xt7h9w090209 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h9w090209/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670324  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 24, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 24, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7h9w090209 section xt7h9w090209 r

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liUEKNEL

The South's Outstanding College
Daily

Friday Evening, March 24. 1967

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LVI1I, No. 120

For Collegiates Spring Means Beer, Beach, And Bikinis
By JUDY KLEMESRUD

famous beach," as Chamber of Commerce pamphlets call it.

New York Timet Newt Service

-

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Beer,
beach, and bikinis were the watchwords
here the last two weeks as thousands
of college students swarmed into this
Northeast Florida spa to participate in
what they call "the annual spring rites."

So instead of soaking up the sun,
many students got soaked in their motel
rooms where drinking is legal for any-

one 21 or over.

"My mother would probably call this

an orgy," said Linda Smith, an

With tests and texts far behind them,
the students raced onto the
sand beach, only to be
greeted by freshly posted signs that said:
"Unlawful to consume alcoholic beverages on ocean beach."
hard-packe-

auburn-harie-

d

Michigan State University coed
who had just been thrown fully clothed
into a swimming pool during a motel
room party.
"But really nothing happens here that
wouldn't happen at your average Sunday School picnic," she added.
Daytona Beach has been the site of
the spring student invasion since 1963,
after a group of motel owners visited
various colleges in an attempt to lure
students away from Fort Lauderdale,

d

Some thought it was a joke. But'
d
policeman assured them it
was not. For the first time in Daytona
grey-shirte-

Beach's history, the city fathers had
banned booze from "the world's most

the traditional gathering place since depression days.
The motel owners succeeded, and last
year an estimated 70,000 students reveled
here, causing pressures for a ban on
beach drinking in the hope that the
figure would be considerably lower this

is very

the beach and hand out pamphlets called
"have you heard of the four spiritual
laws?" By night they hold services in
a coffee house called "Hunger Hanger."
One crusader, Joe Lewis, of Lexington, Tenn., a junior at the University
of Tennessee, pointed at a group of
students drinking beer and cavorting on
the balcony of a motel and said:
"Last year I was on their side. I
got drunk on Thursday and sobered up
on Sunday. The
student
added, now I think I've found what I
was searching for."

year.
So far nobody is quite sure how the
now ordinance has affected attendance.
Estimates range from a low of 15,000 students to last year's 70,000 mark. At any
rate, the ratio of boys to girls is about
six to one.

"There is really no way to tell how
many are here," admitted Capt. William
C. Hall of the Daytona Beach Police
Department. He added that about 250
students have been arrested since March
12, mostly for liquor violations. "This

Bad Check Costs
For Book Stores
Growing Yearly

R egister

Everybody
Sb river Says
By NEIL SHEEHAN

New York Timet Newi Service
WASHINGTON-Sarge- nt

By RON GHOLSON
Cold checks constitute a "tremendous
problem" for book store
operators, and a problem that seems to be getting worse, according
to two of the three sources questioned.
"The problem erows everv that the total loss due to ab- year," said Bursar VV. Bruce Gas
solutely unrecoverable funds
kin. The Bursar's Office handles varies from about $200-$50- 0
each
collection of checks returned to semester. The number of checks
returned daily varies among the
University Book Store.

Joe Kennedy, president and
operator of Kennedy Book Store,
concurs that "there's not much
doubt that it is getting worse."
The situation at Wallace's
Book Store has improved somewhat due to the fact that more
"stringent controls over checks"
are exercised now than were exercised when the store first went
into operation, said President

Wallace Wilkinson.
Although figures on a monthly
basis for the number and amount
of checks returned were not available, some indication of the extent of the problem can be seen
from the running deficits incurred.
As of March 8, one operation

was holding about $2,000 in bad
checks. Another had just short
of $1,000 worth of checks out
of $1,000 worth of checks outstanding. The third had an accumulated total of $4,500 in returned checks over a
period.
The consensus seems to be
th

book stores, but would probably
average about
One operator reported as many
as 25 checks returned on a single
day, following a big weekend.
About
percent of the total
volume of checks are returned
according to the same source.
All those interviewed noted
that a large majority of the checks
are eventually made good. However, the total value of uncollect-abl- e
checks, although a definite
and undersirable operating expense, is not the major part of
the problem. The difficulty arises
with the correspondence, bookkeeping, time, and expense involved with processing returned
0.

