xt7h445hdm7k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7h445hdm7k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1963-10-03  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  3, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  3, 1963 1963 1963-10-03 2015 true xt7h445hdm7k section xt7h445hdm7k Leadership Meeting
Set For Saturday

Jim umie iL

Leadership Conference, sponsored by Links, Mortar
Board, Lances, and Omicron Delta Kappa, will be held at
the Carnahan House Saturday at noon.
Letters have been sent out by

the office of the Dean of Women

to all campus organizations and
approximately 100 students are
expected to attend the conference.
The conference focal points
are the types of leadership and
their differences and similarities.
It attempts to differentiate which
types are the most effective and
more Influencing.
Skip Harris, assistant to the
dean of women, says the main
purpose of the conference is "to
create or provoke an awareness
by the participating students of
the qualities of leadership, the
kinds of leadership in different
can. pus organizations and how
they function effectively."
President Oswald will informally address the conference about

leadership and Its Influences.
After President Oswald's address, discussion groups will be
held, headed by the following
Miss Doris
faculty members:
Seward, dean of women; Fred
Strache, fraternity adviser; Dr.
James Gladden, Department of
Sociology; Dr. J. W. Patterson,
Department of Speech; Dr. John
Kuiper, Department of Philosophy; C. M. Johnson, Department of Sociology; and Mrs.
Wayne Smith, director of women's residence halls.
The conference will be concluded by a general discussion
summary given by the participating faculty members and moderated by Dr. Gladden. They will
attempt to revie'v and reempha-siz- e
the important ideas which
result from the day's activities.

'World Of Folk Music'
Begins Tomorrow
By BONNIE BARNES
Kernel Staff Writer
evening brings a "World

Tomorrow
of Folk Music" to
YTKY listeners. John Holler and Robert Paddock will produce the hour-lonprogram before a live student audience
at 7 p.m. from studio A, on the third floor of McVey Hall.
Plans for a 15 minute folk
music program were drawn for
presentation in the spring semester of
but failed to materialize. This year the project natfell to Mr. Boiler as music
urally
director. Robert Paddock, a senior
broadcasting major, was chosen
to participate on the grounds of
his long-terannouncing experience.
The program will largely feature professional
but
"we are looking for authenticity
and genuineness, which are not
necessarily professional," said Mr.
Boiler.
This Friday's program will feature Barbara Dean, Tom Lind-se- y,
and Mr. Boiler, who intend
to present numbers such as
"Barb'ry Allen,". "Lord Lorrell,"
and other English ballads. "Since
folk music originated with bards
and traveling minstrels, solo renditions are most authentic, and
we intend to stand by this tradition as closely as possible," said
Boiler.
"We're attempting to convey
what folk music actually is and
means to the general public," he
added. "Tomorrow's presentation
will be very general, and will include a discussion of the different modes of folk singing, together with the varied styles of
guitars, not all of which are folk
'
Instruments."
But the general public are not
the only ones involved in the
confusion. When Boiler invited
a country-musi- c
group to partici

la,

pate In the program they replied
they "weren't sure we can play
that there folk music the city
folks do." The cosmopolitan takeover of an originally rustic tradition has ironically eventuated in
frauding the originals.
Tapes of the program will be
sent weekly to the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, and if approved, the program will be scheduled for the
national network. This would not
be the first time a WBKY program has been nationally distributed.
Students will be invited to "sins
along" for part of the broadcast,
and those who wish to attend are
urged to be in their seats 5 minutes before "on the air."

Student Directories
students may
pick up a cpoy of the Student
from 8:30 a.m. to
Directory
noon and from 1:30 to 5 p.m.
on Monday and Tuesday at the
Town Housing Office, northwest corner of Bowman Hall,
by showing their ID card. University offices that need directories for their work should
contact the Student Congress
office, 102 Student Center, Ext.
21G6 before Wednesday.

Vol. LV., No.

University of Kentucky
1963
KY.t

17

LEXINGTON,

THURSDAY,

OCT.

