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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, APRIL 21,

VolrL

No. 97

1939

Panel

SDX To Hold SC Candidate

Jones And Wainscott Agree
To Appearance On April 29
lioth candidates for the Student Congress presidency have
agreed to appear before a four-manews panel on April 29
to defend their respective platforms.
n

Taylor Jones, Campus Party
nominee, and Bob Wainscott. Stu- dents' Party candidate, will an- swer questions from panelists re- presenting University publications
and radio.
Sigma Delta Chi, men's profes- sional journalism fraternity, is
sponsoring the discussion. It is
tentatively scheduled for 3:30 p.m.
1
in Memorial Hall, a week before
the SC general election.
BOB WAINSCOTT
Moderated by Dr. Malcolm Jew- SP Candidate
ell of the Political Science Depart- ment, the panel will consist of
Jirn Hampton, Kernel editor-in-chie- f;
Bill Neikirk, chief news editor; Gurney Norman, Kentuckian
editor and Kernel columnist; and
a representative of WBKY, University radio station.
The proposed discussion would
be the first trme In recent student
government election campaigns
that presidential candidates have
appeared on the same program.
. The idea for the panel was
JeJi&osa Mqr&an, Jim Fulks, Jane conceived
bv - Sterna Delta Chi
Connell and Jim Channon.
on Apri, 9 Consent of both can.
Both parties will be watching didates was obtained last week,
the primary vote tomorrow to look following the nomination of Jones
for some indications of Voter pref- as the Campus Party candidate.
erence. A heavy vote in one col Wainscott was nominated April 7
lege or another for one of the par
ties might reflect some of the party
strength in a particular college.
The College of Commerce, where
the Campus Party has been quite
strong, will bear watching. Both
parties have a field of four candidates in the primary and the
total party vote will tell if the
division of strength has changed
or not.
v
,
In engineering, Dick Watkins of
the Campus Party is favored to
4-Y
capture nomination tomorrow.
!
Watkins lost last December's SC
race to Colin Lewis in which the
final result was in doubt for a
month. His opponent is Don
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TAYLOR JONES

DR. MALCOLM JEWELL

( T Candidate

Panel Moderator

41 Candidates Seekim

Primary Nomination
MILLOTT
Tuesday Editor
Congress
Tomoi row's Student
will find 41 canprimary elections
didates in two parties seeking 14
nominations and the right to run
in the May 6 SC general elections.
Each party will pick seven of
their nine assembly nominees tomorrow. Two Students' Party candidates. Bill Whitaker in graduate school and James Herron in
pharmacy, are unopposed in the
primaries and will be SP candidates on May 6.
The Campus Party will nominate
candidates for graduate and pharmacy in a party caucus before the
general elections.
The race for both party nominations in arts and sciences appears as one of the bigger races
of the election this spring. BeBy DAN

sides

being

the bijge.st

arts and sciences will elect three
of the nine SC representatives.
The Students' Party primary race

finds eight candidates seeking the
three spots on the May 6 SP arts
and sciences slate.

Included in the eight are in- cumbents Kitty Smith and Garrj 1
Sipple. Miss Smith is the present
chairman of the Students' Tarty
Sipple was appointed to SC to
fill the unexpired term of Rose
Billings, who did not return (o
school last PcDruary after her
election in December.
The 'six other SP arts and sciare Priscilla
ences candidates
Jones, Robert Anderson, Ken Hix-so- n.
June Moore, Priscilla Katz
and Trudy Webb.
The Campus Party race features
six candidates seeking the three
party nominations. The six are
college, Ethelee Davidson, Lessley Decker,

by the Students Tarty,
An SDX spokesman said the
panel would operate somewhat like

the "Meet the Press" television
Questions from the four
panelists, recognized by the mod- erator, would be directed to either
or both of the candidates.
The spokesman said probable
areas of questioning would be outlined in advance of the program
and given to Jones and Wainscott.
Questions would deal with the
candidates' platforms, their future
plans if elected SC president, and
their past records in the congress.
Neither candidate will know in
advance, however, specifically what
questions he will be asked. The
SDX spokesman said giving the
candidates information as to general areas they might be asked
about was to enable them to do
any research they might require
to supply a complete answer.
A Kernel representative
said
yesterday the paper has not yet
decided which candidate, if either,
it will endorse. He added, however,
that impressions received at this
discussion would probably influence the paper's endorsement of
a candidate.