2

"It's

not really the checks.

e
collection. We've got a
allotted just to taking care
salary
of bad checks and the related
bookkeeping problems," said Mr.
Wilkinson.
With regard to the fee charged
full-tim-

Continued On I'age

Marlinez
Outstanding
Independent
The

outstanding independent
award went to Miguel A. Martinez of Vine Grove Thursday
at the fifth annual Men's Awards
Night.
Larry Ehleu, Frankfort, was
named student of the year.
The event was sponsored by
OmicTOii Delta Kappa, senior
men's honorary. Approximately
200 men were honored for leadership, scholarship, and individual achievement.
Robert L. Johnson, vice president of student affairs and dean
of students, gave the keynote
address.
Continued on Pace 2

I!

I

7

ii

-

-

i,t Photo
Kernel
'Spring, At Last!
?

which-officially-

-the

Candidates To Debate

SG

Steve Cook and Sheryl Snyder, contenders for Student Government President in the April 6 elections, will discuss campaign
issues in an open debate at 8:45 p.m. Monday in the dorm com-

plex grille.

i

j.

a

Associate Dean of Students Jack Hall presents the outstanding independent award

-

Shriver, director of the Office of
Economic Opportunity, proposed
Thrusday that all American young
men and women be registered
and examined under the Selective
Service System at the age of 16.
Mr. Shriver said that such a
"national and continuing census
of America's youth" should be
combined with a "national referral network" of remedial programs so that educational, physical, or motivational dificiencies
can be identified and corrected
earlier.
The usefulness of the draft process as a vehicle for identifying
these deficiences, Mr. Shriver
said,' was seriously limited because the Selective Service System examines only males and
even then does not test all young
men. It also examines them at
an age 18 to 20 years when it
is often too late to correct deficiencies, he said.
In testimony before the senate subcommittee on Employ-

ment, Manpower, and Poverty,
Mr. Shriver also said that, while
he was not proposingthat women
be drafted for military duty, much
more attention should be given to
forms
encouraging
of serv ice by young women.
The Senate subcommittee, under the temporary chairmanship
of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
non-militar-

The debate is being sponsored by Cooperative Complex Student
Covemment. Cook and Snyder, both current SG representatives,
announced their candidacies Monday. Another candidate, William
Murrell, sponsored by Students for a Democratic Society, announced
Tuesday.

A.-

M

-

f
i

By Randy Cochran

Spring began to slowly arrive Thursday and many students, who
had been waiting since Tuesday
first day
of Spring -t- ook the opportunity to greet the
The
Great Wall is in the background.

checks.

It's the expense involved with

light compared with past years,"

he said.
Among the students who haven't Inen
arrested are 500 members of the Campus
Crusade for Christ, who are conducting
what they call "operation sunshine," this
week. By day they mix with students on

Hi

y

Continued On Page

8

!

tih

Lj2rJ

to Miguel Martinez at the fifth ODK Award's
Night Thursday. At the right, Milton Scott

presents the outstanding freshman award
to Guy Mendes.

* 2 --

Till;

KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Friday, March 21,

MH7

Over 200 Sludcnls Recognized Al Men's Awards Night
Continued From Pajce 1
Cny Monties of New Orleans
won the outstanding freshman
award. Tlic Presidents Scholarship went to Hilly 11. Peyton,
Kddyvillc.
Three fraternities won scholTan
arship trophies.
Alpha
Omega won the most improved
scholarship trophy, Farm I louse
won for the highest grade point
average, and the pledge class
of Triangle won a trophy for
the highest G.P.A. in that

