xt7fqz22fk2p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fqz22fk2p/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640702  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, July  2, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, July  2, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7fqz22fk2p section xt7fqz22fk2p M,

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University

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of

Vol. LV, No. 117

LEXINGTON, KY THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1961

Eight Pages

n
;

Guignol Rehearsals Start
For Annual Summer Opera
By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Staff Writer

The Guignol Theatre has
begun rehearsals for its annual summer opera production. "Susannah," by Carlisle
Floyd, will run from July 22
through July 25.
"Susannah" is being staged by

Charles Dickens. Miss Phyllis
Jenness is the musical director,
and Raymond Smith is the scenic
designer.
Cast members having the leading parts in the opera are Donna
Kelley as Susannah Polk, Mike
Seller as Sam Polk, and Wayland
Rogers as Olin Blitch. In supporting roles are Vera Ryen,
Judy Warren, Celia Butler, Jo
Marie Metcalfe, Danny Hansen,
Norman Aich, Pete Stoner, Randy
Williams, and Stephen Atkinson.
"Susannah," a contemporary
opera set In New Hope Valley,
Tenn., and based on the Biblical
story of Susannah, is the Guignol
Theatre's 267th production. The
theater is currently in its 36th
season.
The story of the Guignol Theatre goes back to a small frame
church and a "theater man"
named Carol Sax. In the early
1920s Carol Sax founded a pri- -

Counseling,

Testing

The Counseling and Testing
Center has announced, for the
benefit of new students, that it
is open for the summer. Academic, vocational, and personal
counselors are available to University students at no charge, on
a confidential basis. Appointments may be made by calling
3394 or by stopping by the office
of the Adminisin Room 201-tration Building.
B

vate theater called the Romany
in an old church which stood
near the present Jewell Hall.
Sax originally came to Lexington to direct a musical show produced by the University Strollers,
a group of UK actors. He Joined
the University faculty as an art
instructor. The University became
interested in his theater work
and built a playhouse on the
site of the old wooden church in
This theater was
the
also name the Romany.
Sax left UK shortly afterwards
and took the theater's name with
him. Frank Fowler was brought
in to succeed him as drama director in 1928. He and a drama
committee chose the theater's
new name Guignol, after the
Grand Guignol in Paris.
Guignol a wooden building
with a small garden beside it
was the University's dramatic
tradition until it burned in 1947.
The Guignol burned a week
before the scheduled opening of
"I Remember Mama." The set
was reconstructed, costumes were
made over, and the show opened
in the UK education training
school auditorium on schedule.
Guignol became a sort of cam
pus minstrel for a year, traveling
about the University and playing
in various auditoriums until it
moved into the present Fine Arts
Building in 1949. The first
in Guignol's new home
was the Greek tragedy, "Medea."
The hook-u- p
of Guignol with
the Music Department to produce
the summer opera series of
which "Susannah" is a part is
about seven years old. Since then,
such operas and musicals as
"Carmen," "Fledermaus," "Street
Seen e," "Brigadoon," "Oklahoma," and "Carousel" have been
produced.
Some notable dramas within
mid-1920- 's.

prd-ducti- on

.

Largest Horse Show
Starts Here Sunday

The largest outdoor horse show in the United States, the
Lexington Junior League Horse Show, starts Sunday and runs
through next Saturday. It has drawn entries from 26 states
and Canada.
There will be afternoon performances at 1 o'clock Sunday through
Thursday and next Saturday. Evening performances, at 7:30 o'clock,
will be held Monday through Saturday.
Ihis show is the Junior League's sole source of revenue and
finances projects such as the Child Guidance Clinic, Foster Home
Survey, and a Speech Therapy Center. During the past 28 years
the show has earned $250,000 in profits.
The newest league projects are continued financial support of
$30,000 to the Opportunity Workshop of Lexington, Inc.; $6,000 to
the YWCA Camp Otonka for six new cabins; and $7,500 for the
underwriting of the salary of a part-tim- e
speech therapist for the
cerebral palsied of Lexington. In all, the league has pledged $47,000
to community projects for the next several years.
This annual event has been rated an Honor Show for 1964 by
the American Horse Shows Association, marking the third consecutive year for such rating.
Highlighting the 28th annual show will be seven performances
by the famous Imperial White Lippizan Horses, from Austria and
Hungary. The regal Lippizan horses were portrayed in Walt Disney's "Miracle of the White Stallion."
The performances will feature the finest saddle horses in America. Afternoon performance will be held in the infield of the Trotting Track and will feature classes for the hunter and Jumper horseman. This famed manner of riding and type of horse is synonymous
with the leisurely Southern way of life.
The evening performances will feature classes for three and
five galted horses, equitation riders, hackney ponies, and Tennessee
Walking Horses.
The horse show will be held at the Lexington Trotting Track.
Tickets will be available at the gate, advance tickets may be obtained from the Junior League Office. Matinee performances will be
at 1 pjn. and evening performances at 7:30 p.m.

