xt7wdb7vqc80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wdb7vqc80/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19611027  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7wdb7vqc80 section xt7wdb7vqc80 Credits Ulcer 'George' To Radio

Dee-Ja- y
By DAVID

"While the records are spinning I think about
of cigarettes, and
the music, smoke a half-pac- k
read album covers," says Carr.
Carr'a radio career began at WBKY four and
one-ha- lf
year ago while he was a University of
Kentucky student. Since then he has had shows on
stations WLAP and WKYT, channel 27. lie now
has a program on WRLG.
The disc Jockey claims commercial radio is
"an easy way to make a living, but it's hard on
the nerves. And I've had an ulcer named 'Oeorge'
for four years to prove that."
Speaking of "Jazz Unlimited," Carr says, "the
program is a release for me. If gives me a chance
to play what I want to play."
His personal taste in music Is reflected in his
Continued on rage 2

SHANK
Kernel Staff Writer
ry Sunday evening, a pray sports car
pulls up near McYey Hall. A man with a
V.xi

and
glasses gets out
and rides tlie
vator to the top floor of tlie
building, all tlie while clutching several
record alliums under one arm. He then enters the studios of WHKY and busies himself with the details of going on the air.

crew-cu-

t

dark-frame- d

1

Hp is Stan Cmr. 24, and his
Is called "Jazz Unlimited."

8

p.m. program

During the pitram. Carr plays the newer Jazz
albums and, between selections, comments on the
artists, their origin, and their claim to fame.

II n
Vol. LI 1 1, No. 21

i

rprsit y

LEXINGTON.

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KV. FRIDAY, OCT. 27, lOftl

Eight Pages

STAN CARR

U.N. To Vote On Plea

Halting Soviet

list it on the items of business for
the session opening at 10:30 a.m.
EDT.
The Assembly Is expecleed to
take up first admission of outer
Mongolia and Mauritania as the
V.N's 102nd and 103rd members,
then plunge directly into consideration of the appeal.
At a private meeting today the
Canada, Japan,
eight sponsors
Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Iceeight-natio- n
laid
and Pakistan
land, Iran
Sponsors of the
resolution containing the appeal plans to counter any delaying
succeeded today in getting the is- tactics by Soviet bloc countries
similiar to those which developed
sue on the Assembly agenda.
They fowarded their request for in 'the Political Committee.
to Assembly Presiurgent action
They are working against the
deadline mentioned by
dent Mongi Slim, who agreed to month-en- d

UNITED

NATIONS, N.Y.,
General Assembly
w ill consider today approval of
an appeal to Moscow to cancel
test. The
a
appeal won overwhelming endorsement in the Assembly's
Political Committee, and ratification is regarded as certain.
(AP)-T- he

Motlihif!

IAUp

Studying
of

Flaine Fanrlli, a tcphomore in the College
Arts and Sciences,
isn't giving muh attention to her book even if midterm exams
are coming up. Maine, who plans to enter interior design, is
from Louisville.

Varsity Debate Team
Travels To Georgia

The University debate team will be in Macon, Ga., this
weekend for the Dixie Tournament.

H-Bla-

st

Soviet Premier Khrushchev for
bomb.
testing the
The Political Committee recommended ratification of the eight
nation resolution by a vote of 75
to 10 with one abstention
far
more than the
majority
for Assembly ratification.
required
Fifteen members were absent
when the vote was taken and two
of them
Niger and El Salvador-indic- ated
they would vote yes In
the Assembly.
They spoke In the Political Committee, were general debate resum
ed on the nuclear test ban issue.
Debate in that committee was
marked by charges from U.S. Delegate Authur Dean that India had
sought to put the Soviet Union and
the United States on equal ground
as far as violation of the voluntary
moratium on nuclear tests is concerned.
He declared that India's attitude
appeared to resemble that of Soviet
Premier Khrushchev, who has declared that U.S. actions in Berlin
made it necessary for the Soviet
Union to resume testing in order
to perfeot its defenses.
The Indian delegation has a
perfect right to take this strange
action if It so wishes, "he said."
"It also has the right to equate a
device exploded underdevice
ground with a
exploded in the atmosphere. But
I subscribe that it should have
done so with some accuracy."
Dean was replying to speeches
In the committee made earlier by
Indian delegates.