3,

Eight Pages

UK Students To Attend

United Nations Seminar
By TOM WOODALL

Kernel Staff Writer

students are
to meet with
L'uited Nations leaders in
New York City Nov.
as
part of the annual U.N'. Seminar.
Thirty-fiv-

e

scheduled

1

Sponsored by the University
YW and YMCA, this year's seminar is set for Oct. 30 through

Nov. 3.

Donald Leak, YMCA director,
said the following schedule has
been arranged:
Oct. 31 Tour the U.N. building and visit the Foreign Policy
Association at the World Affairs
Center.
Nov. 1 Meet with either Ni

geria or Ghana representative to
the U.N.; attend a meeting of
the General Assembly; meet with
a representative from a Communist country (Poland or Yugoslavia); talk with a member of
the Human Rights Division; and
meet with a representative
to
the U. S. Mission.
Nov. 2 Option of tour of
Greenwich Village, Henry Street
Settlement, art tour, or national
YM or YWCA offices.
for this year's
trip are Lindsay Snyder, for the
YWCA, and Coleman Malloy for
the YMCA. They head a steering committee, also composed of
Woody Louden, Jim Ashmore,
and Barbara Peart, which is
arranging the seminar.
Two meetings to prepare mem

Committee Of 240
To Select Members
The steering committee of the Committee of 210, a student organization designed to interest high school students
in the University, will meet next week to select two students
from each Kentucky county to serve on the committee.
The state has been divided in
to 16 areas with a chairman the committee may contact one
who will supervise the activities
within his area. The steering
committee consists of the 16 area
chairmen.
Paul Chellgren, a senior accounting major from Ashland, is
spokesman for the committee. It
is his job to explain the committee's function to the new members.
"The work of the committee is
very important in attracting top
students to the University," Chellgren said.
Dr. John Oswald, president of
the University, expressed his
strong support for the activities
and goals of the Committee of

of the following area chairmen:
Linda Woodall, Anne McCutchen,
John Reisz, Bob Granacher,
Marilyn Meredith, Anne Meece,
Carol Hamm, Vivian Shipley,
Martha Bell, Ann Combs, Charles
Hutchison, aul Chellgren, Ben
Williams, Raymond Daniel, and
Joan Rhoads.

210.

The members of this group are
stuselected from outstanding
dents on campus. Their responsibilities include visiting high
school juniors and seniors in
their counties to give them specific information about the University and informing citizens of
the community in regard to University policies, programs, and
activities.
Anyone interested in joining

PAUL CHELLGREN

bers for the trip will be held
this month, Leak said.
Thirty-fiv- e
men and women
will make the trip by chartered
bus. Leak and Miss Crystal Kel-log- ?,
YWCA director, also will ao.
Leak said application blanks
are available in the Y offices and
the information desk at the Student Center. He asked interested
students to apply as soon as possible.
The cost will be $50 a student,
he said. This will pay for transportation, two nights in a hotel,
U.N. tickets and insurance. Students will be excused from
classes, Leak said.

Cancer Lecture

Dr. A. J. Dalton of the National Cancer Institute, Beth-esd- a,
Md., will deliver the University of Kentucky College of
Medicine's first cancer teaching
lecture of the 19C3-6- 4
series
at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
His subject will be "Electron
Microscopic Studies on Virus-InducMurine Leukemias."
The public is invited to his
UK lecture, to be in the University Hospital auditorium.

Dean's Office
Coordinating
Employment
The Student Employment Bureau for men has been moved
from the YMCA to the office of
the dean of men.
Richard Sellers, assistant dean
of men, said the change was
made Sept. 27. The bureau had
been in the YMCA office since
its establishment before 1925.
"We are now familiarizing ourselves with the employment procedures," Mr. Sellers said. "The
change was purely administrative not procedural."
He said some change in procedure may be made in the
future. Presently he and Mrs.
Paula Kunter are handling the
employment.
The women's employment service will continue to be handled
by the office of the dean of women, Mr. Sellers said.

Phi Sigs Kidnap Sorority Housemothers

By BLITHE RUNSDORF, Assistant Campus Editor

If any sorority is still missing its housemother it can find
her at the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity house.