16

J
r

V

the last 15 years have been "St.
Joan," Cyrano de Bergerao,"
"King Lear," and "Richard III."

Prof. Lolo Robinson, associate
director of Guignol, has been
with the UK drama department
since 1924. In recalling the past
years of Guignol, she said, "Every
production is outstanding at the
time you are doing it." She recalled one particular show in the
old Guignol, "The Second Mrs.
Tanqueray," for which there was
$20,000 worth of antique furniture on the set. That time, she
said, Guignol hired an overnight
watchman to guard the set.

k

hill.

UK Commissioning

Miss Mary Ellen Martin, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Frederick
Martin, Wilmore, and a recent graduate of the University, is commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserve. Serving with
the Army Medical Specialist Corps, she will be assigned to Walter
Reed Army Hospital, Washington, D. C. Miss Martin received a
bachelor of science degree in May, having majored In dietetic and
institutional management In the UK School of Home Economics.
Administering the oath is Colonel James P. Alcorn, professor of military science at UK. Witnessing the ceremony is Miss Ann Brownlie,
UK associate professor of home economics and head of the school's
Institutional management division.

66 Scholarships Awarded
Students For 1964-65

n
University
have been awarded
scholarships ' for the 1964-6- 5
school year.
The scholarships, ranging in
value from $225 to $900 a year,
have a total worth of $39,750.
- Fifty five cf the wards,-valued
at $35,450, were established during the past year. These are in
addition to more than 30 freshman scholarships awarded in the

Sixty-si- x

upper-classme-

--

spring. Funds

for the University's
scholarship program
come primarily from four sources
a $60,000 appropriation made by
the Board of Trustees at the request of President John W. Oswald; projects sponsored by the
students Little Kentucky Derby
Committee; gate receipts from
two freshman athletic events
an orsponsored by the
ganization of current and former
varsity athletes, and endowments
and gifts from alumni and
friends of the University.
Winners of the 66 upperclass
awards:
Scholarship, $900 a
year and renewable: Beatrice
Talley, Magnolia.
Upperclass
Achievement
Awards, $500 a year and renewable: Marilyn Graves, LaCenter;
Arthur D. Henderson, Maysville;
Wanda Sue Lewis, Totz'; Gary S.
Nunley, Ashland; Susan Kay
Pope, Lexington; Muril Lynn
Robertson, Greenville; Clarence
Schanding Jr., Cynthiana; Una
Marian Spencer, Scottsville; Benson Thomas Taylor Jr., Owens-borJerry Lee Waikins, Covington; and Wende Joyce Winters, Miami, Fla.
Little Kentucky Derby Scholarships, $500 each: Mary Linda
Jeffers, Frankfort; Mary Berna-dea- n
Jones, Mt. Sterling; Gordon
G. Landes, Alexandria; Patricia
Marian Rothrock, Louisville; and
Carlene Sue Woliver, Totz.
Little Kentucky Derby Scholarships, $300 each; Phyllis Ann
Bailey, Cumberland; Hence F.
Brank and John Perry Reisz,
Henderson; Jo Anne Burks, Hod-ge- n
ville; Robert M. Guinn, William Keith Hagan and Douglas
J. Von Allmen, all of Louisville;
Joyce Ann Hancock, Sulphur;
William S. Howard, Irvlngton;
and Clayta Rae Leffler, Ashland.
Little Kentucky Derby Scholarships, $250 each; Lowell John
Adams, Garri&on; Steven L.
Dawson Springs; Ilene
Canfleld, South Charleston, W.
Va.; Dorothy Ann CofTman, Louisville; Barbara LUIne Hart,
N. Y.; Kathleen Kerler,
Owensboro; Mrlinda K. Manning,
I'ark Hills; Joy M. Mason, Taints-villDaniel 11. Purcell. Fort
stepped-u- p

n,

o;