The YMCA Leadership-Servicaward was won by Bren-toII. Milward, Lexington. The
Scholarship went to
Fdmond Sutton, Lancaster.
Others recognized were:
e

n

OUTSTANDING

MEN

FRATERNITY

Farmltousp, Scott Skinnrr. Emlyn;
Delta Tau Delta, Charlie Hen Ashby
Jr., Madlsonvlll1; Sigma Phi Epsllon.
Eric Sallee. Wilmington. Del.; Phi
Gamma Delta, Steve Cook, California;
Alpha Gamma Rho, Murrell Porter,t,
Fern Creek; Sigma Chi, Frank Brock-harWheeling, W.Va.; Zeta Beta Tau.
Robert Allen Shapiro, Newport News,
Va.; Phi Kappa Tau, Oscar Wester-fielHartford, and Sigma Alpha Epsllon, Barry Brooks, Corbin.

d,

UK Bulletin Board
square dance for all graduate students will be held at
8 o'clock tonight in the Student
Center Ballroom. The dance is
sponsored by the Graduate Student Club. Jack Todd, will call.
A

The Student Guide to Courses
and Instructors still needs students to pass out questionnaires,
particularly in upper division
courses. All interested students
please come to the Student Government office in the Student
Center Monday and Tuesday to
fill out class schedules and obtain instructions for passing out
the questionnaires.

Frank H. Loudermilk, division manager for Southern Bell,
will speak on "Data Communications" at 7:30 p.m. Monday
in Room 257 of the new Anderson Hall Engineering Building.
The talk is sponsored by the UK
student chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery.
All interested persons are cordially invited to attend.

Theta Chi social fraternity
will sponsor a car wash from
9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at
Witt's Shell Station, 722 Euclid
Ave.

Applications for financial assistance for all students except
those in the colleges of medicine and dentistry are available
in the Office of Financial Aid,
Frazee Hall. Deadline is March
31. Students presently receiving
aid must
to receive it
next year.
ly

PARK
East

CHURCH
METHODIST
High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON,
Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11 a.m.
"Easter Makes a Difference"
Dr. Harmon

The School of Communications and VVAVE news in Louisville have announced establishment of an internship for students
Niterested fn broadcast news.
Application for summer employment is open to students
completing their sophomore or
junior years. Two students will
be selected for about 12 weeks
of work. April 1 is the deadline
for applying. Anyone interested
should write to VVAVE News
Director Rodney Ford, 725 South
Floyd Street, Louisville.
The student chapter of the
of Computing Machinery will hold its March meeting at 7:30 p.m., Monday, in
Room 257 of the new Anderson
Hall Engineering Building. Officers will be elected and Mr.
Frank H. Loudermilk, Division
Marketing Manager for Southern
Bell, will speak.
Association

Sophomores who are still interested in obtaining a commission in the Army through
R.O.T.C. report to Buell Armory
at 8:50 a.m. Saturday for testing
and interview. Those who have
been in a program already will
not be considered. For any other
information contact CPT James
B. Channon, ext. 2658.

The English Department
Committee administering the;
r
Awards announces a prize of $50 for the
best poem or collection of poems,
and a prize of $50 for the best
Datzler-Farquha-

piece of imaginative prase, published by students registered in
the University or its Community
Colleges during the year, April
1,
31, 1967. Entries
may be submitted to this Committee, English Department,
1966-Marc- h

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
WEST HIGH at UPPER ST.

Transportation

Minister

RUSSELL R. PATTON,

or

252-034- 4

277-669- 4

ORIN M. SIMMERMAN,

JR., Minister

Church School; College Class: Sam Davis, Teacher
11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.

Donald W. Durham,
(Next to Hotpltal,
Sanders. Atiorlate Minister
J. It. Wood, Pastoral
Samuel Morris, Youth
(Parking In Rear of Church)
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
9 a.m. and 11 a.m. "Good News"
Nursery for all Services
(Parking In Rear of
1716 S. Lime

Dewey

MlnUter
MlnUter

MlnUter
Church)

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
RD.

TRANSPORTATION

174 NORTH

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
10:50 a n . Morning Worship
"No Epitaph Needed," Mr. Herron
Easter Sunrise Services

PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS

Coll

277-617- 6

or

277-402- 9

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
MILL ST.