1

"tut

Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity members held the
sorority housemothers "captive" for several hours
Tuesday night. The gangsters broke into the sorority
houses while they were eating dinner and spirited

u

them off to the Phi Sig House. The housemothers
look like pretty willing victims, as they are being
treated to cake and coffee.

The Phi Sigs, in what has been you have never seen. The girls,
described as one of the best
as soon as they saw what the Phi
planned and best executed stunts
Sigs were trying to do, started
has pulled off in fighting. And you know girls
any fraternity
many years, "kidnaped" all of when they get to mixin' it up.
the sorority housemothers and The Phi Sigs literally lost their
held them captive until the sorshirts.
orities came to get them. The
The general opinion of the
had to sing a song from
girls
"captive" housemothers was that
their sorority repertoire in order gangsters were nicer than they
to "free" their housemother.
thought. "We'd like it to happen
Dressed in gangsters' garb remat least once a week," they said.
iniscent of the C'apone era and
The housemothers were treated
wild west days, when hootin'
the
to cake and coffee, compliments
and hollerin' were the order of of the noice gangsters.
the day, the Phi Sigs "broke
At the Alpha Gamma Delta
into" the sorority houses about
Miss Bess May said ' I
the time the girls were eating house,scared to
was
death, but our
dinner. Confusion was the meal
housfboys (the boys that serve
most of the sorority coeds ate for
at meals) wouldn't lot them (the
dinner Tuesday night.
Continued nn Page 8
And such hootin' and hollerin'

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

3,

13

TT

1

High School Debaters' Start
UK's 'Debate Of Month'
stntc (hampion- The
ship debaters from Howling
Green Higb School will help
inaugurate the UK Student
Forum's "Debate of the
Month" series this Saturday.

The series, which provides experience and Instruction in the
principles of debating, is being
with the.
held 4n conjunction
Third Annual Speech Educators
Conference which opens Friday
'
morning.
debate, scheduled
Saturday's
for 2 p.m. in the Little Theatre

A chemical processing plant model has been presented to the University of Kentucky Department of Chemical Engineering by the
Procter and Gamble Co. The intricate layout is scaled to a model
which was used In construction of one of PAG'i new plants. Dr.
Samuel C. Hite (left), head of the UK department, says the model
will be used by senior design classes. Also shown with the gift Is G. F.
Crewe, associate professor of chemical engineering.

Dairy Judging Team
Captures Top Honors
For the second year in a row the University Dairy JudgFair at
ing Team has won top honors at the
Memphis, Tenn.
The members of the team are
Mid-Sout-

James Davenport Jr., a senior
from Bowling
Green;
Jerry
Brumagen, a senior from Mt.
Olivet; Charles Boyd, a senior
from Dover; Tom Code, a senior
from Boone County; and Neil
Owen, a sophomore from Butler.
The L'K team, coached by Oliver Draton, placed first among
the eight teams competing. Western Kentucky State College won
the second place honors in the
contest.
Top individual winners were
James Davenport, who won the
reasons contest. A total of 50
points is possible in each class
with 50 points possible for each
set of reasons. Davenport won a
total of 669 points out of a possible 700.
Jerry Brumagen placed third
in the Brown Swiss and Gurnsey
individual judging contest.
This was the first contest the
team has entered
this year.
Coach Deaton said that the team
will participate in the International Livestock Exposition in
Chicago in December.

Newman Club
Dr. Mark M. Luckens of the
College of Pharmacy will speak
at the Newman C lub at 8 p.m.
on Oc t. 6.
Dr. I.uckens will speak on "A
Typical Day of Worship in the
Family of an Orthodox Jew."
The public is welcome.

Slaff Mem bers
Get National Recognition
Two

Two

Model Presented To UK

members of the University of Kentucky Coojerative
Extension Service staff are receiving national recognition today
at the National Home Demonstration Agents' Association
meeting in Salt Fake City, Utah.
Mrs. Lucille E. Warren, ExtenShe has served as secretary of the

sion home demonstration agent in
Bullitt County, and Mrs. Bertha
Corbitt McLeod, Fulton County
home agent, are among those receiving Distinguished Service
awards at the convention.
In Bullitt County, Mrs. Warren works with 20
clubs having an enrollment of 800 members and with eight Homemakers
Clubs which have 135 members.

