xt7k0p0wsr55 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k0p0wsr55/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19691008  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  8, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  8, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7k0p0wsr55 section xt7k0p0wsr55 Tie Kmiiucecy Kmira
Wednesday Evening, October 8, 1909

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

-- 1

4

By DOTTIE BEAN
Associate Editor
Recommendations on the proposed merger of UK and U of L
were termed "urgent requests" in
directives to the two institutions

-- I

v.M

;,'--

'

Kernel Photo by Mlml Fuller

Jumping the bumps behind the
Complex tennis courts provides
entertainment for John Frelinger,
e
UK law student and
motorcyclist The added bumps
are provided by the workmen
who are constructing a parking
lot in this area.

Jump Those Dumps

U Of L 'Urgently Requested9

To Outline Future Relationship

it

1

part-tim-

when the State Council on Public
Higher Education met Monday
in Frankfort. The Council set a
deadline of November 7 for submission of these recommendations.
The Council upon receiving
these recommendations will then
submit its own proposal for 1970-7budgets for the state colleges
and universities to the State Finance Department on the following week. And, due to the possi
2

More Chicago Demonstrations

SDS

Revolution-'Brin- g

EDITOR'S NOTE: Bob Brown,
editorial page editor, and Frank
Coots, assistant managingeditor,
are in Chicago this week to report
on the SDS demonstrations
scheduled there today through
Saturday. This story was written
before they left.

'

By FRANK COOTS
Assistant Managing Editor
" Bring the war home! "
This is the theme for the'
demonstrations planned by the
Revolutionary Youth Movement
I (RYM I) Oct.
in Chicago.
RYM I, which now occupies
8--

Faculty Forum On War
Sanctioned At U Of L
-

The
LOUISVILLE
(AP)
University of Louisville has
agreed to sanction a faculty forum
on the war in Vietnam in which
supporters and opponents will
have an equal opportunity to
speak.
U of L President Woodrow M.
Strickler agreed to a student committee's request for the forum on
Oct. 15, scheduled by anti-wa- r
groups across the country as a

day of national protest.
Strickler said the campus administration would not intervene
in
demonstrations
student

31

Budgetary Kccoinmcnlntion8 Tending

tK,

---

v

Vol. LXI, No.

planned for Oct. 15 as long as
they remained
"Their request," Strickler
continued, "shows thoughtful-nes- s
toward the important issues involved, and they are prepared to be tolerant of spokesmen for both sides. The program they have suggested can
serve a valuable educational purpose."
Each class on Oct. 15 will be
shortened by 15 minutes in order to provide time for the forum,
which will be followed by group
discussions on topics of general
student interest.
e.

bility of a merger of the state's
two largest universities, the budget request will have to reflect

Education Council. According to
Don Clapp, UK coordinator of
budget planning, the University
is required to submit such a budthese recommendations.
The November 7 deadline also get request every two years. Howis the date on which budget reever, his office now incorporates
quests from all state colleges and into the request an outline given
to them by the Council.
universities are due to the council. This will be the first year
The proposed incorporation of
U of L has had to submit a budthe U of L into the state higher
get to the state, following action education system will, of course,
by the Legislature in 1968 which figure into the Council's final
made U of L eligible for state requests for funding for all of the
funds as of July 1, 1969.
colleges and universities.
A special
of
Biennial Budget Due
the Board of Trustees has for
UK's budget request itself some time been working with a
will, for the second time, go committee from U of L. Howthrough channels of the Higher ever, their recommendations will
have to be reviewed by President Otis A. Singletary and by
the Board of Trustees who will
have final action on the recommendations before they are given
to the state Council.
UK's Trustee Approval Pending
The U of L Board of Trustees
take much imagination to see that
gave its approval this summer to
RYM I, also known as "weatherthe proposed merger. However,
men," is bent on a continuation
the UK Trustees gave only a
of the "Battle of Chicago" begun
qualified approval. Many of the
last year at the Democratic Naobjections centered around fitional Convention.

The War Home'
the SDS national headquarters
in Chicago, is
of the
planned demonstrations. RYM II,
another faction of SDS, is also
planning demonstrations independent of the more radical RYM
I in Chicago today through Saturday.
The preparations for the action appears to be a power struggle on the part of both factions
to determine which group can
draw the biggest crowd and win
the support of the local SDS
chapters.
SDS Leadership Split
The split in the SDS leadership came about this summer at
their national convention in a
dispute over tactics. RYM I is
the faction the national press
classifies as "Maoists," while
RYM II is not as violently revolutionary. The UK SDS chapter is more sympathetic toward
R'iM II, but is determined to
remain independent of either
one-ha- lf

nances.

The board members indicated
to the Council that the merger
might be approved if it could be
demonstrators were injured. This shown that U of L's entry into
time they evidently plan to fight the state system would not affect
back if attacked by the police. the University's own fundingtoa
There is also talk of people arm- great extent.
The budget requests, which
ing themselves and of buildings
must be submitted on November
being blown up, as well as rumors of an attempt to form a revol7, encompass most University exutionary army. Last week police penses. The requests will include
found 17 sticks of dynamite set direct instructional support (facto a time bomb in a
ulty salaries, classroom supplies,
building. Monday night a me- etc.), funding for student services,
morial to police killed during a administration costs, research
riot at the turn of the century programs, extension services, liwas blown up.
brary services, maintenance and
operations, auxiliary services,
schedThe "Weathermen" are
student aid, debt service on builduling their demonstrations for ings, and an additional item of
Lincoln Park (a battleground of
hospital services.
Chicago '68), local high schools
The budget requests are subgroup.
It is difficult to determine just and the federal court house where mitted biennially on the odd
what the demonstrations in Chi- the conspiracy trial of the eight numbered years, a requirement
Rennie of
cago are all about. Both groups persons (Dave Dellinger,
Kentucky state law. They must
are protesting the U.S. involve- Davis, Tom Hayden, Abbielloff- - be passed before the Legislature
ment in Vietnam, but it does not
Continued on Paj e 8, Col. 4
adjourns in March.
RYM I does not intend to
have a recurrence of last year's
"police riot" where scores of