During the past four years UK
Deno Curris
has won the tournament twice, atiye Ben Wright and
and placed second and third once. will debate the negative.
Accompanying the varsity squad
Twenty Southern colleges will be
will be the novice team with Stanentering the tournament.
"Our toughest competition will ley Craig and Ronald Elswick de- come from the Iniversity of South bating the affirmative. On the
Carolina and the University of negative side will be Richard Ford
Florida." said Dr. GifTord Bly- - n Phillip Grogan.
ton, debate coach.
Again the debate question will
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The Iniversity has asked the General
The members of the varsity de- - be "Resolved: That Labor Organi- to appropriate the largest budget request in its nearly 100 year
bate team will be Bettye Choate zations Should Be Under the Juris- rt
aeries explaining why the
history. Thin is the lat of a
and Warren Scoville for the aflrm- - diction of Antitrust Legislation."
needs the money and how it intends to use it.)
The University needs $2,436,730 for the next two years to
service and liquidate ImmhI issues to finance the construction World News Briefs
of critically-neede- d
classroom space.
Part of the money is to meet appropriated funds. This has been
payments on an 8 million dollar possible since World War II and
bond issue being used to construct
ow we jlave a lot of catching
the Chemistry-Physic- s
WASHINGTON, (AP) The United .States will
peared to be passing south of the Kamchatka
Building up t0 0
Peninsula. Yesterday's weather pattern had Indiend an addition to the Margaret
Funds to liquidate and service formally ask the Soviet Union tomorrow to put an
cated that part of Soviet Siberia might be in the
I. King Library.
immediate end to interference with American ofanother $5.5 million bond issue
fallout path.
Construction has teen under- - to construct a College of Corn-wa- y ficials who visit East Berlin.
for 11 months cn the Chem- - merce building and build additions
Ambassador Lewellyn Thompson received inU.N. Orders Investigation
structions to lodge an official protest in Moscow,
Building and for to the Colleges of Engineering,
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.. (AP) The United
three months on the library addi- - F.ducation, and Law are also State Department spokesman Lincoln White said.
Nations Assembly today ordered a special investition. Both structures ere expected needed.
Yugoslav Wins Nobel Prize
to be ready for use by October
gation into circumstances surrounding the death of
UK's College of Commerce Is
STOCKHOLM, Sweden. AP) Ivo Andric, a
Secretary-GenerDag Hammarskjold in a plane
tf 1962.
housed in White Hall, built in
Yugoslav author, who wove the dark currents of
crash in Africa Sept. 18.
The Tniverity began falling i880. The Department of Archltec-behln- d
modern life into a powerful trilogy of novels drawn
dur- - ture, under the Commerce
In da.fct.room building
The resolution asked for particular light on the
College, from his country's troubled past, was awarded the
ing World War II and has never is housed in the Reynolds
following aspects of Hammarskjold's death in Rho1961 Nobel Prize for literature today.
to catch up. I K presl- - house building. Increased enroll-drdesia on a peace mission in the Congo:
A prewar diplomat who was Yugoslavia's last
Frank G. Ditkey explained, ments in Education. Engineering,
1. Why was the flight undertaken
at night
minister to Hitler's Germany, Andric now is a
"This backing in building needs and Law has created space short-wa- s member of Communist
without escort?
Yugoslavia's parliament.
finally broken when construe- - ages in those colleges,
2. Why was the arrival of his plane at Ndola
He lives quietly in a Belgrade apartment where he
Estimated cost of the College of wrote "The
t'.on was started cn the Chemistry- Bridge on the Di'ina," "The Travnik
unduly delayed?
Physics Building," Dr. Dickey said. Commerce building is $2 million, Chronicle," and "Miss" while Nazi soldiers patrolled
3. Whether the plane after having established
"Now we must move forward to the College of Engineering adili-niethe streets outside during the wartime occupation.
contact with the tower at Ndola lost contact, and
other needs fciought on by tion $1.3 million, the College of
why the fact of its having crashed did not become
Fallout Spreads Over Pacific
Increased enroll.Tjtnt and ageing Education addition $1.25 million,
known until several hours afterwards?
and the College of Law addition
WASHINGTON, (AP) The fallout cloud of
buildings."
4. Whether after the damage it was reported
radiation loosed by Russia's superbomb blast rolled
"The only way ve can build $750,000.
to have suffered earlier from firing by aircraft
For its total operations, the Unt- - steadily across the North Pacific today toward an
classrooms, however," Dr. Dickey
hostile to the United Nations the plane was la
Fundk to liquidate and service versify is requesting $24,374,458 for area south of the Aleutian Islands.
The U.S. weather bureau said the cloud ap
tiild, "is with the use of stuta lKu'2-0'- 3 und $28,541,647 for 1963-6pioper condition for use.