Conventions programmed for mankind are held at Mammoth Cave National Park quite often but one convention
lor which reservations are never made has been staged there
each year for longer than any man knows.
The delegates are bats.
sky at this location during late
Zoologists at the University,

Pershing Rifles

Sponsor Dance

The annual Coronation Ball
sponsored by Pershing Rifles will
be held at 8 p.m. Saturday in the
Student Center ballroom.
Sponsors will be presented during intermission, and new pledges
will be introduced.
The Confederate Squad of
Company C- -l will present an exhibition of 1800 drill.
The dance is open to all students and faculty members of the
University, and tickets may be
purchased from any member of
Pershinsr Rii'les.

summer and early fall," says Dr.
Wayne H. Davis, assistant professor of zoology and principal investigator for the UK research
project. "It is truly a convention
of bats because of the number of
species present."
The UK zoologists' work in the
national park is presently described as attempting to find out
more about the migration of bats
as individuals and as colonists.

If you had the time you could do the computations which the biggest data processing systems do. I But they do them at electronic
speed and without tiring. I It calls for constant
initiative to make them work better for us. I
You needn't know anything about them to start

I

IBM has an education

program for

continued training. I
Ask your college placement officer for our brochuresand for an appointment when the IBM
representative is interviewing on campus. I
IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

I

If you cannot attend the interview, write:
I
Manager of College Relations, I IBM Corp.,
590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y. I
MOVE AHEAD: SEE

OCTOBER

Kentucky Home Economics Association, as district chairman in
the Kentucky Home Demonstration Agents' Association, and is
active in other community and
state activities.
Mrs. McLeod has been active
in promoting "leadership development in the adult extension program and creating international
understanding through programs
for civic organizations."
She
works with 253 Homemakers Club
H
clubs in Fulton
members and
County as well as with other civic
and farm organizations
there.
She has attended four meetings
of the Associated Country Women
of the World In Ceylon, Scotland, Canada, and Australia.

HELD
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$1.00

2nd Week

OVER!
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LOU!;
ELSA MART3NELLI
MARGARET HUTHERrORO
MAGCJE SMITH
P.OD TAYLOR

DOUBLE FEATURE

"THE CASTILIAN"
In Color

Cesar Romero
Avalon

Frankie

Paul Newman
In

"THE YOUNG
PHILADELPHIANS"

PlxlUtW

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jERRHlEWlSas

'THEi:SI!ipIi i
PROFESSOR,"
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FIRST

RUN

WESTERN

'The Lion'
Holden

Trevor Howard
Both Features in Color

SuKy Circle will hold a
meeting for all its regular
members at 6:39 p.m. tonight
in the Student Center Theatre.
It is important for all members to attend.
Adm.

THEATRE

STARTS TOMORROW

WED., THRU SAT.

SuKy Circle
The

Starts 7:30

Kentucky

1:30 P.M.

OPEN DAILY

William

MrTRO

with.

Co-O- p

Mammolh Cave Is Site
For Research On Bats

where an intensive bat research
program was initiated last year,
report that the immediate area
around Dixon Cave, within the
national park, has become their
mecca for a study of Kentucky
bats.
"The flying mammals flit by
the thousands through the night

six are Dr. Gifford Blyton, UK
debate coach, Mr. Brent Fry, Dr.
Ernest E. Hall. Mark B. Lloyd,
the Rev. Joseph M. Miller, and
Mr. James Albert Tracy.
cs
Randy Capps, Director of
at Western State College,
will moderate the debate.
Bowling Green's Valentine has
twice represented Kentucky in
the National High School Speech
Tournament.
Last year the team of Valentine and Duncan won the Kentucky Summer Institute Championship. The team has twice won
the High School Summer Speech
Institute Tournament on the UK
campus.
Henry Clay's Hastie holds the
degree of distinction in the National Forensic League. Last year
he received a superior rating in
at the
declamation
oratorical
Southern Speech Association in
Nashville.
Ockerman won first place in
extemporaneous speaking in the
state tournament last year.