Be-the-

e;

Thomas; John B. Straw, Independence; Daniel W. Telegdy,
Bridgeville, Pa.; and Patricia Ann
Wolfe, Jenkins.
Community College Scholarships, $500 a year for two years,
to students who have completed
two years at UK community
Duane Gilliam, Greenup, and Mary Sue Hood, Ashland, from the Ashland Community Colleges; Janice Dietz,
Covington, and Mary S. Griffith,
Newport, from the Covington
College; Leonard C. Alvey,
and Joyce E. DeGraf-fenrei- d,
Henderson, from the
Henderson College; Patsy Ann
Creech, Cumberland, and Jane J.
Easley, Loyall, from the Cumberland College.
R. C. Kash Scholarship of $400:
Jesse Lynn Gough, Mayfleld.
Student Center Board Scholarships, $500 each: Margaret Gehl-bac- h,
Owensboro, and Laura Ann
P'Pool, Princeton.
Nannie Samuel and Stonewall
Jackson Douthitt Scholarships,
Mor-ganfie-

each: Nancy Jo Holtzclaw,
Danville, and Anne K. Frye,
Georgetown.
Fannie L. Jones Scholarships,
$250 each: Charles A. Hutchinson, Shelbyville, and Ralph
Charles Brown, Louisville.
Frances Jewell McVey Scholk,
arships: Mary Anna Davis,
Ohio; Anna Rae Miller,
Hawesville, and Cheryl K. Smith,
r,
Somerset, $300 each; Helen
Toronto, Canada; and Mary
Jo Ryan, Paris, $250 each.
Juliet Shouse Scholarships:
Carola Lea Roberts, Key West,
Fla., $300, and Virginia D. Tac-ke- tt,
Ashland, $250.
Fayette County P.T.A. Council
Scholarship, $300; Anne Arnold
Shipley, Lexington.
American Association of University Women Scholarship, $225
a year for two years: Linda M.
Rankin, Fort Thomas.
University Scholarships, $500
each: Wallace P. Norris, Richmond; Julia B. Scearce, Shelbyville; and Thomas S. Williams,
.Covington.
$500

Nor-wal-

Ma-tee-

Architect To Publish
Civil Defense Report

The Department of Architecture will publish by
an illustrated report on the most efficient and serviceable municipal emergency center for each of eight regions
in the United States.
for one erected where
mid-Janua-

The report will represent the
outcome of a study directed by
John W. Hill, associate professor in the department, and supported by a $54,350 grant from
the Office of Civil Defense.
"Emergencies which would originate from a nuclear war and
those that arise in the wake of
tornadoes, floods, and other natural catastrophes can best be
coped with if there is a central
headquarters where decisions can
be made and dispatched," Hill
said. "In a city of heavily populated community, the municipal
building or city hall seems the
logical place for such a command
post.
"Our survey and design work
will be concentrated on this type
of building," he added. "Plans for
the entire structure, as well as
emergency center and fallout
shelter space, will be produced."
Diflerent regions will figure in
the project, Hill said, because of
prevailing geographical and climatic conditions.
"One design would not suit all
locations," he explained. "For example, an underground center
satisfactory for one municipal
building would not be applicable

ry

the ground
water level is high."
The project will be divided into
three phases.
During 10 days in August, eight
architects representing as many
sections of the country will work
In Lexington with UK architectural students. Eight teams, each
composed of an architect and
four students, will live and work
at Carnahan House, UK conference center. This period will be
devoted to turning out preliminary, schematic designs.
The teams will adhere to
emergency - center requirements
as recently adopted from a study
conducted at the Stanford Research Institute.
In November, the guest architects will return for 10 days to
work with their teams in the
architectural department's

draft-

ing rooms.
Production of the final report
to contain descriptions, plans,
and illustrations of the eight
model centers will fall to the
department's research stall for
the project. Members Include
Hill; Charles Graves, the department chairman; and Clyde
R. Carpenter, fn instructor.