Kpptl

S2J36S36

Budget Increase Calls
For Building Finances

U.S.

Protests Soviet Intrusion

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Tr'uUy.

Oct. 27, 19(il

Companies To Inlervieiv Students
physical chrmi.stry; physics at all
decree levels, chemical, electrical,
mechanical, and metallurgical engineering.
2 I'nlon
Carbide
Oct.
Nuclear Co. analytical, inorganic.
physical chemistry, library science,
mathematics,
physics, chemical,
electrical. mechanical, metallurg
ical, and nuclear engineering at
all degree levels.
cerNov. 2 Haynes Satellite
amic, chemical, industrial, mechanical, and metallurgical engineering.
Nov. 2 J. C. Penney Co. January, June, and August graduates
in commerce, who are interested In
management training.
Nov. 2 Square D Co. electrical
engineering.
Nov. 2 Universal Oil Products
Co. chemistry at all degree
els; chemical engineering. (Will
terview Juniors, seniors, and
uate students in these fields for
summer employment.)
3
Nov.
Linde Co. analytical,
Inorganic, organic, physical chem- -

The following companies will
conduct interviews next week for
all interested students.
Theme wishing Interviews should
contact the Placement Service,
Room207, Administration Building,
as soon as possible.
Oct. 30 American Smelting and
Refining Co., Central Research
laboratories graduate levels in
metallurgy, chemistry, and chemical engineering.
Oct. 30 The California Oil Co.
chemistry, chemical, and mechanical engineering.
Oct. 31 U. S. Naval Ordinance
Laboratory chemistry, mathematchemics, physics; aeronautical,
meindustrial,
ical, electrical,
chanical 'engineering at all degree
Fevels.

1
Air Reduction
Oct.
Company chemistry at all degree
chemical, electrical, gen- mechanical, and metallurgical

Texas Instru- Oct.
ments, Metals and Controls Divi- frion analytical,
and
Inorganic,
1

and mechanical en- Istry; chemical, civil, electrical, electronic
industrial, mechanical, metallurg- - gineering.
ical engineering, engineering physKMC Corporation
Nov. 3
ics at all degree levels.
chemistry; chemical, electrical, and
mechanical engineering.
3 American
Co.
Oil
Nov.
Nov. 3 U.S. Steel Corporation
,.nrillntM nt MS mH
rhpmlK,rw
.
,
ro
orrMtnrtnrnl
p. n ,
ceramic, civil
crive degrees' within twelve months, chemical, electrical, industrial, me- Nov. 3 Federal Aviation Agency chanical,
mining.
metallurgical.
aeronautical, civil, electrical, petroleum engineering.

ov.