of the Student Center, will pit
Bowling Green seniors Bob Valentine and Steve Duncan against
Henry Clay seniors Ed Ockerman
and Ed Hastie.
The Bowling Green team will
take the affirmative
against
Henry Clay's team on the national high school topic of the
year, "Resolved: That Social Security Benefits Should Be Extended to Include Complete Medical Care."
Deno Curris, former varsity
debater at UK, will head a panel
of seven critic Judges who will
evaluate the debate. The other

IN

Many movie patrons in recent
weeks have told theater managers
throughout the nation that they
should not be allowed to show
"The Balcony." They say it is disgusting, blasphemous and even
obscene. They say it is a blueprint for social and moral depravity.
However, even more movie-goer- s
have praised the film and
lauded the theaters for having the
courage to show it.
Bob Perkins, manager of the
Southland 68 Auto Theatre said
that he believed that those who
condemned the picture missed the
point.
"Actually," he said, "this enormously entertaining film though
it admittedly deals with eroticism
without restraint, and is packed
with scenes that shock and even
repulse is a most successful film

'

USTMANk

because it tells the truth the
truth about the falsity of values
we believe in.
'"The Balcony' is a minor masterpiece. It is a blow to Hypocrisy
and a score for Art!" said New
York critic William Raidy.
"A bold, sexy, disquieting film
strictly for adults!" This film may
start a whole new trend in the
movies'." said NBC-T" 'The Balcony' is recommended
without reservations as hard-hittin- g
cinematic art," said Archer
Winsten of the N.V. Post.
" 'The Balcony' is one of the
most original and 'adult' movies
In years
it is never boring,"
wrote Variety.
"The Balcony" Is sure to shock
you. It will make you laugh. It
will make you shudder. You may
not have the guts to like it, but
you will never forget it.

...

Jaan Genet's erotic view of the world!

ORSON WELLES
noM

i

mmm. vtwsm rut1
TAIN

S"fLLEY
A MUULHM
PANAVISION"

and

ME FRO

WINTERS

PHER

FALK

LOVt STORil
DEE

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COLOR

JOSEPH

STRICK

No Children Under 18 Admitted With Or Without An Aduali

22
'THE

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THE LAW"
3d
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NOW thru SUNDAY
Twice Nightly

7:15 and 10:50

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SOUTHLAND 68
AUTO THEATRE
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minitf, Harrodiburg Rd.

2nd Feature
"THE SKY ABOVE
THE MUD BELOW"
Celor
9:10 p.m.

� Z. THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963

3

UIIIIJMMIWWjW.ftWWmUl-JM-!ii-

Sorority Girls Revolt,
Pranks Reign Supreme
By BLITHE RUNSDORF
Watch it guys, the Cht O's arc
cn a spree. They've taken to

ttealing anything that isn't
railed down, and some things
that are.
Tuesday night the Phi Tau's
invited the Chi O's over for a
dessert. Usually desserts are quiet
orderly affairs, where the only
notion is some dancing but the
Chi O's are attempting to Etart
a new precedent.
A few errant Chi O's stole the
Phi Tau flag and hung it from
the second floor of the sorority
house.
As if this wasn't enough, later
that evening, they removed the
Pike crest from over the door cf
that house.
The Pikes, anxious to get back,
their crest, arrived en masse at

the Chi O house and started to
remove all the lawn furniture.
Ann Combs, vainly trying to
save, her sorority furniture, sat
down in one of the chairs and
refused to move. The motivated
Pikes removed her along with
the chairs.
In true Egyptian tradition, four
Pike standard bearers carried her
back to their house in the way
transported
Cleopatra atwas Pike house,
the
around. Back
the men nicknamed her
Jim Pitts, spokesman for the
Pikes said that Ann made a will
ing hostage,, and no one was

hurt.