RICHARD

T. HARBISON,

MlnUter

9:45 a.m. College Class. Mr. Jack Matthews, Leader
8:45 and 11:00 a m
"The Christian Doctrine of Heaven"

CRESTWOOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1882 6ELLEF0NTE
Sunday

Worship

DRIVE

REV.

FELLOWSHIPS

fe

KEYS

Darryl Stith. Lexington; Mike Shee-tShelbyville; Shanklin Cannon,
Bethel; Bob Wilson, Vanceburg; EdDan
ward Ockerman, Lexington;
Switzer, Russellville; John Keebler,
Middletown; Tim Koch, Russellville;
Mike
Richard Hartley, Owensboro;Wester-maFarmer, Midland, Texas; Phil
Corydon; Harvey Fennel, Ft.
Smith. Ark.; Tom Wright. Lexington;r,
Jimmy J. Miller, Union; Todd
Freeport, 111.; Gregg Schulte,
Bellevue; Bill Moss, Williamsburg;
Don Graeter, Louisville; Bruce Shive-lSolon. Ohio; Clay Stuart. Owensboro; Ted Renaker, Berry; Mike Barr,
Lexington; Bob Swanson, Sparta, N.J.,
and Gerald H. Slucher, Valley Station.
y,

COLLEGE

JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minhter

10:30 a.m.
Sunday College Seminar
For Transportation Call 277-378- 9

OF ENGINEERING

Earnest Gay Amburgey,
Seniors
Premium; James Norrls Cline, Scotts-vlllClyde Robert Dempsey, Mays-villDidi Duane Gilliam, Greenup;
Jesse Lynn Gough, Mavfield; Ralph
Hunt. Majestic; John Ellis Sirles III.
Horse Cave; Thomas Craig Tolliver,
Ewing; Charles Embry Anderson,
Lewis Berkley Davis Jr.,
Mayfield;

d;

COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
AND ECONOMICS

Seniors Leonard Alvey, Morgan-fielHugh Anderson. Erlanger; Allan
Gillls Hester, Lexington; Paul Allen
Don
Chandler
Krebs, Cynthiana;
Little, Maysville; James Frank Rowland, Wllmore.
Juniors David Allen Collins, Louisville; Charles B. Reasor Jr., Corbin.
Sophomores Robert Luther Abrams,
Russell; Joseph Whitlow Blackburn,
Mayfield; Ronald Geary, Louisville.

d;

COLLEGE

e;
e;

n,

Horst-meye-

OF EDUCATION

COLLEGE

Juniors Peter Ray Held, Brandenburg; James C. Klotter, Booneville.

OF PHARMACY

Fifth Year James Philip Poore Jr.,
Pleasure Ridge Park.
Fourth Year Archie Alan Stahl,
Bowling Green.
Third Year Douglas Curtis Black,
Lawrenceburg; William Haden Wagers, Berea.

y,

Circle K Plans To Hold
Organizational Conference

LANCES
Steve H. Cook. California;

Dennis
Perkinson, London; Lucian Y. More-ma- n
Robert A. ValII, Valley Station;
Ray Reyentine, Bowling Green; L. Ed
Hastie,
nolds, Blytheville. Ark.;
Lexington; Rodney F. Page. Chadron.
Neb.; Joe W. Bolin. Clinton: Nick
Carter, Houstonville; Ronald Coburn,
Paducah; Phil Patton, Lexington;1
Stokes Harris. Atlanta, Ga.; Rick
Stephens, Frankfort; Virgil Quisen-berrReynolds Station; James W.
Sichter, Dayton, Ohio; Sheryl G. Snyder, Owensboro; Jimmy Childers,
Water Valley; Frank Browning,
Edward Worland Jr.,
Rafael Vallebona, Montevideo, Uruguay, and Charles Reasor
Corbin.
Jr.,