* Civil Rights:
Order Of The Day

Civ rights is the order of the
day. The Congress of the United
States lias acted wisely in passing a
bill to i lake all Americans free. President Lyndon B. Johnson is expected
to sign he bill Saturday on the 18Sth
anniver nry of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
It w 11 then become the law of the
land, an J everyone will be subject to
its privileges and its restrictions.
And, yet, there are some in this
country who have already shown
their scorn of freedom for all men
and their defiance to abide by the
rules governing us all. They would
rather solve their problems with violence, instead of by peaceful, civilized
means.
1

advice

and

comment

Arson isn't an acceptable method,

but the fact remains that the Social
Sciences Building (Splinter Hall) is
still standing and being used. It is
still a constant eyesore and a fire
hazard. For at least the millionth
time, the Kernel advocates that the
structure be razed and a suitable substitute built.
The first year of the shortened
semesters is over, and the time for
evaluation is here. It is the Kernel's
opinion that the shorter semesters are
worthwhile and should be retained.
In conjunction with the shortened
semester system is the question of the
third ph.ue of the trimester plan
the sumir.er session. If a full term
were in effect, more classes could be
offered and the cost wouldn't be as
prohibitive with a full load. It is
to spend the amount of
money required of summer study to
earn a maximum of only nine hours.
The University isn't the only campus plagued by arsonists, it seems.
Two weeks ago fir men battled flames
at the College of Commerce at Western Kentucky State College in Bowling Green. They fo'ind several strips
of inner tube which had been soaked
in gasoline and lighted in the building. The Kernel urges the state to
launch an immediate and exhaustive
investigation of the fires and prosecute to the fu'i extent those responsible.
t

m

Three weeks ago University President John W. Oswald unveiled his
plans for he next decade of UK to
the Board of Trustees, including
many excellent programs. May the
presiden'. succeed in his imaginative,
worthwhile efforts.
In American politics, no rumor is
ever confirmed until it is officially
denied.
The 'long, hot summer" has already b gun in earnest. The latest
conflicts in St. Augustine and Mississippi indicate that the civil rights
bill is u blessing to those who abhor
violence. Perhaps it will end some
of the Moodshed.

The strife of the past few weeks
in Florida and Mississippi is only the
beginning of what has been predicted "the long, hot summer." Racists
in both states have shown themselves
to be only small of mind and weak of
character by their actions actions unbefitting Americans.
The United States has been a liberal nation since its beginning nearly
two centuries ago. Democracy was
an unheard-o- f
inovation when a
small group of men gathered to sign
the Declaration of Independence in
1776. Government by the people all
the people, not just a select group-w- as
a shocking idea when Andrew
Jackson took the oath of office of the
President in 1829.
Slaves were hardly considered
human beings when Abraham Lincoln led the North in the war against
the South which emancipated them.
Thousands said it was "unconstitutional" when Franklin D. Roosevelt
sought to help his fellow Americans
in the 1930's. Many declared that
John F. Kennedy's actions and proposals would lead us to what would
amount to communism.

But the day is almost here that
Americans will begin the beginning
of the end in perfecting the great
American ideal of liberty and freedom
for all. We call on all men and women
everywhere to lay down their petty
prejudices and violent hatreds and
unite for freedom's cause. May we all
have the strength and courage in these
next few days and years to accept the
realities of what we have professed
for many years.
Let us discard our partisanism
on this one issue, at least. After all,
this is the issue which is the most
fundamental to our Constitution, our
nation, and our ideals.

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky

Entered at the pmt office at Lexington, Kentucky a second elms matter under the Act of March 3. 1879.
Published four time a week during the regular school year except during holidays and exami.
Subscription ratei: 7 a school year; 10 cents a copy from files.

Richard
Chant, Production Aide

E. Stevenson,

R.

Early College Entrance
May Be Advantageous
Figures indicate not only a growing freshman class each year but
when compared to September enrollment of freshmen indicate that many
freshmen begin their college careers
in June, immediately after graduation
from high school, instead of waiting
until the traditional September starting time.
This trend toward higher education at an early age at colleges and
universities may prove beneficial not
only to the student but also to the
nation. The early enrollment may
benefit the student. If he is a doubtful
or borderline admission case, many
colleges and universities will accept
him in the summer whereas he would
be rejected in the fall. Other schools
which wish to balance their enrolld
to make better use
ment
of their facilities will also accept such
a student. The school and the student
both profit from this arrangement.
For a student who wishes to accelerate his college career, the summer semesters offer opportunity to get
off required general courses on the
freshman level so that he may more
quickly reach the advanced courses
in his field.
But no matter his reason for entering college in June, the freshman,
provided he does not fail or drop out
for any vacations, will complete his