Amid threats of retaliation,
the women bowed to their male
superiors and returned the crest
and flag several hours later.

Campus Calendar
Oct

3

Oct.

3

'

Oct. 4
Oct. 4
Oct.

4

Oct.
Oct.

5

Oct.

5

Oct.

6

5

Oct. 9
Oct. 11
Oct. 12
Oct. 14
Oct. 17
Oct. 20
Oct. 24
Oct.

25

Dr. Michael Scriven lecture
Advancement of Management meeting
Greek Week Steering Committee meeting
ta
dessert
Phi
Dutch Lunch meeting
SuKy Circle meeting
Lamp and Cross meeting
..
Beta Alpha Psi meeting
Ladies Bridge-Buffe- t,
Spindletop Hall, 10:30 a.m.-5:3- 0
pjn.
TO IF
Kingston Trio concert
Mrs. Alben Barkley at the Barkley Room of Margaret I. King
Library
Third Annual Speech Educators Conference, Student Center
Fraternities entertaining with parties.
President Oswald's student conference
Leadership Conference
Lambda Chi Sleepy Hollow party
SAE Riviera party
Kappa Sig Wild West party
Phi Sig Hayride
Fiji Pajama party
Sig Ep basement party
UK Musieale, Faculty Woodwind Quintet, Memorial Hall,
3:30 p.m.
Picasso Art Exhibit ends, Fine Arts Gallery
Game Night and Buffet Dinner, Spindletop Hall, 6:30
Club Dance (Cecil Jones Orchestra), Spindletop Hall,
Stoll Field, 8 p.m.
Football,
Concert, Jerome Kines, Memorial Colisuem, 8:15 p.m.
and Buffet Dinner, Spindletop Hall, 6:30 p.m.
Game Night
UK
Symphonic Band, Memorial Hall, 3:30 p.m.
Governor's Conference cn Higher Education
p.m.
Club Bridge Party, Spindletop Hall,
Homecoming Revue. Memorial Coliseum, 8 p.m.
Halloween Dance (Dick Walker Orchestra), Spindletop Hall,
1

Kernel Women's Page
Meetings

Lamp and Cross
Lamp and Cross members will
meet at 7 p.m. today in Room 208
of the Journalism Building. All
members please be present.
Beta Alpha Psi
Alpha Mu chapter of Beta AlPsi wii; meet at 7 p.m. today
pha
in Room 117 of the Student Center. Martin Solomon of the UK
Computing Center will speak
about automation.
Dutch Lunch
Dutch Lunch will meet at noon
today in the Student Center.
Sandwiches and drinks should be
purchased in the meeting room.
Keller Dunn, associate dean of
admissions of UK, will be the
guest speaker.
Dessert
Phi Sigma Kappa will entertain Kappa Alpha Theta with a
dessert tonight at the chapter
house.
Greek Week
The Greek Week Steering Committee will meet at. 7 p.m. today
in Room 119 of the Student Cen-

ter.

Agronomy Club
The University Agronomy Club
will hold its first meeting of the
month at 7:30 p.m. today In the
Student Room of the Agriculture
Building. Topic for the evening
will be an illustrated discussion
of Dr. C. O. Spillman's two year
study in India.

Engagements

Elections

Nadlne Stillman, a topical major from Cincinnati and a member of Alpha XI Delta, to Bill
a commerce major
YVhitacre,
from Louisville and a member of
Phi Kar-pTau.
B. J. McGinlry, an education
major from Merchantville, N. J.,
and a member of Alpha Xi Delta,
to Gerald Dr.vdrn, an agriculture
major from Mount Olivet and a
member of FarmHouse.
Diane Knocke, a sophomore
arts and sciences student from
Readington, N. J., to William
Kohout, a senior math ' major
from Thornwood. N. J., and a
member of FarmHouse.
Tat Cody, a June graduate
from Thornwood, N. Y., and a
Alpha Xi Delta, to David Cox,
also a June graduate from Louisville and a member of Phi Kappa
Tau.
Jewell Kendrick, a June graduate from Louisville and a member of Alpha Xi Delta, to Ber-na- rr
Burke, a June graduate and
a member of Phi Kappa Tau.