service organization on campus,
Circle K, the
will hold its Organizational Conference for campus organizations
in the Student Center March 28.
The Conference will be held to discuss organizational aims and
objectives as well as transition at the University.
Wayne Bowen, chairman of the committee for the conference
and Circle K treasurer, called the meeting "primarily informative" and said it will be open to anyone interested in or involved
with campus organizations. It is hoped that the conference will
also promotejntqrest in thearious organizations, he said.
Men students announced as
Vice President for Student Affairs Robert Johnson will keynote
ranking academically in the the conference and moderate a
panel consisting of Dean of Men
of their
upper three percent
Jack Hall, Dean of Women Doris Seward, Panhellenic Council
colleges:
President Claire Kaempffe, Interfraternity Council President Danny
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
Sussman, Student Government President Carson Porter, and former
Seniors Cyril Sheldon Dodge, Lexington; Ronald Joseph Vesper, Covspecial adviser to the IFC Deno Curris.
ington.
Ronald Douglas Catchen,
Juniors
After Vice President Johnson's address, Bowen says, the conferEubank; Bobby Joe Gaslin, Boston.
ence will center around questions directed to the panel from the
Sophomores William Verl Wellnitz,
Louisville; Philip Wayne Westerman,
audience.
Corydon.
Kiwanis-sponsore- d

y.

g;
g;

COLLEGE

OF ARTS

&

SCIENCES

Seniors John Raymond Baxley Jr.,
St.
Richard Metcalf
Louis, Mo.;
Crutcher, Lexington; Larry H. Eblen,
William Gregory Morgan,
Frankfort;
Owensboro; Shelby A. Sherrod, Lexington; Michael A. Urquhart, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Richard Charles Worley,
VVilmore.

Juniors Jose Antonio Alcala-RuiSantorce, Puerto Rico; William Bruce
Ayers. Hulen; Crawford Harris Blake-ma- n
Jr., Middlesboro; Gerald Alan
Campbell, Lexington; Wendell Carver,
HopkinsviHe; Robert Mason Coleman,
Hopkinsville; David Cecil Fannin,
Terry Robert Girill, Rochester, N.Y.; Robert Franklin Goodman Jr., Glasgow; Michael Thomas
Heath, Gilbcrtsville; Arvin H. Jupin,
DunBrandenbury; Paul Gale Penn, Sande-fubar. W.Va.; William Marion
Beaver Dam; Joseph S. Schoenen-bergeFreehold. N.J.; Robert D.
Trent, Hardinsburg; Bobby J. Brown,
Ray
Monticello; Bernard
Hawke,
Sonora.
Sopbomorrs Bill Earl Barnett II,
Pikeville; John Walter Boone Jr.,
Howardstown; Andrew Cammack,
Shanklin B. Cannon, Bethel:
Michael
Thomas Farmer, Midland.
Tex.;
Gordon,
Phillip
Carpenter
Thomas Henry Green,
Frankfort;
Charleston, W.Va.: Jan Barry Hen-soLexington; Todd Scott
Freeport, 111.; Charles Robert
Ingram, Williamsburg; Collin Scott
Kaeder, Lexington; Robert Bryant
Kenney Jr., Lexington; Charles Ronald Lovan, Owensboro; Evan Scott
Medley, Middlesboro; Jimmy Joe Miller, Union; Michael David Needleman,
Bardstown; Darrell Ray Rice, Pleasure Ridge
Richard Gregg
Park;
Schulte, Bellevue: Darrell McDonald Sheets. Anchorage; David Shra-ber- t.
Lexington; David Glenn Smith,
l.
Kingsport, Tenn.; Bruce Vincent
St. Charles. Va.
Freshmen
Michael David Alcorn,
Grayville, 111; Edward Durham Blake-maMiddlesboro; Clement Henry
Block Jr., Louisville; Joseph B.
Pikeville; Philip Asa Busby,
Weare, N.H.; Morris Dean Campbell,
Mechanicsburg, Pa.; James Lynn
Combs, Louisville; Mike Lee
Newport; David Nando Felty,
z,

r.
r.

