KENTIifKY KERNEL.

ErM.iv. Sept. 27. 1T.7

Do You Have

WBKY Director Plans

Mononucleosis?

Improvement In Station
A recent world tour mado by Mrs. Halyard feels that the station
Mrs. Camille Halyard, director of can give its listeners a better in-t-

he

into international affairs,
WBKY probably will carry more
news broadcasts, she said,
Mrs. Halyard visited educational
radio station in Lebannon, Greece,
Turkey and other. Middle East
countries. She then went on to
the Asian nations,
Mrs. Halyard said there is more
educational programming overseas
than there is in the United States,
but when there is such a broadcast
here, it is of high quality,
Looking to the future. Mrs. Hal
yard says the University can
pect to begin television operations
during the 1957-5- 8 school year. She
said plans are being made Jor a
WBKY television station to oper-fir- st
ate on a closed circuit to UK class-clas- s,
rooms. This, she said, would over-Whicome, to some extent, the shortage
of classrooms currently, and in the
future. The TV station also is to
feed commercial stations directly.
When television broadcasting
dors begin here, Mrs. Halyard said
the school will offer a degree in
television, as one now is offered
in radio.
Mrs. Halyard listed as the great-nn- d
est single need of the UK radio
station, the installation of an
amplitude modulation station. The
hrnnrirnts nmv carried nre on fre- ;
I.
mavc-.niin.il
llHt'nt.V IllUUUlillluii nmim.i .Vilcannot be received without
cial listening apparatus.
sight

Radio Arts Department may
result in better and more improved
programming by University sta- tion WBKY.
Last September. Mrs. Halyard
began a sabbatical leave from UK
to travel throughout the world and
visit educational broadcasting sta- tions scattered from London to
Hawaii.
rirst stop on her itinerary was
Italy, where she was a representa- live of the National Association of
durational Broadcasters at the
competition for the Prix Italia,
radio and television pro- grams produced by educational
stations vied for prizes in various
rategories. The Tnited States took
prize in the documentary

ex-The- re,

le

she was in Europe, Mrs.
Halyard made arrangements with
various radio stations to exchange
recorded broadcasts with WBKY.
be designed to
The programs
ive listeners in the different na- tions a better look at each other.
Through the exchange broad- casts and through WBKY's plan
to put more emphasis on problems
backgrounds of foreign na- tions in its programming this year,
w-il-

l

j

Refrigeration
Experiment
ToContinne

.

.

1

-

-

USED

BOOKS

"We have a string of cases all
during the year and it's one of our
biggest problems because of the
long time required for mononucleosis to run its course," Dr. Chambers said.
"We have had some students as
patients as long as six months and
some students lose a semester of
school because of it," Dr. Chambers added.
Dr. Chambers said now with
cortisone serving as an antibiotic
t lie patient
is not confined more
than three or four days in the hospital.
' Some years aro, somebody put
out the idea that mononucleosis
was transmitted through kissing.
It hasn't been established, but it's
sort of reasonable," Dr. Chambers

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Tryouts for the first C.uignol
Theatre production, "Inherit The
Wind." will be held at the Gui?-nTheatre Sunday the 29th at
2 p.m. C.D.T. Professor Wallace
Briggs announced that a cast of
30, 14 women and 16 men are
needed for this production.

Research in basic refrigeration
is being continued on the campus
this year by a UK mechanical
engineer who has been awarded
a $1,000 grant by the American
Society of Refrigeration Engineers.
The project, conducted by Dr.
Merl Baker, director of the Kentucky Research Foundation, concerns the investigation of boiling
refrigerants inside tubes and the
rates of heat exchange.
In Baker's earlier research, equations were established for the rates
of heat transfer from different
evaporating refrigerants toal-a
heated tube surface. Factors
ready considered include the rate
of flow, the temperature difference
between the tube and the
frigerant and the refrigerant tem-

We Buy

Does kissing transmit mononucleosis?
Mononucleosis is a disease which
has all the symptoms of a virus
and is commonly found among college students.
Dr. J. S. Chambers, head of the
Health Service, says mononucleosis is one of the chief problems
among college groups. He says
there is no loss of life from the
disease and it makes no one critically ill.

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In future research, emphasis will
be placed on additional refrigerants. A major investigation avill
include the effect of rotation of a
surface immersed within a liquid
bath, Baker said. It is hoped
the results of the experiments may
be useful in the design and manufacture, of air conditioning and
refrigeration units.
Charles Staley of Lexington, a
graduate student of engineering,
has been associated with the project since last September. He will
develop his thesis for the master's
degree on the basis of the research.
Roger Dickerson of Bardstown,
another graduate student, is conducting research indirectly related
to the major investigation. His
project involves the heat transfer
from a heated tube surface to a
combination of liquid and air flowing within a tube.
'

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Louisiana.
Harvard University is in Cambridge, Mass.
Natives of North Carolina are
called Tarheels.

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