college study in less than the traditional four years. This means that college facilities will be available to
more students. It also means that the
graduating senior enters the professional world at a younger age, thus
contributing to the world the standards, knowledge, and skills which he
has learned in college.
Freshmen who enter college immediately upon graduation from high
school may have to learn to compensate with learning for their lack of
experience and age when they graduate from college. But this may prove
to the advantage of both the individual and society.
From The East Texan

year-roun-

'Sounds Of War'
Invade The Campus
Summer students, have you by any
chance noticed in the past few weeks
sounds very much like the coughing
and chattering of automatic weapons
and thy occasional banging of small
arms ire?
Well, so have we. In fact, one of
our editors has such a bad case of
sheHshock that every time one of our
reporters sits down to type a story,
the editor dives under the desk, muttering about "the war in Viet Nam."
After the first such outburst closely following the opening of summer
school, two of our reporters were armed with pica sticks and copy pencils
and sent to find out who won the
battle and get casualty lists.
However, our two valiant war
correspondents only spent a few minutes at the front. They soon came
back to report that, while the campus
did look somewhat like a battlefield
with holes and ditches and torn concrete scattered all over the place, all
was well. It was just a wrecking crew
tearing up the campus again for another one of the administration's
schemes.
If long range plans are being made
to move the battlefield elsewhere, we
would like to suggest that in the
meantime the authorities station medical corpsmen every 50 yards to as

Editor

Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
Runny Anderson, Advertising Manager
Kernel Staff:
Melinda Manning, Sandra Rrock, Kenneth Green, Hal Kemp, Robert Lee, Len Cobb

William

sist students who fall in the trenches
and shelJholes and cut their feet and
ankles to shreds on the jagged pieces
of concrete.
One male student was overheard
to Say, and we agree wholeheartedly,
that "there hasn't been so much noise
around this area since the Indians
stopped raising hair and high water.1"

A Long Dash

For Phones
Getting a telephone call is nice.
It is always pleasant to hear a friend's
voice or from one's parents. But, for
residents of Haggin and Donovan
Halls, a telephone call is also a pain
in the neck.
Telephones are located at the end
of the halls in these two dorms. One
has to race the length of the corridors to answer a call before the caller
hangs up.
The Kernel urges that the University consider installing telephones
in the individual rooms in the new
dorms now in the planning stage. A
good many male freshmen would be
greatfully thankful to such thought-fulnes- s
on the University's part.

The Reds:
Who Has
The Truth
The split between the Soviet
Union and Communist China, growing more acrimonious by the day,
still does not seem to be a reality to
many Western observers who have
thinkgrown accustomed to one-blo- c
about the Communist woild.
ing
But to Communists everywhere, it
is a reality.
It is a reality, to them, like few
realities since Khrushchev purged the
Molotov - Malenkov - Kaganovich element. It is apt to become, in fact, a
far more important schism than even
the one that split off Trotsky's followers and aligned them against the
Kremlin all over the world for decades to come.
The monolithic aspect of post-wa- r
communism is the one most familiar
to us today. But those who write histories of communism a century from
now may conclude that its tendency
toward schisms was the reason it
failed to dominate the world.
You cannot have a movement
founded upon absolutism of belief
without having schisms. If the movement assumes it alone can find truth,
there will always be some in it who
assume they rather than the party
leaders are the ones who possess this
truth.
And it is not easy to reconcile two
factions when each is certain it is sole
possessor of the Word.
The Soviet and the Chinese may
patch up differences, just as any two
other nations may be reconciled diplomatically.
But it already seems clear that
deep disturbance will remain in Communist ranks for a long time to come
because of the ideological schism
which has developed in this dispute.
-- From Tlie ..
ta Jourmil and

* 4

.

Salinger's Successor

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, July

2, 1961- -3

Exiled Beauty

Dad's at the White House

By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON

AP Newsfeatures Writer

s
Maria Tcreza Goulart
Beautiful,
abdicted as First Lady of Brazil recently. The role was
not one she enjoyed or worked at much anyway.
fashion-consciou-

S.4

Ir. the wake of a revolution In
voked by the Leftist tendencies
and inflationary policies of her
Joao
President,
husband,
glamor
Goulart, the
girl Is said to have Ted the
country with her two children.
The new First Lady, for 30
days at least, is Mrs. Silvia
Serra Pignitary Mazzilli, wife of
Ranieri Mazzilli President of the
Chamber of Deputies. She is the
mother of three youngsters,
Maria Lucia, Luiz Guilherme and
Luiz Henrique.
1 heBrazilian
Congress meanwhile
will elect a full term President
among several strong contenders.

