vet- thought night flying was more
erans Day in 1954..
dangerous than day flying he replied, "not if the pilot uses caution
in the darkness. He "must remember that night flying has to be
similar to instrument flying due
to the lack of a horizon and daytime visible objects."
The pilots all feel that it is many
times safer to fly to a destination

By DIANE CAPEIIART
"Thus at il o'clock this morning; came to an end the crudest
and most terrible war that has
ever scourged mankind."
These were the words Lloyd
George read to the House of Commons, Nov. 11, 1918. And they
concluded the reading of the
Armistice which brought an end
to World War I.
In 1921 the body of an unknown
American soldier was brought
from France and buried in Arlington Cemetery on Armistice
Day. Four years later Congress
adopted a resolution directing the
President to issue an annual proclamation calling on the people
to observe Armistice Day.
This day is under the auspices
of the Americaii Legion, which
has built a tribute around two
minutes of silence at 11 a.m.
In thousands of cities and villages all over America a firing
squad of veterans and a bugler
take their places at a busy inter-

I

airplane. They perform their
maneuvers from 3 p.m. to the wee
hours of the morning thousands of
feet above the Lexington area,
Royster added.
Royster proceeded to explain
some of their maneuvers, one of
which is a power stall that Is
with 2200 r.p.m. of power force the
nose of the plane points upwards
until the turbulence of air being
forced back on the wings Is

)

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Nov. II,

UK Placement Service

Meeting

The Pitkin Club will meet at
noon at the Maxwell Street
Presbyterian Church. The Rev.

Announces Interviews
The UK Placement Service has
announced that the following companies will be on campus this
Wfck to interview students interested in finding Jobs.
Today Cincinnati Shaprr: electrical, hydraulic, industrial, and
mechanical engineering. Hallmark
Cards: men In all fields, interested
In sales trainee positions. Radio
Corporation of America: electrical
mechanical
engineering,
and

Today

Schlumbrrgrr Well Surveying Troy R. Eslinger will speak on
Corporation: electrical, mechanical, "An Authority for Life."
The Blue Cirass Astronomical
petroleum engineering and engineering physics. Union Starch and Society will meet at 8 o'clock
tonight in Room 111, McVey
Refining Co.: B.S. and M.S. gradHall.
uates in all fields, Including engiDr. Wendell C. DeMarcus will
neering and chemistry, for sales
speak on "The Composition of
and production trainee positions.
the Giant Planets."
Thursday Union Carbide Chemical Co.: electrical, cliil, chemical,
SUB Activities
mechanical, Industrial, and metal-lurgiSUB Topics Committee, Room
engineering; chemistry, 206, 4 p.m.
physics, mathematics, and statisJam Session, Little Enos, Balltics at all levels; technical gradroom, 5 p.m.
uates for sales and accounting.
Pershing Rifles Tledge PracThursday U.S. ' Patent Office: tice, Ballroom, 5 p.m.
men and women in applied physical
science and chemistry; aeronautical, agricultural, chemical, civil,
electrical, industrial, mechanical,
metallurgical, mining, and petroal

physics at all degree levels.
Today and tomorrow
U.S.
Marine Corps: officer to describe
Officer Selection Program.
Tomorrow
rhilllps Petroleum:
mechanical, electrical, chemical,
and civil engineering at all degree
levels; chemistry and physics at
M S. or PhX. levels.
leum engineering.

2--

Teimcsscans Show
Art Work At UK

Pi Tau Sigma Initiates
14 Men Into Honorary

193- 9- 3

Dr. Ferguson To Speak
On Stale Government
Dr. John H. Ferguson, director
(he Institute of Public Administration and professor of
political science at Pennsylvania
State University, will give three
public addresses at UK his week.

the auspices of the Murray Season food Good Government Fund
of Cincinnati, Ohio. He formerly
served as secretary of administration and budget secretary in the
offices of Gov. Leader.

of

The first, on "Merit Systems In
State Government," will be held
in conjunction with the Political
Science Club Meeting at 3 p.m.
today in the Laboratory Theatre
of the Fine Arts Building.

Dr. Ferguson is author of
Diplomacy and the
"American
Boer War," "The American Federal Government," "Elements of
American Government," "Municipally owned' Electric Plants in
The next address, on "State Pennsylvania," and
of
Reorganization," several other works.
Administrative
will be at 7:45 p.m. Thursday in
the music room of the SUB.
r.
co-auth- or

The final address is scheduled
for 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Social
Room of the SUB on "The Citizen's Part in Practical Politics."

j J See Russia
1

I960

:L-i-

lin

Economy SladentTeacher summer
According to Dr. E. G. Trimble, tours, Ame iran conducted, from 1195.
s
head of the University Political B ItuMtia by Motor comth. 1
Science Department, there is some from Warsaw or Helsinki. Visit rural
similarity between oroblems which towns plus major cities.
faced Pennsylvania at the begin- B Diamond Grand Tour, Ruia,
Poland,
ning of Gov. George M'.chael Western Czechoslovakia. Scandinavia,
Europe highlights.
Leader's administration and those B Collegiate Circle. Black Sea
facing Kentucky today.
Cruise, Russia, Poland. CzechosloDr. Ferguson will appear under vakia, Scandinavia, Benelux. W. Europe.

