xt72ng4gq81m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72ng4gq81m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19630924  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 24, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 24, 1963 1963 2015 true xt72ng4gq81m section xt72ng4gq81m Smith To Deliver
Blazer Lecture

Henry Nash Smith, distinguished scholar of American literature
and history will deliver the first
Blazer lecture Wednesday
at
8 p.m. in the Quignol Theater.
Professor Smith's subject will
be the "The Quest for a Capitalist
Hero." He will cover a wide range
of American books from Franklin's "Autobiography" to modern
fiction. He will trace the efforts
of American writers to depict the
businessman.

Test Dates
Announced
The University Testing Service
has made the following annouce-men- ts
concerning three tests.
The National Teachers Ex-

amination:
The only special local administration of the NTE to be held
this semester will be given at
8:00 a.m., Oct. 5, in Memorial
Hall. Only the Common Examination will be offered at that
time. To be able to take this
exam a candidate must obtain an
application blank from room 304
of the Administration Building.
This blank must be properly filled out and returned to the sa.ne
office along with a check, postal
note, or money order for $9, made
out to the National Teachers Examination.
closes
Registration
Sept 28.
The Graduate Record Exami-

nation:
The GRE will be given Oct. 11
and 12 for seniors completing
their work the fall semester, and
for all new graduate students,
as well as others eligible to take
the test at this time. The Area
Test, required of all Arts and
Sciences seniors the semester in
which they graduate, will be
given Friday, Oct. 11 at 8:30 a.m.
The Advanced Tests will be given
Friday Oct. 11 at 1:00 p.m. To be
able to take these tests, the candidate must complete a registration blank in room 304 of the Administration Building and pay a
$6 fee. This fee may be paid in
cash or by check made out to
the University of Kentucky. (Seniors in Arts and Sciences taking
only the Area Test pay no fee.
If they take one or both of the
other tests they must pay $3.
Others pay $6 regardless of how
many tests they take.) Registration closes Sept. 28, after which
a late fee of $1 will be assessed.
The place of these examination
has been changed to Buell Armory.
The Medical College Admissions
Test:
The medical college Admissions
Continued

on rage

8

Jim H&PTCE IL

Professor Smith will speak to
American history and. literature
students Thursday at 11 p.m. at
the Student Center Theatre. His
subject will be "Ideas and a
Dream."
This lecture will be concerned
with Mark Twain's "Connecticut
Yankee in King Arthur's Court"
as an attempt to interpret the
Industrial Revolution and new
following the Civil
capitalism
War.
Professor Smith received his
BA at Southern Methodist University, his M.A. at Harvard and
his Ph.D. at Harvard. He is a
member of the Board of Directors of American Council of
Learned Eocieties since 1959.
He was presented the special
Scholaraward, "Distlnquished
ship In the Humanities" by the
American Council of Learned
Societies.
The book, "The Virgin Land:
The American West As A Symbol and Myth" made Professor
Smith's reputation. He has written several books about Mark
Twain. One of the most important is "Mark Twain: The Development of a Writer."
Professor Smith has taught at
Southern Methodist University,
University of Texas, University
of Minnesota, and University of
California.

University of Kentucky
KY.,
SEPT.

Vol. LV, No. 11

LEXINGTON,

TUESDAY,

Constitution Committee
Discusses Election Rules
By Rl'SS WEIKEL
Kernel Assistant Daily Editor