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,

A SEW MOVE.. . RUH
13. and Michael 75, ponder a problem on the chess hoard while mom.
Mrs. George Reedy, kibitzes. Busy at the White House is Dad, President Lyndon Johnson s new

press secretary.
By MARIE SMITH

Washington Post

IF White House Press Secretary George Reedy needs
any legal counsel in his new job, he can get it right at
home. His wife, Lillian, is a graduate from Fordham
Law School and still has a legalistic outlook on events
although she has never practiced as an attorney.
Right after graduation in 1942
she came to Washington hoping
to make a contribution to the war
effort. She landed in the book
and magazine section of the Office of War Information.
There newspapering got into
her blood and she switched to
being a reporter. Her assignments took her to the Pentagon,
the Supreme Court and to Capitol Hill.
IT was in the press gallery at
the House of Representatives that
dark-haire-

d

New

York-bor-

n

Lil-

lian Greenwald met a fellow red
porter tall,
George
Reedy, who was from Chicago
and then just out of the Air
Force.
In those days, Lillian had a
press card to go to the White
House news briefings but she
never used it. Now she can go
without a card and hear the
briefings by her own husband, if
she wishes.
Kitchen Tactics
Lillian confessed that since
George became White House
Press Secretary for President
Johnson, the big question she
ponders daily is not "when" he
will come home to dinner, but
"whether" he will come. His
hours at the White House are so
uncertain.
It is in the kitchen that legally-traineliterary-talente- d
Lillian
her greatest
Reedy exhibits
skills now. But since George is
on a
diet to
lose veight on doctor's orders,
she has had to learn a new way
of cooking.
"He has always liked
lasagne, spaghetti, and
other Italia i foods," she says.

d,

sauer-brate-

n,

New Phones

The biggest change,
Since her husband went to the
White
House with President
Johnson last November, is that
they are a little busier socially
and have extra telephones in the
house. The new phones are connected to the White House switchboard.
Otherwise, she adds, "I still
do the basic things: cook the
meals, take care of the boys
(Michael Andrew, 15, und William
James, 13), take care of the
house and walk the dog."
Eng-- 1
The latter is a giant-siz- e
i sh
bulldog named Major.
Early Goodwill
k
Lillian has a
maid, Elsie Tabron, who has
working for her since 1945 when
Lillian was unmarried and had an
apartment in Georgetown.
The house on Hi; bland pi.
nw., is a huge, rambling
once-a-wee-

Victorian style white frame and
grey stucco with a red gabled
roof. It is filled with antiques
Lillian has acquired in her
browsings. Some of her choice
pieces she calls "early goodwill" because she found them at
the Goodwill Industries store.

Lillian said her husband is
not the type to bring work home
with him. He usually stays at the
office, where his files are, until
he finishes the job. Occasionally
though, he will write in his upstairs study.
Despite his long hours, he
finds time for companionship
with their two sons. Mike, who
and
excels in mathematics
science and is an avid chess
player.
Billy, is the athlete in the
family and declares he's going to
the University of Texas and play
football when he finishes high

including Mazzilli.

Whoever the new First Ladv
may be, she will probably not
with
compare in pulchritude
Tereza
Maria
Goulart, often
world's
described as one of the
most beautiful women. But she
can easily by a lot less aloof.

brunette
3
The sexy
married Joao Goulart eight years
ago when he was Vice President.
Despite her youth she has ignored
the social whirl accompanying
high public office, andhas rarely
accompanied her husband on his
official travels.
Like Jacqueline Kennedy with
whom she was often compared
she is an excellent horseback
rider. She spent much of her time
with her family visiting their
ranch at Sao Borja in Kio Grande
Do Sol. During the three-da- y
which
is
holidays
prelenten
celebrated by most Brazilians
with abandon, Maria Tereza took
Joao Vicente, 7, and
young
Denize, 6, to the seashore.
probably her
Paradoxically
biggest disappointment was an
occasion that would have drawn
the spotlight of the entire world
on her.
President John F.
Twice
and
his American
Kennedy
beauty were scheduled to pay a
state visit. Twice lovely Maria
Tereza commissioned an exquisite wardrobe for the occasion,
one comparable to the fashion
example always set by Jacqueline
Kennedy. Twice (and finally) the
visits were canceled.
However, Mrs. Goulart did

participate
an

MRS. JO AO GOULART

Uncertain des ti'iy.

school.

in the

activities

of

the Brazilian Legion ofAssist-ancThis is a welfare organization traditionally headed by
Brazilian First Ladies.