Carl Sublett and Walter Stevens,
both of Knoxville, Tenn., are displaying a group of paintings in the
UK Art Gallery.
The exhibition, which began Oct.
21, is scheduled to end Sunday.
Pi Tau Sigma, mechanical en- William Rose, St. Albans, W. Va.;
The gallery is open from 12 noon
gineering honorary, initiated 14 William R. Harrington, Owens-bor- to 3 p.m. during the week. On
men Monday.
Kenneth II. List, Jefferson-tow- Sunday the gallery is open from
Leslie Adkins, Vine Grove; 3 to 5 p.m.
The students were chosen on the
bus: of academic standing and Jack Mellott, Lexington.
Richard B. Watkins. Fort
demonstration of professional
Thomas; William B. Fisher, Trenqualities, as Judged by their proton, Tenn.; Reginald Bethel, Loufessors.
A Mutual Company
isville; William E. Dunning, Eddy-vll- le
The activities were concluded
Over Half a Century of Quality
Robert Chesney, Montlcello;
with a banquet Monday night at
Ihe Kentucklan HoteL Dr. Herb- Will K. Brown, Chicago, 111., and
Phone
Archie L. Roberts Agency
Ho, Kwangsl, China.
ert Sorenson, distinguished pro- Cho-Ye- n
fessor of educational psychology,
was the principal speaker.
Pi Tau Sigma president, Guy A.
Jelly of McQuady presided at the
t ess ions.
ir
The new initiates are Gordon
Ray Hopkins, Wheelwright; George
T. Slaughter, Hardy ville; George
o;

n;

B Eastern Europe Adventure. First

lime available. Bulgaria, Roumania.
Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, West-er- n
Europe scenic route.
B See your Travel Agent or write

Indianapolis Life Insurance Co.

Maupintour-

6-80-

400 Madison Are., New York 17. N. Y.

61

LUCKY STRIKE presents

Dr. Navarro
To Visit N. Y.
This Week
Dr. Silvio Navarro, assistant
director of the UK Computing
Center and associate professor of
electrical engineering, will participate in a five-da- y
seminar this
week in Endicott. N. Y.
Dr. Navarro will present a paper
on his experience with digital computer applications regarding power
distribution systems for public
utility companies.
The meeting is concerned with
public utility engineering methods.
It will be conducted hi the new
International Business Machines
Corp. education center.
Before coming to UK in July,
Dr. Navarro served as a consultant on several projects of the
Fame nature for power companies
in Texas.

JO
DR. FROOD'S MORAL OF THE MONTH
When the world seems dark . . . when the sun re
fuses to shine, do not fret. It happens every night.
Dear Dr. Frood: A professor here says
I'm so dumb can't spell my own name.
Willyum
What should I do?
I

Dear William: He's just teasing.

Dear Bothered: Say you have a headache. Better still, admit you have no head.

Dr. Frood, Ph.T.T.
Dear Dr. Frood: I have gone steady with
four different boys in the last three
weeks. Would you call me fickle?

Thert is considerable talk in
tobacco circles about ths Introduction of saw cigarette
flavors. It is expected that you

to

travel with
.

tWA

titbef vob

will soon b ablt to buy
cottage cheese .cigarettes,
sarsaparilla cigarettes and
--

is

I'ORID of FUU!

CURIOUS DECISION

would call you seldom.

0

Sketch Deadline

Have a

DR. FROOD ON A

L.N.
Dear L.N.: I

Thursday
the last day the
Homecoming Display Committee
will accept sketches for displays.
Those Interested may call Becky
Carloss at

Dear Dr. Frood: Several girls colleges
nearby depend on our college for dates.
Some girl is always calling and asking
me to go out. How can I politely refuse?- Bothered

Dear

Dr. Frood: I hear that at some
schools they let you smoke in class. How
can I convince our administration to do
Hopeful
the same?

Dear Hopeful: Wherever you smoke

Dear Dr. Frood: Like you're the most.

ciga-

...

so cool
I mean like you're out there
you're Iceville. Like you're the ginchiest.

rettes.

Vm'i

bt hppy to

know that Lucky Strike has
decided to stick with its own
remarkable taste that of fine
tobacco only. A pleasant decision, I'd say.

Chick

Dear Chick: Like you're sick, Chick.

You Witt

it

Luckies, you're smoking in class.

tow Com

COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKE
MORE LUCKIES THAN

Europe
or

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When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,

tZL

$998

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ANY OTHER REGULAR!

$67

n.