Sigma Nu
The pledge class of Sigma Nu
has elected Elvis Humble president. Other officers include Bob
Gene
Range, vice president;
King, treasurer; and Denny
Alerding, secretary.

Initiations
Kappa Alpha Theta
Kappa Alpha Theta recently
initiated Emmy Seymour, Wendy
Tanner, Mary Straight, Martha
Johnson, and Leah Caldwell.

Pin-Mat-

Christina Lee Moser, a sophomore psychology major from
Louisville and a member of Alpha. Xi Delta, to Bill Combs, a
sophomore
engineering
major
from Owensboro and a member
of Fhi Kappa Tau.
Jeannie Shure, a sophomore
Russian area studies major from
Towson, Md., and a member of
Alpha Xi Delta, to Mark Amos,
a senior commerce major from
Owensboro and a member of
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Katherine Irvin, a senior art
major from Lynchburg, Va., and
a member of Alpha Delta Pi, to
Robert Rainey, a junior premed
.student from Springfield, N. J.,
and a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon.

ASK YOUR FRIENDS

Annual Educational Conference and Annual Meeting of
Kentucky Association cf Colleges, Secondary and Elementary Schools

6

Shirts That You Will

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LAST CALL!

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Oct.

For Tickers To

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Dial

PAYING JOBS

116 W. Maxwell

249-431-

3

PIZZA MOBILE
Serving hot Pixxa and
Sandwiches direct from
our Mobile Unit.
LOOK FOR U-S-

8:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
9 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Euclid and Limestone
Rose and Washington

9:30 p.m, to 10 p.m.
10 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.

Haggin Hall

Fraternity

Row

FOR SPECIAL
For Quick

284

Delivery

ORDERS . . . PHONE

or

S. Limestone

Pick-U- p

and

KINGSTON
TRIO

Visit

234-668- 3

our Dining

Rooms

241 Southland Drive

at

IN EUROPE

in person

Grand Duchy of Luxembourg,
Oct. 2, 1963 The American
Student Information Service is
accepting applications for sum-join Europe. Openings include office jobs, lifeguarding,
factory work, shipboard work,
child care work, resort and
sales work. ' Wages range to
$400 a month.

PASQU ALE'S

Memorial Coliseum
Friday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m.

ASSIS also announced that
residual funds permit the first
4000 applicants travel grants
of $165 each. Interested students should write to Dept. O,
ASIS, 22 Ave. ,de la Liberte,
Luxembourg City, Grand

Duchy of Luxemborug, requeste
ing the ASIS
prospectus with job selection and travel grant and job applications.
Send $1 for the prospectus and
airmail postage. The first 8000
inquiries receive a $1 credit
towards the new book: Earn,
Learn and Travel in Europe.
Paid Advertisement

Edited hy
Nancy Loughridge

$2.00 Now
$2.50 At the Door
EVERYBODY'S
going! Don't YOU be
a misfit!
Hear John, Nick, ' and

Bob sing such favorites
as "Wimoweh," "MTA,"

"Worried Man," and the
new "Ballad of the
Thresher."
RUN, don't walk, to these gentt
for tickets:
KENNEDY
BARNEY