;i

e.

She's PM.'s Offbeat Daughter lanlFleming
JetsAround
"That's the kind of girl she
is,'' says sister Caroline. "She

By RAYMOND E. PALMER
LONDON (AP) Her name Is
Merlel. She's 24 and her sisters

and

English

folk songs.

Guitar Lessons
In her room on the second floor
of No. 10, overlooking horse-guar-

V

-

min-

Even when her father was a
peer of the realm and she was
entitled to be call "The Right
Honorable," she preferred to be
called plain "Miss" Douglas-HomShe's quite unlike her two

i

l it

composer-singe-

JJr-''-

e.

'

sisters.

ID)

Caroline, 26, is a member of
formal
the enclosed,
fairly
where she
society of the court
regularly attends Queen Elizabeth as
Diana, 23, now married to
whisky executive James
has always been the most
domesticated of the three. In
March she presented Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Hom- e
with his first grandchild.

y

Easter.

She married Adrian Daiby,
tutor in economics

Vi

Kcble College,
"They have
lie is very gay
Caroline Doug

....
her favorite raincoat and lace

MKRIKL
In

DOl'Gl.AS-HOM-

stockings.

the patients own heartbeats are
undependable, tpecialists in this
new medical iield estimate.

at

Oxford.
a lot in common,
and lively," sa s
I as
Home.

LEFT CAN AT HOME
Kan. (AP)
Robin Cronin walked in
circles after she got her finger
stuck in a spout of a large gasoline can.
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Scott
Cronin, didn't want to take the
can to a hospital. So Robin
walked around the can until she
unscrewed the spout before going
to a hospital where attendants
removed the gadget from her
finger.
WICHITA,

Electronic l'ttcetimkers Kvvp Patients Alive
Anu-iicu'i-

Domenico

Blue Lace Stockings
pretty daughter of a prime
minister is always a good subject for newspaper photographers.
But Meriel's
clothes
offbeat
made her a special favorite.
She gave new status to the
shiny black plastic raincoat,
leather coals, and lace stockings.
She even wore blue lace stockings as part of her going-awaoutfit alter her marriage at

But

are
More than 3,000
being ktpt alive today by electronic pacemakers in cases where

r

(Volare) Modugno, Fats Waller,
American guitarist Chet Atkins,
American folk singer Carolyn
Hestler.
Recently she bought a guitar
and enthusiastically began taking
lessons. Sister Caroline says
Meriel has a good singing voice.
A

Wolfe-Murra- y,

Artist, Book Clerk
Meriel is the brightest
spirit, with unorthodox and offbeat tastes. She doesn't lay
great store by formality.
Meriel is an
of the
London School of Art and still
does a little painting occasionally as a pastime.
After urt school she winked for
a while as a waitress in an Edinburgh tea room. Later she worked
in a furniture store.
Before last Christmas she took a
job for a few months as a sales
assistant in a big London bookstore. Site sold children's books
and biographies
and at night
she went home among the commuters to the most famous address in the land: No. 10 Downing
Street.

parade, is the impedi-mentof youth that the extra
money helped her to buy. There's
a record player and a scattering
of disks.
Among her favorite recording
artists are the Beatles, Italian

ia

You'd

never think she was the prime
ister's daughter.

and
enjoyed working in shops
the extra cash came in handy."

IS?!

call her "the gay one."
Her fair hair hangs loosely to
her shoulders. She paints, plays
the guitar and entertains her
friends with American, Spanish

-

As Himself

THRILLING CITIES. By
Ian Fleming. New American Library. $4.95.

The author of the James Bond
thrillers is writing nonfiction
this time.
The title is a little misleading, for in his
survey he does not find all of
the cities he visited to be utterly thrilling. In some of them,
he is quite frankly taking an
look at things the
writer of secret service fiction
would be interested in.
This is the structure of the
book: For a series of articles
in his paper, the Sunday Ti