Dear Dr. .Frood: My girl is the

best-looki-

ng

doll on campus . . . honey-blon- d
hair, beautiful face and figure. I date her
so often that my marks are' suffering.
Daihlyo
What should I do?

college students head right for fine tobacco.
Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regular
sold. Lucky's taste beats all trv. rest, because
L.S.M.F.T. Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.

IciGAmtrrts

1'

,

TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!

Dear Daddyo: Better your marks suffer
than you.
Q 4. r. c4

Product of crfZ

Jntiin Uviccwryiany

(Jdaceo-- is out midJU name

-

� The Kentucky Kernel

The Readers' Form

University or Kentucky

Entered at (h Port Office at Lexington, KratiirVy ai trcond clmi matter anW tb Act of March
Published four timet a wprk durinff the regular nchool vrar except holiday! and exama.

ID Malfunction

A, 1870.

To The Editor:
I would like to present a problem
concerning the punching of ID cards
this year and its one serious fault.
Today, as I presented my ID card
in order to cash a check, I happened
to notice that the Pinkerton men had
punched the number "3" basketball
game.
I realize that this is a legitimate
mistake which anyone could make,
but I also should think that it hasn't
been made just once. This problem
will become one of much consternation when others like me try to enter
a basketball game with our card
already punched for that game; at
least, for the first six games.
A suggestion might be that the
parts of the card containing those
numbers for football and basketball
be colored differently so that such a
mistake wouldn't be made.
I hope that this letter will raise
attention of those who can do something about it. As it is now, the only
thing I can show is that the "3" for
the third football game has not leen
punched.
Duke West

SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Bob Anderson, Managing Editor

Dill Neiurk, Editor

Stewart IIedcer,

Sportt Editor

Paul Zimmfrman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editors
Dice Ware and John Mitchell, Photographer$
Alice AriN, Society Editor
Stuart Goldfarb and Paul Dvxes, Advertising Managers
Beverly Cardwell, Circulation
Terry Ashley, Business Manager
Bob Herndon, Hank Chapman, and Lew King, Cartoonists

Staff Writers: Jerry Rlngo. Jim Phillips. Bobble Mason, Linda Hockensmlth, Robert Wenninger,
George. Smith, Robert Perkins, Edward Van Hook, Rod Tabb, Lawrence Lynch. June Dyers, Ann
Harria, Beverly Cardwell, Margaret Copehart, At Royster, Jan Berryman, Bob Jobe, Mary
Miller, Herb Steely, Norrls Johnson, Bob Fraser, Emajo Cocanougher, Mtchele Fearing, Pat Hulker,
Curtlss Smith, John Fltxwater, Garnett Brown, Richard Hedlund, Chrlsta Flnley, Allen Travis,
Sue McCauley, Phil Cox. Robert Radford, Beverly Pedigo, and Maxine Gates.

.

WEDNESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
Mereda Davis, News Editor

Rex Bailey, Associate

Graduate-Quiet- ly
The University Faculty, apparently
in an effort to pacify certain departments on campus, has unanimously
passed a new plan for the revamping
of Commencement during 1961.
Obviously designed to present seniors with a needed final two weeks of
instruction, the plan will require them
to remain on campus for nine days
.after the semester ends for exercises.
The faculty has endorsed the new setup because it will not detract from
Commencement attendance and will
facilitate the processing of senior
grades.
But the logic behind this plan is
rather absurd. We might as well do
away with Commencement.
In the first place, no one will remain nine days to attend a mere Com

mencement program. If a person had
intentions of going, it would have to
be readily available. Faculty members,
no matter how efficient and faithful
they may appear, will neither remain
on campus.
Granted that the senior needs the
extra two weeks or so of instruction.
Granted that instructors have a difficult time grading papers and that
the administration has to process
them.
But if the faculty must fret about
how Commencement is such a bother
and creates such a burden, why must
we maintain the tradition at all? Postponing it for nine days virtually buries
its meaning.

Defends IFC
To The Editor:
The object of this letter is riot to
defend any action of the
Fraternity Council, but to correct
some very real misconceptions the
author of Friday's editorial on fraternity pledges seems to have.
It was never proposed to set the
required grade - at midsemester for
pledges at 2.0. It was stated that if
it is obvious that a pledge will not
make his grades, the fraternity would
like to have the privilege of dropping
him. An example of when a pledge
would be considered for dropping
is as follows:. The grade range for
the pledge class, with the exception
of one, is from 1.6 to 3.0. The grade
standing of the one pledge is 0.5 or
lower. It would be a safe guess to
say that this one pledge won't make
his grades, and if the decision were
up to me, I would drop him.
Just as a structural egineer would
not build a skyscraper on a mud brick
foundation, a fraternity could not
build scholarship with below average material. An atmosphere in the

Do away with it.

The Fetish Of 'IQ'
Even a presumably educated people can invent fetishes. They are only
different and more pretentious than
the fetishes of ignorant people. Such
a fetish of the last quarter century
has been made of the theory of the
"IQ" (intelligence quotient).
It postulates the existence of a fixed
capacity to learn as an inborn quality
of a human being. Not what a person
ha