Dry Cleaning SPECIAL

2

nZ7

DISCOUNT

We Still GIVE AWAY VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
(With 100 Coupons) GET A COUPON WITH

COLOR CARE DRY CLEANING

116 W. Maxwell

EVERY

SHIRT LAUNDERED

ONE DAY SERVICE

Phone

255-431-

3

For a delightful, relaxing, carefree weekend, a "
V
pleasant evening, or when parents and guests
come to Lexington, visit the Imperial House,
Lexington's most elegant motel where gourmet
foods, wines, and fine service prevail. Entertain- ment and dancing nightly for your pleasure. Our
rooms are spacious, elegantly appointed and
supremely comfortable.
STANLEY DEMOS. Manager

r,

M

r

'

,

it imperial IJoUSG of Lexington, Ky
v

WALLER

AVENUE

HARRODSBURG ROAD

n,

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH

9:30 a.m. College Class
8:30 and 10:50 a.m.
6:30 a.m.

WILSON

Richard M. Crutcher, Lexington;
Mary L. Gosney, Alexandria; Joyce
A. Hancock, Sulphur, and Michael A.
Urquhart, Scarsdale, N.Y.
nil BETA KAPPA
Richard Worley, Wllmore; Kenneth
Combs,
Eblen,
Lexington;
Larry
Frankfort; Frederick Christensen, Louisville; Michael Urquhart, Scarsdale,
N.Y.. and William G. Morgan III, Owensboro.
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
Arnold Lowe,
Langley; Marcus
Trumbo, Lexington; Frank Reeves Jr.,
Lexington: Paul W. Blair, Morehead;
Fred G. Karem, Louisville; Steve H.
Cook, California; Roger A. Walz, Ft.
Thomas; Charles B. Reasor Jr., Corbin; James M. Walker, Corbin; William G. Morgan III, Owensboro; Robert M. Guinn, Louisville; Robert W.
Fleishman, Lexington; Sheryl Glen
Snyder, Owensboro; Ed Hastie, Lexington, and William N. Eigel III,
Louisville.

Washington. DC; Robert Charles
Draper, Charlestown. Ind.; William
Madlsonvllle; Daniel
Islie Glner HI.Wheelwright; George
Craig Greer,
Williams King. Shelbyville; Gary Webster Smith, Calvert City; James Marlon Walker, Corbin.
Elvin Clarence Bryant,
Junior
Williamsburg; James Moody Ellis,
Ronald Lee Harness, AshEminence;
land; Michael Julian McOraw, Louisville: William F.dwln McKlnney, Falmouth; Jerry Wayne Purdon, Stanford; William Mitchell Rees. Winchester; Iirry Emerson Whaley, Maysvllle.
Ronald Lee Brown,
Sophomores
GreenRaceland; Richard Wayne Lee, Bloom-fielville; George Daniel Martin,
Raymond Bernard Shuman,
Paris; I,arry Gene Wells, Falmouth;
Philip Wayne Westerman, Corydon.

Wad-del-

SUNDAY SERVICES

2356 HARRODSBURG

WOODROW

Horst-meye-

ALDERSGATE METHODIST CHURCH
9:50 a.m.

seph R. Hampton, Cnmpbellsville;
Jess B. Scott. Guston, and Jon D.
Walker, Columbia.

n,

9:35 a.m. College Class
8:30 a.m. "A Wonderful Morning"
10:50 a.m.
"Diet No More"
provided for students Call