Dance At

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JOHPH

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"MASTER OF THE WORLD"
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8:00 To 12:30

Carmack. It was quickly changed
to Stan Carr by his first commercial radio boss who told him the
name "Stanley R. Carmack" would
not stick in the minds of his listeners.
Carr's daily four-hoprogram
0
on WBLG
a.m.) leaves him
with enough time to read, drive his
sports car, shoot, strum his guitar,
or go into his attic and play his
drums.
Reeling."
He has a sister. Veronica CarHe admits, however, that he mack, who is a freshman home
most any music as economics major at UK.
"can appreciate
?ong as it is professionally done.
"I love music," he volunteers.
Although. he has no single favorite recording, because there are
LEXINGTON
.50 very, very many. Carr rates the
album called "Time Out," by Dave
YELLOW CAB
Brubeck, as one of the highest on
his list.
Inc.
When he first came to UK from
Berea, Intending to become an
his speech was characterized, by a mountain accent, Carr
recalls.
When he decided to enter radio,
Dial 2-2- 23
the instructions of Wallace Briggs,
assistant professor of English, and
Stuart Hallock, assistant professor in the Department of Radio,
Television, and Films, helped him
develop his voice and rid himself
of the accent.
His real name is Stanley R.
v- -

k

DELIVERY
TIL 12:00 P.M.

Charlie Bishop

Continued from Page
collection of 500 records. Some 300
are jazz recordings, 100 are classical, and the others are in various
classifications.
"Jazz is the end of a progression that began with hillbilly music when I was 10 or 11. I first
staheard jazz on an
tion and have liked it ever since,"
Carr. "Maybe I prefer jazz
ay
because it is a music primarily of

IimIi
AWnu
Crfvy
TODAY AND SATURDAY!

'If It's On the
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COFFEE SHOP
Phone
500 Rote St.

THIS FRIDAY
Music By

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OPEN DAILY

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* i

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, IrM.iy,

Halloween Dominates
Weekend Festivities
By JEAN SCHWARTZ
The time tias arrived for everyone to tret out his broom and get
It In working order so he will have
the proper mode of transportation
to travel to all the activities of
the Halloween weekend.
Everyone will be decked out In
his very best costume and mask
(for those who need one), so be
careful who you are talking about
because it might be that delightful
poblin next to you holding a
pumpkin.
Even though Halloween isn't until Tuesday, it still provides an excuse for some colorful parties.
The Alpha Gamma Deltas will
start the weekend off with a jam
in honor of their pledges
this afuiiinnn from h p.m. at
tli ir ih.,p:er h'ni e. Eervone i.s

to their

Halloween

tractor and wagon.

party

on a

The Rejects will provide the
music at the Alpha Oamma Rho
Halloween party, and everyone will
be In costume, at the Triangle
house and at Limestone Lodge.
The Kappa Sigmas will be fighting off the ghosts and witches at
their Wild West party tomorrow
night In the vicinity of Dodge
City. A gun fight Is scheduled at
midnight, and anyone not In costume will be thrown in Jail.
If you're allergic to paint, you'd
better stay away from the Delta
Tau Delta house, where everyone
will be glowing under the infrared
liKhts. The costumes will be decorated with artistic little drawings,
painted by some of the more creative persons at the neon party.
Hie Siema Chis are having P.
masquiade affair of u chlTerent
type a "call girl" party tomorrow niiilit.
This week's dance parly vi!l be
Hall in the lmu r
held at
p.m. tomorrow
lounge from
NiKlil. Jne Mills will provide the
mii'ic, mid movie passes will be
awarded to the winners of the
dance contests.
The Fijis are traveling to Jerry
Anderson's farm for a picnic tomorrow, and then thy're returning
to the chapter house for a dance
party.
The members of Farm House and
their dates will be swinging their
partners at a square dance in the
Women's Gym and the Tau Kappa
Alphas will be enjoying the night
air at a street dance outside their
house with the women of Bonnie
Brae House, Weldon House, and
the Home Economics house.
Have fun trick and treating
everyone, and be sure not to compliment anyone on his original
mask who Isn't wearing one.

imi'nl.