Kernel Staff Wiiter

tee members, William Kenton, Ann Combs, Jim
Pitts, Gretchen Myers, and Roger May heard ideas
submitted by several members of both sides of
what has developed into a type of party factionalism in the SC.
At one time, while under attack for the
emergence of party strife in the Congress, Kenton
said that "there has been no party as such in the
Student Congress as there was supposed to have
been last year. Although I firmly believe that the
party political system is beneficial to both the
students and the University, I have not set up,
nor to my knowledge has there previously been set
up, any sound political parly here at UK."
The Committee meeting Friday was primarily
concerned with the revision of election machinery,
and revisions in the legislative organization.
The meeting was not a revisions meeting. The
Committee will meet to decide on proposals they
will make to the Assembly next Thursday sometime this week. The meeting last Friday met only
to hear ideas from the student body, not to take
action while outside members of the body were
present.
During the discussion points that were made
that should either be revised or omitted were:
1: Membership in the Assembly should be cut
approximately in half.
2: A method should be developed to make members of the Congress attend the meetings.
3: Point standing of 2.3 should be discussed
for possible revision to a 2.0.
4: The election of officers inside the congress
should be discussed more or possibly omitted.
Proposals were made to cut the Assembly to
about 50 members and proportion them to the
number of registered students in that college. This
would necessitate the revisions of the number of
students that each college wolud elect each year
before the elections.
In closing the meeting, Kenton promised that
proposals for the amending of the Constitution
would be ready for the Thursday night meeting of
the Student Congress. "Proposals for ratification
of the Constitution are certainly in order and I
parfeel that because we had so much
ticipation in this meeting it will make our decision much easier to make," he said.

Is Selected
Peggy Kelley will recreate the
role of Eliza Doolittle for the
coming Guignol production of
George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion."
Charles Dickens, professor of
English, will portray Professor
Higgins in the lively comedy
which is to be presented Oct. 18,
19. 25 and 25.
The play, upon which Broadway's "My Fair Lady" was based,
is under the direction of Wallace
N. Briggs, English professor.
Other members of the cast include: Bob Cooke as Col. Pickering. Bill Hayes as Freddy, Margaret Silbar as Mrs. Eynsford
Hill, Phyllis Haddix as Clara,
and Beverly Lawhorn as Mrs.
Higgins.
Jane Lee Forrest will be seen
as Mrs. Pearce, Doolittle will be
portrayed by Ray Smith, and Ann
Gabbard will portray the parlor
maid.
Bystanders are: Keith Good-acr- e,
Dave Phillips, Mat Barrett.
Eldon Phillips, Rosemary Boyer,
and Anne Dietrich.
This is the second time the
Guignol Theatre has presented
"Pygmalion." The first performance was in November, 1948.

:

'

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,

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'

'

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-

;-

V

i

Oswald Meets Students

President Oswald talks to students In the new Stu- - verslty students and
dent Center. This is one of many talks planned by planned for Friday.
Dr. Oswald in order to acquaint hlmselt with I'nl- -

Kernel Photo by Sam Abell

problems.

Another

talk

A campuswide

election to choose new
Student Congress representatives has been set
tentatively for Oct. 21. New ollkers may be
elected at the same time.
A special Student Congress committee, appointed last week to determine the elecetion date
and procedures, agreed on this provisional schedule
at a meeting Sunday afternoon:
Oct. 14 Submission of constitutional amendments concerning membership to the University
Faculty. Another special committee is drafting
these amendments.
Oct. 17 Campuswide vote on ratification of the
amendments, providing they are approved by the
faculty.
Oct. 24 Election of new representatives
a
prescribed by the amended constitution. In case
the faculty or students fail to approve the changes,
however, elections will follow the rules of the
present constitution.
Gene Sayre, chairman of the special elections
committee, said no agreement has been reached
on when new officers will be elected but indicated
a preference for electing them when the representatives are chosen.
"A combined election would handle things very
easily," he said.
Four undergraduate men three of whom are
members of the Campus Organization for United
attended the meeting to discuss proParticipation
posals with the committee.
'
Jim Sayra, chairman of the COT.'.0 group, said
he favors electing officers this fall instead of waiting until spring, as some have suggested.
He also indicated a desire to have the officers
elected by the student body, rather than by the
representatives themselves.
s,
The congress'
which were suspended
at Tuesday night's meeting for a
period,
require election of officers by the congress at the
first meeting after representatives are chosen.
Ben Williams and John Cole, also COUP
members, and Doug Smith, a prelaw student,
supported Sayra on most of his statements.
Other committee members present were Keith
Burchett, Larry Lovell, and James Shuffett. Sayre
presided. The fifth member, Linda Tobin, was
absent.
The committee was appointed last week by
Ron Nickell, acting president of the congress. It
is expected to present its final recommendations
to the congress at a meeting Thursday night in
the Student Center Theatre.