1881 EASTLAND PARKWAY

Iron Mountain, Mich.; Timothy Ray
Futrell. Cadiz; Roger D. flann,
N.C.; Vernon Neal Goetz,
Highland Heights.
Kpnneth Dean Herndon, Franklin;
David
Arthur E. Jacobs.
B. Jones, Akron. Ohio; William Earl
Kelley, Frankfort; Richard Lee Jr.,
Madisonville; Jimmy Raymond
Willlnstown; Kenneth Ralph
McClanahan, Wllliamstown; Robert
Barker McFarlnnd. Owensboro; Michael D. Miller, Dawson Springs; Steven
Craig Miller, Groveport. Ohio; Thomas Wayne Miller. Owensboro; John
Martin Miracle, Black Mountain, N.C.
Howard F. Moore, Adams; Daniel
Robert Mueller, Fort Thomas; Douglas McGuIre Neuman, Lyndon; Robert
Lee Noe, Paint Lick; Billy Bruce Peyton, Eddyville; Jackie Lee Prltchard,
Eastlake, Ohio; William P. Ridge Jr.,
Louisville; Lawrence Lee Robey,
Shepherdsville; John Pierre Sabella,
Joseph
Ridgewood. N.J.; Jerome
Schmitz, Ludlow; Jess Brown Scott,
Guston.
Chester A. Stevens, Hazard; Robert
Trimble Surface, Lebanon, Ohio; Gerald Ahern Thornton, Lexington; James
Terry Tidwell. Williamsburg; Kenneth Ray Troutman. Louisville; Danny
John Uhl, Ames. Iowa; David Wick-lifVictor, Fairborn, Ohio; Jerry
Allen Gaines, Paducah; John R. Cook
III. Lexington; William H. Courtney,
Lexington.

SCHOLARSHIPS
TRUSTEES
David T. Campbell, Henderson; Jo-

9:30 a.m.

Fein-aue-

The Kentucky

STEAK HOUSE like
Lexintton now hat
Louisville and Cincinnati

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein Is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising fchould
be reported to The Editors.

Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising, Business,
Circulation

2321

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L'l. IM.- 7-

Festival Of The Arts Representative
Of Many Greats In Performing Arts
Stravinsky, Fersichetti, Pinter, Chekhov,
Brecht; all these greats in the field of the performing arts will be represented next month when
the Department of Fine Arts celebrates UK's
first Festival of the Arts.
The Festival, which begins April 5 and continues for three weeks until April 22, will bring to
the campus five theatrical productions, seven concerts, a ballet, and an art exhibition.
Highlighted during the Festival will be a visit
to Lexington by Igor Stravinsky. Stravinsky will

conduct the Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra
in three of his own works when he appears April
11 in Memorial Coliseum.
Stravinsky's associate Robert Craft will conduct
Beethoven's "Symphony No. 1" and Schoenberg's
"Song of the Wood Dove." Stravinsky will conduct
his "Fireworks," "Second Suite for Orchestra,"
and "Pulcinella."
On April 13, a faculty septet will perform Stravinsky's "Septet." Also during the Festival, three
contemporary compositions will be premiered.
UCLA faculty member John Vincent has written
a work for string quartet which will be premiered
by the University's resident quartet April 8.
Haskell Thomson of the Oberlin Conservatory of

perform for the first time Vincent
Persichetti's "Chorale Prelude" on April 12. And
John Barnes Chance, of the University faculty will
have his "Kyrie and Alleluia" premiered by the
University Symphony and Choristers.
Festival
Other highlights of the
e
dance group of Merce
will include the
Cunningham performing on April 19. Harold Pinter's "The Dumb Waiter" will be performed by
Louisville's Actor's Theater April 17.
s
Chekhov's "The Marriage Proposal,"
"Miss Julie," and the University of Michigan's Professional Theater Company will produce
present "An Evening's Frost."
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony will be performed
April 22 by the Lexington Philharmonic and the
Lexington Singers.
The Department of Theater Arts' production
of "The Good Woman of Setzuan" is scheduled
for April
"Masterpieces from University Collections," an art exhibition, will run from April
9 to May 10.
Tickets for the Festival admission charged
events can be purchases at $2.00 each in the
Fine Arts Building box office.
Music will

three-wee- k

avant-gard-

Strind-berg'-

5--

Fourth Volume Of Massive Clay
Work Now In Research Stages
The

fourth

volume

"Henry Clay Papers"