M.i'k

are in order for the II.
ijm,U( i,y the NV.v-in Club. Joe MilN will
mcee
tie a IT.ur which will be held in
the Hubble.
Our on fraternity row the Phi
Fimi.i Kappas are holding a little
at the chapter house.
The Phi Delta Thetas are providing the costumes for their dates
tomorrow night nt their annual
pa Jama party. The Ninhtcrawlers
will provide the music.
Any face but your own will be
welcome at the Sisma Alpha
Halloween party, and behind the Rreen door at the Sigma
Phi Epsilon house everyone will
be bobbing for apples at the
haunted house party.
The goblins will be Jumping at
the Alpha Tau Omega's goblin hop,
and we've been Informed that a
genuine Halloween atmosphere will
be provided.
Everyone will have to carry his
broom to the Phi Kappa Tau
house because the Phi Taus are
transporting their dates In style
Hall

27, 19il- -3

Social Activities

DR. HARPER TO SPEAK
sororities, as well as other stu- - sponsor a film, "Martin Luther,"
to be shown at 6:30 p.m. Monday
The YWCA Foreign Affairs Com- dents are invited to bring cars.
of the StudenU
In the
FILM
mittee will meet at 4 p m. Monday
The Luthern
Fellowship will Union Building.
in the
of the Student
Union Building.
Dr. Kenneth Harper, .assistant
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS
dean of men, will speak on his
experiences as a missionary in
Africa and will give his opinions
on current African affairs.
ONE BLOCK FROM U.K.
328 CLIFTON
St'KY
SuKy is sponsoring a team send-o- ff
SUNDAY:
at 10:50 a.m. today for the
9:45 a.m.
For All
Clos$e
Georgia football game. The parade
10:45 o.m., 6:00 p.m.
will assemble at Wildcat Manor
Worship
and accompany the Cats to Blue
WEDNESDAY:
Grass Field. All fraternities and

CHURCH OF CHRIST

10:00 o.m.
7:30 p.m.

Lodies' Bibl Study
Closscs For All

HARMON CALOWELL, Evangelist

What's

A New

N ew?
JUST ARRIVED
A
new shipment of the
lantren
Canadian Cardigan sweaters. The
is wearone everyone en the campus
beaubulky knit hold stripes
ing
tiful blended- - colors. Stop by the
123 Shop tomorrow. Pick yours up.

or

(Phone

Testament Church with Nothing to Offer
Except the Teaching of Christ

THE
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Angelucci's are having their 38th
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fall and winter needs now and stock
up your wardrobe with the wonderful
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Saturday
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Knit Collared Corduroy Cor Coats in
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This 1,9, 11
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* The Kentucky Kernel
University ok

Enteri--

Kfmi-ck-

at th pot office t Lrtingtnn, Kentucky m mnml clusn mutter tinder the Art of March .1, 1879.
fuhlishpd lour timri a wei k ilnrinii the rmular w hixil vrar except (luring holiil.ivi ami riaiui.
MX DOl.LAHS

A

SC

HOOL

YKAR

Ed Van Hook, Editor

Kerry Toweix, Munrtgfritf Editor
Wayne Gregory, Campus Editor
Ben Fitzpatric k, Sports Editor
Jean Schwartz, Swlvty Editor
Hick Mc:Reynolis, Curdwnht
Dick Wallace, Advertising Manager
Bill IIolton, Circulation Manager
FRIDAY NEWS STAFF
Mike Fearing, News Editor

Bill Martin, Sports

'frt

Kyra Hackley, Associate

HELL

A Good Question
An anonymous and irate woman
called the Kernel newsroom recently
and demanded to know where the
money to give scholarships to the
children of Cliff I lagan and Frank
Ramsey would come from.
Although it is very disconcerting
to speak to an individual without an
identity, a good question was raised.
A check with Mr. Clay Maupin,
director of the Accounting Division,
revealed that the I lagan and Ramsey
children will receive only tuition expenses.
The profits from the recent basketball game between the Boston Celtics
.

and St. Louis Hawks will be invested
in securities. The dividends received
from this investment will supply the
money for the scholarships to be given
by the University of Kentucky Alumni
Endowment Fund.
Mr. Maupin said that profits from
the game are expected to be "approximately ten thousand dollars," and
that dividends should be realized in
about six months. He expects about
four hundred dollars annual income
from these dividends.
In light of the potential results of
the scholarship program set up by
the alumni association, the Kernel
raises a hearty cheer.