Law School Building
To Be Constructed

4

Conslruction

4

Cam pusivitlc Voting
Set For Oct. 21
By TOM WOODALL

An open meeting of the Student Congress
Constitutional
Revisions Committee, held
last Friday, brought up several important
points that will he considered 'in the reworking of the Student Congress Constitution.
A sparsely attended meeting in the Student
Center that was attended by five of the Commit-

Guignol Cast

,

Eight Page

Two SC Committees Meet,
Attempt To Solve Dilemma

15

f'

21, 19f3

is

is

to begin this year on a Dew, SI, 100,000

law building at the I 'Diversity,
The building will "provide for
the first time at UK the facilities
required for modern legal education," the college's dean, W. L.
Matthews Jr., said.
The
building will be
located near Memorial Hall, with
one wing running parallel to
South Limestone St. The site was
chosen by the law faculty and the
campus planner, Lawrence Coleman.
The law library, considered to
be the heart of legal education,
will nearly fill one arm of Uie L,
and will extend from the basement through the first and second
floors. The three library levels
will contain
general reading-rootables, small tables for
and individual stugroup study
dent : carrels.
The basement of the building's
other arm will have seven offices
for the Kentucky Law Journal
and
staff, student conference
meeting rooms, a suite of offices
to the Law Research Indevoted
stitute, staff and student lockers,

book stacks and storage space.
The first floor will house six
offices, a room for practicing attorneys to do research in, librarian's office, student and faculty
classroom.
lounges and a
A

specially-designe-

275-se-

"model courtroom" will be a special feature. Dean Matthews said.
Some of the seats in the courtroom will be movable so they
may be arranged to serve as appellate and trail courts, and for
courses and institutes in continuing legal education.
The building's second floor will
contain the clean's office, conference room, 10 staff offices, a
134-seclassroom, two smaller
classrooms, offices and a faculty
room.
reading
Classrooms will be of the
amphitheater type, which is traditional in law schools. The
smaller rooms will be equipped
with seminar tables for small
numbers of students; there will
be tiered seats on three sides of
the tables for larger classes.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept.

21,

13

'Social Isolation'
Fades In Dentistry

Dr. Vord Virus lVru

Dentists ;iic just beginning to grow into ;i posture of
sori.il i tsMnsil)ility, ;uut the University's (College of Dentistry is lielping the profession ease its growing p.iins, a UK.
dental faeulty member believes.

i

Dr. Wesley O. Young, chairman
of the Department of Community
Dentistry, said his department's
major goal will be to help future
dentists cope with the shell of
Isolation which is characteristic
of dental practice.
He meant that a dentist often
goes to his office where a full
book awaits him,
appointment
works hard all day, and returns
home to relax until bed time.
It will be an objective of Dr.
Young's department to encourage students to become active in
community affairs when they begin practicing.
The I'K department, the only
one of Its kind, will be a "sort of
halfway house" to help ease the
transition from academic life to
the demands of private dental
practice, Dr. Young said.
Another major objective of the
department will be to encourage
students to practice in small
towns, especially in Kentucky,

European Tour
Sponsored By
3 Departments
The European Art Tour,

spon-cere-

d

the Art, English and
Modern Foreign Languages Departments, was conducted this
year by Professor Richard Freeman, head of the University Art
Department.
Prof. Freeman said the purpose of the tour was to gain
firsthand contact with European
art. Twenty-tw- o
students, most
from UK, spent 57 days touring
Italy, Austria, Germany, Liechtenstein,
Switzerland,
France,
Belgium, Holland, and England.
While" in Europe, they visited
museums, cathedrals, and art galleries, and attended the theater
and concerts.
The highlight of the tour, said
Prof. Freeman, was the Palio
horse race in Siena, Italy. The
Palio, a semiannual event since
the 16th century, is run over the
cobblcstoned Piazza
dangerous
del Campo. The race has been
marred by fatal accidents, said
Freeman, and this year three
riders landed in the hospital.
by

and to prepare them to do so.
Dr. Young said a dentist's life in
a small community is vastly different than it is in a metropolitan area.
In the village, a dentist's work
is less specialized, and he often
requires a more general technical
flexibility than does a large-tow- n
dentist. Concurrently, the smalltown dentist probably will be expected to take a larger part In
community affairs, Dr. Young
said.
In January, dental students will
begin their studies under Dr.
Young. After the initial department courses, probably in 1965,
students will be sent into communities where they will receive
first-han- d
experience working
with practicing dentists and community agencies.