of the
is now

underway. The University professors, Dr. James Hopkins and
Dr. Mary Wilma Hargreaves
are working on a collection of
writings and speeches of Henry
Clay. The project is a child of
the "Jefferson Papers" project
begun in 1951. Each state was
encouraged to follow suit and
make collections of their various
favorite sons.
The problems encountered in
this job have been many. For
one thing, the people involved in
the project had to set their own
precedent on how the work would
be collected and presented. Another problem is to find the
thousands of documents Clay had
written and received in his lifetime.
Dr. Hopkins said that the
first estimate of 10 volumes was
thought to be more than enough
but now there is a difficulty in

condensing the material into just

olumes. The project has more
than 150 sources for Clay's letters,
speeches, and bills. Students
have been helpful in this category and a student of Dr. Hopkins located a new letter just last
semester.
After a copy of a correspondence is obtained, there is the
additional problem of transcribing the material. Clay's handwriting is easily deciphered but that
of his writers has sometimes been
almost impossible Dr. Hopkins
10

v

The fourth volume, was originally expected to be comparatively
easy to compile since this is the
period in which Clay served as
Secretary of State for President
John Quincy Adams who had
himself held that office. This
volume however has become the
most involved with many times
the material expected uncovered.
Primarily ev ery letter or comment
Clay made at this time calls for
an abstract on the then current
national affairs.

Volume one includes Clay's
early life and local Kentucky affairs. Volume two takes in his
work on the Treaty of Ghent and
various commercial treaties with
England, a period of national
politics. Volume three contains
the period when Clay served as
lawyer for the Bank of the United
States and hence was a businessman rather than a congressman.

the most dangerous thing in the world
"Next to the
is television," said Dr. Bernard Rosenberg, professor of sociology
at the City College of New York, at a public lecture Thursday
night.
Sillane the Shakespeare of our
Dr. Rosenberg's lecture was time."
sponsored by Alpha Kappa Del- "Man can live without se- xta, national sociological hon- - some prjests and nuns do; and
orary. He spoke on "Art and man can iive without art, too,
Mass Society."
but it directly diminishes him."
Discussing increased leisure
Dr.
Rosenberg suggested
time, Dr. Rosenberg said "we changing the names of university
kill-l- est
it kill colleges to "college of remedial
have time to
us." He said we stay in college arts ami sciences" and stressed
till we are 35, then push for that "not one art artist has come
early retirement at 55, "and don t out Gf a university."
work much in between."
"During our leisure time,
emphasized Dr. Rosenberg, "we
stupify ourselves before the
cathode tube." The alternative
to being "victimized by the
media," is to "embrace learning
or art, or both."
The effect of the mass media,
is a

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"cultural, religious, ethnic, sexual homogenization."
"There is a sameness about
the whole world," he pointed
out, "a dreariness, a grayness,
a uniformity due to the mass
media." Citing the mass media
as "collective hypnosis," Dr.
Rosenberg rebuffed the argument
that TV was a distraction or a
diversion saying "Distraction
from what? a distraction from
facing the human predicament.
"But," cautioned Dr. Rosenberg, "prolonged emersion in garbage art has a deadening effect.
The unsatisfying pablum of the
mass media . . . makes Mickey

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* The Kentucky

Iernel

The South' s Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

1894

FIUDAY,

MAKCH 24, 1907

Editorials represent the ojnnions of the Editors, not of the University.

Walteh
Stk.vk Rocco, Editorial

M.

Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

William

fagc Editor

KNArr, Business Manager

Choosing Your Professor
Omission of instructors names
from the fall schedule book is at
best a slipshod solution to a serious problem. At worst, it is a
frightening violation of what must
remain a basic tenet of higher educationthe right of the student
to work in his chosen discipline
under a chosen mind.
Two reasons have been offered
by Registrar Elbert Ockerman for
the omission:
First is the problem of inaccuracies foisted upon the schedule book due to the fact departments must submit names of their
teachers a semester prior to the one
for which the books are being
printed. Since the advent of
three years ago, the
problem has materialized into a
great deal of paper work, called
"pink sheeting." This, Dr. Ockerman proclaims with delight, has
decreased with the omission of
instructors' names. The sympton
seems to have been treated and
on

e
the basic
dilemma of assigning teachers and
courses still rema