Program Conflicts
A rather unfortunate

conflict occurred recently. The Blazer Lecture
and the John Jacob Niles concert
were scheduled for the same night.
In a University community where
there are far too few cultural and
programs, it is indeed disheartening to find that two
good programs were scheduled for the
same time.
Although sports events don't have
any overall master plan to solve conflicts, they do have a record worth
noting. Sports activities in the Lexington area are well planned. Usually,
only one high school team has a
Friday night home game. The Uni
thought-provokin-

g

versity plays on Saturday. University
home football games during the
Keeneland Race meet are played at
night. After Keeneland closes, home
games are played in the afternoon.
It would seem to be a wise decision-to
the
organize and
various programs of the English Film
Series, the Fine Arts programs, Chamber Music programs, plays of both
the Laboratory Theatre and the Guig-no- l
Theatre, with the Blazer Lectures
and the Central Kentucky Concert
and Lecture Series.
Together, they could work out a
single calendar of superior cultural
quality and could prevent future

Sent To The Cleaner
For a good many years, now, we
have published each Sunday in our
Magazine of Books a list of the best
sellers in the middle west. The list
was compiled each week from reports made to us by leading wholesalers and retailers. We collected and
published (he results because the general reader as well as the men in the
book trade welcomed this guide to
what was popular.
We have come to the conclusion
that we can no longer publish this
list raw. Recently and tardily, we
have become aware that some of the
best sellers that have appeared on our
lists were
by
readauthors for
ers. We aren't going to further this
game by giving publicity to such
authors and their titles.
Unfortunately this week's list was
already off the press before the new
policy was decided upon, but beginning next Sunday, the list in the Magazine of Books w ill appear under the
caption "Among the Best Sellers" and
we will not knowingly include in it
any book that is intended to make
money for its author and publisher
by being nastier than the next. This
won't bring many changes in the list
but there will be a few.
Otherwise respectable bookmen
have comforted themselves after pub
sewer-writte-

n

dirty-fingere- d

dirty-minde- d

lishing the stinkers by telling themselves that the fault lies with the
readers who crave this kind of thing.
We, too, have been deceiving ourselves with the notion that what the
publishers publish and what the booksellers sell in largest volume are facts
to be recorded by us, like changes in
the stock market and batting averages,
because people are interested in them.
The new policy doesn't mean that
we are going to join the
or are about to advocate censorship, or have become more easily
scandalized by printed references to
sex than we were last week or last
year. Our position is simply that we
aren't any longer going to draw attention to gutter literature. Those
who care to publish it and exploit
it can still do so, subject to the laws
against obscenity, but we aren't going to assist them.
We assume that you don't want
filthy looks on your shelves any more
than you want to bed down a herd
of hogs in your living room. We assume that you would not welcome a
visit from a farmhand who hadn't
bothered to clean the barnyard off
his shoes before entering the house.
We should have instituted the new
policy long ago and apologize to our
readers for not having done so.
Chicago Thihcne.

University Soupbitx

Students Blast Editor

By RORKIE

MASON And
KYRA HACKLEY
To The Editor:
We are sick of your editorial page.
We have found no stimulation on
any of the editorial pages this year;
they are stupidly unexciting and insipid. We thought anything would
have been an improvement over last
year, but apparently this is not the
case.
Nor have the news stories been
especially exciting or enterprising this
year. We especially would like to see
some original cartoons and on some
occasion an entire page which does
not depend on other newspapers.
The ultimate was on Oct. 6 when
there was a news photo on the editorial page, along with a couple of