Students, Faculty
To Attend NRC
Dr. Earl Kauffman, University
director of the Council on Aging
and chairman of the Division of
Recreation, will be moderator for
one of the panel sessions at the
45th National Recreation Congress to be held Sept. 29 through
Oct. 4, in St. Louis.
Dr. Ernst Jokl. another faculty
member of the Department of
Physical Education, will be a
member cf the same panel whirh
will deal with recreation for the
aging.
Dr. Jokl is internationally recognized as an authority in sports
medicine and has done extensive
research on the relation of physical education to the health of
aging people.
University recreation
majors
who will attend the conference
are Betty Borner, Corine Crutch-e- r.
Jack Royalty, Thomas Tanner, Mary Werner, and Patricia
Witt, all of Lexington, and Carol
Sue Green of Washington, D.C.
The congress is jointly sponsored by the American Recreation
Society and the National Recreation Association with the cooperation of a number of related
agencies.

Revolution In Peru
Not Likely To Occur

In looking at the aid programs,
he learned that the old International Cooperation Administration programs had Just passed
out of activity and the new Aid
for International Development
programs had not been fully developed.
He did find, however, that
most of the changes in the old
program were more indirect than
direct, because many activities
were dropped by the Peruvian
when American
government
aid was cut off.
matching-fun- d
AID and the Peruvian government now will contract with universities and private agencies for
specified programs which are
supposed to fit into the Alliance
for Progress plans, he added.
Dr. Ford believes that the
Feace Corps is a successful program in Peru because aid is being given directly to the people,
instead of through administrative channels.
Dr. Ford, accompained by his
wife and three children, who

Physics Dept.
Receives Grant
The Department of Pnysicshas
received a grant of $24,870 from
the National Science Foundation
under the Foundation's undergraduate scientific equipment program. The University will match
funds for the purchase of scientific equipment.
The funds will be administered
by the Kentucky Research Foundation and will be used to improve the sophomore physics laboratories and to improve equipadment in the department's
vanced undergraduate

i

t

Pharmaceutical
Chemistry Dept.
Receives Grant
The Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry recently was
granted $4,000 from the Smith,
Kline and French Foundation,
and $1,600 from the University
Research Committee. They plan
to purchase an infrared spectrophotometer which will be used
in experimenting with the synthesis of new drug molecules.

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lived in Lima while he traveled
throughout the country, went to
Peru on a grant from the Guggenheim Foundation.
The sociologist used data from
some of the surveys being made
for planning purposes and some
from the Peruvian census of 1961.
He also talked with AID and
Peruvian
officials,
government
local people and university professors.
After his last visit to Peru
twelve years ago. Dr. Ford wrote
a book, "Man and Land in Peru,"
which was published in 1955.

0FTTJE WORLD;

THE INTERNATIONALLY

Civil Defense
Course Offered
Training Civil Defense instructors for Fayette and surrounding
counties will be the object of a
course to be offered next month
by the University of Kentucky
Extended Programs division.
Charles Reedy, director of the
program, said persons completing
the course will be qualified to instruct individuals who will as-- "
sume duties in their home communities as fallout shelter managers.
Enrollment in the course will
be limited to 30, Reedy said. No
registration fee Is required, and
will
Instructional
be
material
supplied without charge.
First meeting of the class is set
for 7 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 1. in
Room 246 of the Taylor Education Building. There will be six
additional three-honight sessions, during October, plus n
"shelter exercise" during which
those enrolled will spend time
in a fallout shelter under simulated emergency conditions.
Persons wishing to take the
course may sign up in advance by
writing the instructor, Chark's
Reedy, at the University, or John
F. Ahern. Loudon House, Castle-woo- d
Drive, Lexington. Those
who have not registered in advance may do so at the initial
class meeting.
The course will present
a
efknowledge of nuclear-weapo- n
fects, possible protection against
such effects, community shelter
systenu. and use of shelter facilities, supplies and equipment.