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For Some Seniors:

Grad Test To Serve
As Comprehensives
spokesman said.
Dean M. M. White of the College of Arts and Sciences said the
Graduate Record Exam would have
advanced area tests in the larger
departments, but the questions will
be general.
The scores will be broken down
by the areas and given an over-a- ll
score to be rated with other colleges, he said.
Several departments don't .give
comprehensives. These include
bacteriology, chemistry, English,
mathematics and astronomy, physics, political science and sociology.
The Radio Art Department has
may suboral comprehensiTes,
stitute part of the comprehensives
for the Graduate Record Exam.
The decision for substitution is not
definite, Department Head O. Leonard Press said.
The Anatomy and Physlology
Department will not substitute the
Graduate Record Exam this year,
Department but it may use a similar test InPsychology
The
plans to use tne area test for its dependently later, R. S. Allen, de- a department partment head stated.
comprehenslves,
The May 6 Graduate Record Examination will replace parts of
senior comprehensives in two arts
and sciences departments and the
entire comprehensive exam in a
third.
The anthropology and botany
departments will substitute the
graduate exam- In certain areas,
but will give comprehensives In
areas it does not include.
The School of Journalism will
substitute tbe graduate exam for
its entire senior comprehensives,
according to Dr. L.' Niel Plummer,
director.
The modern foreign languages
and philosophy departments will
not use the Graduate Record
Exam Instead of comprehensives
because of the uncertainty of having the results in time for the
senior grade deadline, department
heads said. They may substitute
comprehensives next year, but the
decision is not certain, they said.

The SP engineering race finds
Jim Steedley, Alan Isaacs and
Grady Lee seeking the one nomination there.

Rarhenbus Plaque
Donations for the purchase of
a bronze plaque in memory of
Dr. Charles Barkenbus, professor of organic chemistry, are
being taken in the main office
of the Chemistry Department.
Contributors may also be sent
to Dr. Smith. Chemistry Depart -

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partment.

Pro, R- - s- and Physiology

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SDX Officers Plan Panel Discussion

Laying the groundwork for Sigma Delta Chi's proposed April 29
panel discussion between the two Student Congress presidential
candidates are the professional journalism fraternity's new officers,
installed Friday. They are, from left. Paul Zimmerman, treasurer;
James Nolan, president; Palmer Wells, vice president; and Bill
Biakeman, secretary. The panel will be moderated by Dr. Malcolm
Jewell of tho Political Science Department and will be made up
of campus newsmen.

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SEIFC Concludes Meet Here
Exchanging ideas, election of of- - versity of Georgia,
A new plan was set up
ficers and problem discussions
Southeas- - ing the' present rotation of con- the annual
tern IFC convention held at UK vent Ion sites with the home school
Under
of the secretary-treasure- r.
last weekend.
Twenty-eig- ht
delegates from 10 the new plan the convention will
Alabama, be held at the school of the presischools representing
Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Louis- dent of the organization.
iana, Mississippi and Kentucky at- - The I960 convention will be held
at the University of Alabama.
tended the convention.
In the Southeastern
The delegates discussed individNew officers
Lanford, ual problems concerning rush,
group are president, Bill
University of Alabama; vice presi- Greek Week, outstanding pledge
dent, Stuart Kay, LSU; and secret- programs and other Greek organary-treasurer,
Will Little, Uni- - ization sponsored activities.
Chang-highlight-

ed

. Jim
Heil, UK IFC president,
said the convention "went very
well, and that every school attend- ing must have returned home with
valuable new ideas. Our IFC acquired several good ideas which
will be utilized as soon as pos-

sible."

The UK IFC attributed much of
the success of the convention soto the AFROTC
cial functions
accompanied the
sponsors who
delegates to all activities except
business meetings.
.

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