book-burne-

on subjects that are of interest to
the campus, or would be of interest
if that interest were stimulated.
Suggestions:
Campaign for more concerts and
lectures.
Campaign against courses from
ISoO to the present which take you
to World War II and drop you.
General war against professors
teaching methods.
More forums and debates, perhaps
among Greeks and dormitories.
Investigation into fraternity and
sorority systems.
Investigation of the function and
capacity of Student Congress and the
limitations imposed by the University.
Function and efficiency of campus
religious groups. (The only way to
find out about one of these is to join
it.)
Coerage and comment on (he
more important I'hilosophy Club lectin. 's.
Outstioning of UK's "intellectual
atmosphere."
Survey of UK's "morals."
Discussion of the policy of
relationships. (The English Depaitrnent,
for instance, has
frowned upon these.)
Campaign for classes in autohyp-nosito alleviate exam cramming.
Campaign for campus pubs.
Campaign for more humanities
courses for engineers. (You can spot
most engineers a mile away.)
In previous years, the Kernel has
been criticized for its undue cynicism.
But this year, the Kernel is doing
fine, just as everyone wants it, with
nothing to alarm them, nothing to
tear their cardboard existence, nothing entering their cellophane heads.
At least the Kernel is keeping the
administration happy.
Congratulations on selecting the
best of newspapers, the Christian Science Monitor, for most of your material. ,
(Maybe we should try for (he Holy
C.rail?-TI- IE
EDITOR.)
s,

editorials lifted from other papers on
things irrelevant to the campus.
We want enlightenment anil leadership, not calm agreement and
smoothing over the issues. We would
like to point out that there rt important areas lor exploration and comment by the Kami. We don't see
how they escaped you.
We would like a series of student
articles-rath- cr
than sterile AV copy

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SllOis
Wallace Brims director of Guiffnol Theatre, Mops rehearsal of
"J. B." to give members of the cast some pointers. From left are
RriKKS,
Charles Webster, Richard Meyers, Sonia Smith, Nene
arr, and Mitil Tale. Miss Smith, a junior in speech and drama
from Lexington, plays the wife of J. B. in the Archibald MacLeish
play.

Stretch Tops Snug!
The elastic around the
top clings to the foot
and snugs the fit! And it'3
the new modern kind
which doesn't "die".

Rehearsals Keep Actress
A I 'Road Runner' Pace
The great gusts of wind which
have been sweeping across campus
during the pa.st few weeks have
been rumored to have been caused
by a "road runner." but Sonia
Smith, member of the "J. B." cast,
explains that this is the name
which friends have given her because of the furious pace she has
been keeping since rehearsals began for the Ouignol play.
Miss Smith, a junior dramatic
arts major, says that this has been
prompted "by seeming oblivious to
everything except the role of
Sarah," the wife of the title
character.
"My sorority sisters are finding
it difficult to cope with my continual experimentations with crying." she adds. "I am constantly
trying different approaches to it,
and then I ask for opinions trying
to determine its effectiveness.
"The role of Sarah is the m.t
difficult and challenging I have
ever had," Miss Smith says. "The
greatest part of the challenge Is
grasping the many levels of emotion through which Sarah passes.
At first she is a loving wife and
(iod fearing, but then digresses-ta God hating and embittered
won; an.
Finally she Is a pentitant wife
who fears that her husband will
not accept her again, but is full of
hope that he will forgive her, and
perhaps, accept her love."
Miss Smith adds that she feels
the character is now coming to life.

"At this point I feel that I can
comment upon what Sarah feels.
Her emotions are common to us
all, but In the play the emotional
changes far surpass the rate at
which they occur to most of us
in daily life."
Of director Wallace Briggs, Miss
Smith says, "Mr. Briggs is one of
the main reasons for my coming to
UK. I knew what an outstanding
director he was before I graduated
from high school, and felt that I
would gain the best training In
dramatics under his instruction."
After graduating from IK in
June 1963, Miss Smith would like
to go to New York for further work
in the theater. "I would like to
attend a drama school, and try for
minor roles in either on or
shows."
Miss Smith thinks that much of
her love of the theater and dramatics has come from her encouraging parents. "Mother and father
acted together while in college, and
mother has directed many high
school productions." Her fath