the average peasant or slum
dweller is not
These people have been told
that the reason they don't have
land is because of the wealthy
Peruvians and the "Yankee imperialism" which supports them.
Thus, they take part in demonstrations in which they carry
slogan's but they
don't even know what "Yankee
imperialism" or communism is.
"You find some real
sentiment among students,
who are more sophisticated than
others," he continued, "but I
don't think the majority of the
students are Communist or

University sociology professor
Dr. Thomas R. Ford went to Peru
last year expecting a violent
social revolution, but returned to
his home this month with an
altogether different impression.
"Unfortunately, this is not because Peru is making rapid social
and economic progress, but because the military forces and
government police there are well
organized and often ruthless in
movements,"
controlling left-wiDr. Ford said.
He also said that, while the
Communists are using all of the
unsolved problems in behalf of
their own cause, there are at
least five different active groups
g
extremists in the
of
country. This splintering of the
dissident forces weakens their
effectiveness. "All of the leftist
governgroups are
and
ment,
Dr. Ford said, "but

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Tuesday. Sept. 21,

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tiu!ay,

Kernel Woman's Page

What Happened
To Those High Ideals?
(Editor's Note: We all come to college with some sort of Ideal In
mind and along the way a few lose that goal. You might tack thij
on the wall as a reminder for life.)
By DAVE JAE11MG
From the Michigan State News
Everyone had high ideals when he arrived at the University
. . . betterment
of the world he lives in, improvement in his field of
endeavor, even security in a world of utter insecurity.
How many students' still have those standards, those ideals any
where near the surface where they can readily find them?
Most students seem to have lost them somewhere along the way.
Coeds waver in their moral standards, male students lack determination in their goals of education, and the standards of high
school days are in many cases already dead.
Convictions of what is right and wrong have been warped to fit
Immediate needs and wants, and a group of flabby minded students
is the result.
Coeds have mixed up loneliness with love, passion with virtue,
and boys with men.
The boys have mixed up the coeds with concubines, education
with parties, and goals of life with goals of the moment.
Most people taking a quick look for those
ideals
will find them compromised to fit the goals of the moment, buried
frills.
beneath college-lif- e
For the coeds the Mrs. degree has suddenly become more important than the rehabilitative teaching degree. Sex has become more
important than love and boys more important than morals.
For the boys, the bottle has become the status symbol of their
student profession, the coed has become the plaything of their whims,
and education has become an excuse to stay out of the cruel, hard
world.
American students, and to a certain degree European students,
have become so concentrated, as a whole, on ducking life, that they
have forgotten that they have to build their own lives.
While Middle Eastern students are fighting for political rights
and sitting in jails in protest to dictators who oppose their standards, Americans are busy fighting integration in their lunch lines,
or rolling out of the nearest bed, or out from under a bottle laden
table.
The students of a country once high in worthwhile ideals, once
the champion of individual standards which were respected in each
man, have somehow decided among themselves that any triviality is
more important than preparing for a chance to boost themselves
and their country.
Patriotism has become an unintelligible term from history
books; ideals, something for grandmothers to push into the heads
cf granddaughters; and morals, something that went out with Sunday
church.
The national spirit has become identified with
hikes,
standards with some obscure philosophy cou;se, and girls who say
"NO!" with the nunnery.
But the crowning stupidity of it all, is that we're proud of it.