BOOK STORE

fZ

l--

i

rvr
wii

V
Si

DAWAHARE'S

UNIVERSITY

LINK
AT . .
BOOK STORE

"LINK"
m

BURGUNDY
Is a region In
S.E. France famous for its burwine. Burgundy is also
gundy
this season's favorite color (burgundy and camel are now at a
photo finish in the fashion sweepstakes). "Art Walker" (freshman) decided to get in the style
race and selected a blazer of
a striped
deep burgundy hue
burgundy shirt of oxford cloth
with button down collar and barrel cuffs, a tie of the same shade
as his blazer, and he is underplaying the whole deal with a
pair of dark grey flannel slax in
the "slim trim" model. Art is a
pretty sharp boy and selects
clothes with care.
YAK
The long-hairwild ox
of the Tibetan highlands has inspired this unusual car coat by
"Robert Lewis Sportswear" and
it is difficult to describe. However, if you run into "Joe Minta"
or "Mitch Weiss," of Transylvania campus, you will probably
be treated to a glimpse of one
of these handsome car coats. Joe
and Mitch saw them and flipped!
JOB INTERVIEWS
Will soon
be coming up for seniors, and
best insurance for that first
your
meeting approval is a neat appearance, and a neat appearance
calls for the correct suit. Your
clothes say "I know what's goinaf
or
on"
"I don't know
happening." The employer wants
the guy that knows what's going on
you can take that as
a friendly tip.
ANSWER
To postcard from
I work all over the store
P.D.
and if you want me to be your
sales person just ask for me and
I will appreciate it and be happy
to assist you
thanks for the
card.
AM
Lining up my 'round-tabl- e
discussion schedule for the
fall season. Any fraternity or
interested
organization
please
contact me.
j
A HOOTENANNY Will be happening Oct. 5th at the "Manchester Center" and featured on
the billing will be "John and
rs
Chuck", two nice guys and
from U. of K. campus
"M.G." are you going to partiYou should.
cipate?
THOUGHT AT RANDOM Have
never had a suit or sport coat
brand sell and meet approval like
the ones sporting the "Careerman" label
It's amazing!!
FUN
Will break loose at the
"Tau Kappa Epsilon" fraternity
Oct. 19th. It will start with an
afternoon Jam session and then
blast into a swinging party that
night. Music will be by the
from Georgetown
"Castaways"
College (crazy). It will be a
so
"Bum's Party"
dress as
a slob or no admittance.
Can't
tell you the surprise ending
promised not to (scout's honor
and all that jazz). The "T.K.E.'s"
are a swell bunch.
Saw
THIS
I must mention
a cat last P.M. all sharped up la
a sport coat, shirt, tie, pants,
but
the whole works
shoes
no socks. Question: "What's
he proving???"
So Long For Now,

MILLER'S

CRAVES, COX

J

TIPS
ON
TOGS

� '

'

Stadium Seating
Causing Problems

The idea behind the football

seat-!n- g

those who go toplan
gether sit together. But this is not
true in all cases.
is that

Any group arriving at the gate at

the earliest possible moment, wades
through the mob of students trying
to get in, and finally makes it up the
tamp, may find its members scattered
across several rows with no particular
order.
According to the plan, all the sections will be filled to the top before
filling the next section. This was to
have been done two sections at a time,
so supposedly there would be more
loom to seat large groups.
The plan was to have been based
i
On the basketball seating plan which
seems to work well for all concerned.
No such luck with the football seating arrangements.
Not only do you stand a good
chance of not sitting next to your
date, you might find one part of your
group on row 48 of one section and
the other part on row two of the next
section.
Even with the changes made over

the original plan, many students are
not convinced it is perfect, by far.
It has accomplished one thing.
Students not only arrive before the
games, they arrive hours before in order to get a good seat. Hut the mere
time you arrive seems to have little

to do with the scat you get. It's really
more luck than anything else.
Perhaps if the issuing of tickets
were a little more flexible, the plan
would work better. This would enable
ushers to give out two tickets together
to a couple rather than the next two
tickets in order.
Hardly any group, or any couple
for that matter, wants to fight their
way into the stadium just to watch
each other through field glasses.

Kernels
A fool may ask more questions in

an hour than a wise man can answer
in seven years. English proverb
A woman is like your shadow; follow her, she flies; fly from her, she
follows. Cliamfort

i oar am

class towofzoW"
mmmimmit&MissBimmmMmsitBiisBm

m

Whom, then, do I call educated?
First, those who control circumstances
instead of being mastered by them,
those who meet all occasions manfully
and act in accordance with intelligent
thinking, those who are honorable in
all dealings, who treat
persons and things that are disagreeable; and furthermore, those who hold
their pleasures under control and are
not overcome by misfortune; finally,
those who are not spoi