Campus Calendar

7 p.m., Room 208 cf the Student Center
Fiji's entertaining ADPi with a dessert
Chi Delta Phi meeting
Young Republicans meeting
25 Spindletop Hall Buffet Dinner and Game Night
Sorority and fraternity meetings
AWS program meeting
and
26 University Women's Club Reception for President
Mrs. Oswald, Student Center
p.m.
27 Spindletop Hall Dance

Sept. 24

Meetings

Edited hy
Nancy Loughritlge

GOP
The Young Republicans will
meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Room
115 of the Student Center.
CHI DELTA PHI
Chi Delta Phi will meet at 7
p.m. today in Room 119 of the
Student Center.
SOCCER PRACTICE
All International Students are
invited to attend soccer practice
on Tuesdays, Thursdays
and
Saturdays at 5 p.m. on the Intramural Field alongside Stoll Field.
There are no prerequisites for
practice with the team. Anvone
who is registered in the University is eligible.
COSMOPOLITAN CUB
Any students who are interested in Joining the Cosmopolitan Club or who are interested
in the Club may get information
in the International Students office in Patterson House.
PRESBYTERIANS
Midweek worship services will
be held each Tuesday evening
from 6:30-- 7 p.m. in the chapel
of the Presbyterian
University
Center, 412 Rose St. These services are conducted by the Reverend John R. King, Presbyterian
University Pastor and the Reverend T. Douglas Sanders, Campus Minister of the Christian
Churches (Disciples of Christ).
These services were originally
held on Wednesday evening but
changed to Tuesday due to several campus conflicts. All students and faculty of the University community are invited to
the Lord's Supper will be observed the first Tuesday of each
month. Informal attire is in order.
BSD
All freshmen who are planning
to attend the Freshman Retreat,
8
to be held Sept.
at Natural
Bridge, should check at the BSU
Center as soon as possible.
PITKIN CLCB
The Pitkin Club, an interdenominational luncheon group, will
begin its regular
Wednesday
meetings Oct. 2 in the dining
room of the Presbyterian University Center, 412 Rose Street. The
Club meets at noon and is over in
time for 1 o'clock classes. This
semesier the program will center
around "My Personal Views on
the Bible," and will be led ty
various members of the UK faculty. The first speaker on Oct.
2 will be Dr. James Gladden, professor of Sociology. Reservations
are now beinf? taken. Ju.t call the
Presbyterian Center,
leave your name.

.

Recently Wed

Carroll Baldwin, a senior English major from Paris, and a
member of Delta Delta Delta, to
Larry Henry, a senior commerce
major from Lexington and a
member of Sigma Alpha Ep.silon.
Judy Rrrutich, a recent graduate in elementary
education
from Louisville and a member of
Delta Delta Delta, to Jack Risby,
a 1960 graduate
in commerce
from Louisviiie and a member
of Phi Delta Theta.
Ann Gordon Lvans, a recent
in Journalism
from
graduate
Lexington, and a member of
Delta Delta Delta, to Bud Grcel.v,
a graduate from Lexington and
a member of Kappa Alpha.
Carolyn Mansfield, a senior
speech and drama major from
Lexington and a member of
Delta Delta Delta, to Ernie
Clarke, a 1962 graduate of Princeton University from Lexington.
Susan Withers, a recent graduate in art from Owensboro and
a member of Delta Delta Delta,
to Mike Kilijan, a former student from Louisville and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Tarasa Travis, a recent graduate in music from Maysville and
a member of Delta Delta Delta,
to Karl Forester, a first year law
student from Harlan and a member of Sigma Chi.
Twink McDowell, a recent
graduate in English from Erie,
Pa., and a member of Delta
Delta Delta, to Steve Webb, a
senior pharmacy
major from
New Jersey, and a member of
Kappa Sigma.
Lynn Martin a sophomore English major, from Louisville, to
Jack Geislcr, a junior engineering major from Louisville.

O. K. GRILL

Cpen
24 Hours
Welcome
UK Students
PHONE

252-948-

5

Interfaith Council meeting

TGIF
Fraternities entertaining

AWS Convention Steering committee meeting
28 Spindletop Hall Fall Style Show
Miss Stoll Field 8 p.m.
Football, UK-Ol- e

GUIRGEVICH

21, 1963- -3

Sjt.

Delta Delta Delta
Ann Gordon Evans, 1963 UK
graduate from Lexington and
woman recipient of the Sullivan
Medallion, received still another
honor, when she was named the
recipient of the Delta Delta Delta
National Leadership Award at
the sorority's Leadership Conference this summer.
The award is made each year
Tri-De- lt
to the most outstanding
in the nation. The University's Delta Rho chapter has received a rotating engraved silver
punch bowl and tray to display
during the coming year.
Ann was president of Tri-De- lt
during the 1962-6- 3 year, and has
served as recommendations chairman for the chapter. She was
named Outstanding Greek Woman for 1362-6and received the
Sullivan Medallion last spring.
She was a member of Phi
Beta Kappa, Mortar Board, Theta
Sigma Phi, and was named Outstanding Woman In Journalism
last spring.
Delta Rho was recognized the
preceding two years when two
former presidents received Honorable Mention for the Leadership Award, Kay Kuster, Paris,
and Myra Tobin,
in 1960-5- 1,
Harned, also former Outstanding"
Greek Woman and Sullivan Medallion winner, was honored in
1961-6-

Engaged

Lynn Trayner, a senior foreign-languaeducation major from
Junction City, to Dick Keys, a
senior commerce advertising major from Lexington, and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha.

i

i.

'.

pii'S

V

A

,

,4

P

the
KINGSTON
TPJO

I

The group that started all
this hootenanny business!

See All
That's NEW FIRST ot

Remember the "Ballad of
Dooley," "Goober
Peas," "Zombie Jamboree" now it' the "Ballad of the Thresher"

-

Tom

i7

SHOE REPAIR

387 S. LIME and EUCLID
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ZIPPER REPAIR

JACKET CUFFS, BANDS

COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANING SERVICE
Serving University of Kentucky
Students For 49 Years
We Now Feature

1963- -7

....

ONE DAY SERVICE
AT NO EXTRA COST!
In by 9 . . . Out by 5:00

BECKER

DRY CLEANING CO.
LAUNDRY
Corner of South Limestone and Euclid

See them IN PERSON
here October 4 at 8:00,
Memorial Coliseum.

Where Radio and
Television Is A ISusincss
NOT A SIDELINE!

St-

MT.

mo

if
m

KADI05

o

o STEREO

ls

get 'em early. They're
$2.00 now, and $2.50 at
the door. All seats are reserved.

HI-- FI

o RECORDS

IMrCtl

4 9 KCWKLCKO
JL

The best tickets are being
sold first, so you'd better

o TV:

9.

Kentucky's Largest Selection Til
of Home Entertainment
sly
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These places
with tickets:
KENNEDY

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L

BARNEY

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part

CRAVES. COX

* T

Campus Building
The Kernel takes pride in

report-

ing tlie development of new, modern
buildings on campus. The Student
t
Center is a
victory for the
University in its race with other colleges and universities in campus planning.
The Chemistry-PhysicBuilding
long-sough-

s

Letters To Editor
SC Committee Meeting
Shows Signs Of Maturity

To The Editor:

On Friday a meeting of the

con-

stitutional revision committee of the
acting Student Congress was held in
the Student Center. The purjxse of
this meeting was to consider changes
to be made in the constitution, specifically in the sections relating to the
size of the Congress and the relative
number of representatives from each
college of the University. I wish to
thank William Kenton, the committee chairman, and the other members
of the committee for the fair and
equitable manner in which they allowed all interested persons to be
heard. This is the type of meeting
that should be charactersitic of a mature student government.
The fact that this is not the case
is indicative of a need for change
which the students of this University
will be able to put into effect in the
coming elections. It is the responsibility of every student to acquaint
himself with the issues and candidates, and to use his vote effectively
in a way which will result in a more
responsive student government.

John
Arts

S.
& Sc

Cm e III
iences

Junior

has been added to meet the needs of
the students and the growing University community. Plans for a new
dormitory complex, the completion
of the Agriculture center, reputedly
to be one of the best in the central
United States, all add to the University. They stand as monuments of
progress and learning.
The Medical Center on Rose
Street is another addition regarded
highly by public officials, doctors,
an deducators. New buildings and repairs to older buildings testify to
the University's growth and greatness.
B