31-sto-

Lexington Air: Moving Toward A Crisis
By DAHLIA HAYS
And
CHARLES FIORO
Kernel Staff Writers
"This area's potential growth is great and it also
has the potential for the development of air polu-tio- n
problems of a serious nature."
CounThis description of the Lexington-Fayett- e
area appeared in a 1966 publication of the Kenty
tucky Department of Health, following an examination of major urban areas in the state where
high pollution rates might be expected.
Now, almost four years later, evidence indicates
that Lexington is making little effort to eliminate
its most serious sources of pollution.
On the contrary, statistics suggest that the
problem is worsening.

Last In A Series.
The Kentucky Air Pollution Control Commis13 of the
sion, in a report on pollution rates in
the latter part of 1967,
state's largest cities during
stated that Lexington showed the lowest pollution level of the cities under study.
However, the Commission reported that
sulfurdioxide level, or sulfation rate, had
h
exceeded the "clean air" limit during the
Lex-ingto-

three-mont-

period.

Sulfur dioxide in the Lexington area is predominately the product of oil, gas and coal combustion. Its concentration in the air therefore
usually increases during the winter months.
The report failed to state the exact percentage
of time during which sulfation was above the acceptable standard; however, a similar test conducted during the first three months of 1968
revealed that sulfation values on individual months
exceeded the recommended value 90 percent of the
time.
Sulfur dioxide in such above-normamounts
promotes the corrosion of metals and deterioration

i- -y

A
'J!

yj
A

ft

al

of fabrics damages sensitive plants and irritates
the respiratory system of those who breathe it.
Soiling index (the ability of particles in the air
to soil surfaces and reduce visibility) was also
above the recommended level 90 percent of the
time during the 1968 sampling.
Other particulate concentrations did not exceed
the level of safety during the period. It must be
noted, however, that Lexington is located in a rolling, open plain which allows generally good air
flow in the area.
Ceographic location, then, is at least partly
responsible for the failure of pollution to develop
at least so far into a problem of great proportions.
A question however, whether Lexington's "good
Continued on Page

8, CoL 3

c,

.....
--

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'

'

1? n1

* 2 --

19

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct 8,

;

Arlo Guthrie Booked At Xavier
Fieldhouse Site For Concert
By DAN

COSSEIT

Arts Editor
Arlo Cuthrie will appear, in
p-acer-

Oct.

t.

ala

11

with Santana,

group in Cincinnati
Cuthrie, who rose to fame singing about cops, motorcycles and
garbage, is slated for the Xavier
University Field House, courtesy
of Xavier University Student
Council and Squak Productions.
tin-roc-

k

Arlo has become something
of a phenomenon in modern music. Barely old enough to vote,
he has risen to the upper echelons
of popularity just by writing

songs about his everyday experiences ami singing them.
It all started, of course, at the
1967 Newport Folk Festival when
he walked out on stage and did a
te

talking-singing-pickin-

g

monologue about getting
busted for taking out the garbage and how that ended his
chances for a career in the mil-

itary.
Hi; musical roots, however,
go back much further. He is the
son of Woody Cuthrie, who in
the 'thirties did basically the
same thing Arlo is doing in the
'sixties. Woody bummed all over

'Kinetic' Flicks Challenge Viewer,
Bounce, Bubble The Emotions

1st AREA SHOWING!
I.

PH.

he saw.
When Arlo was growing up,
people like Lcdbelly, Cisco Houston, Guy Carawan, Pete Secger
and Lee Weaver would drop by
Cuthrie's New York home to talk
and sing with Woody. Occas-sionall- y
Arlo would sit in and
learn their styles and repertoires.
The world's first "folk bar
mitzvah" was held in Arlo's honor when he was 13. It was in
an abandoned warehouse in the
Bronx, and for the first time he
was treated as a musical equal.
Cuthrie is at his best when he
is commenting on police tactics

getting

busted.

M All
ff..; 1

ve

top
i'i mil

c

r'

i

"

f

"Ring

Around the Rosy, Rag" is the saga of an episode in Philadelphia
when Arlo and a few friends
began feeling really groovy and

Ym Kiss Me Awake," and Kam-lerBy PHILLIP P. GULLION
and guinea pigs?
Puppets
"Spiderelephant;" where decided to play
America, america?
important dialogue is garbled to rosy in the park. Some older
near incoherence.
Spiderelephants why not?
people in the park thought they
Last night the Student Center
"The Kinetic
I" were crazy, or on acid or someCinema Series presented "The will be repeated at 8:00, tonight thing and called the police. The
Kinetic
I," a series and tomorrow night, at the Stucops came, of course, and busted
of eleven short subject films se- dent Center Theatre. Admission
all of them for playing
lected to provide an accurate will be $1.00. This program apTicket information for Arlo
representation of modern cinema. pears to be a welcome suppleThis was the first of three pro- ment to the generally
can be obtained by calling Frank
grams, containing 26 internation- and mediocre films which have Woods Jr., at WEBN Radio, at
al films.
preceeded it.
(513)
The organization of 'The Kinetic Art" is credited to Brant
Sloan, project director for UniHELDOVER!
versal Education and Visual Arts.
Mr. Sloan conducted an extensive
18 month search for recent, little
A man went looking for America.
known films. He collected these
And couldn't find it anywhere...
films from studios and laboratories in Japan, Italy, the United
States, France, and several other
PAN DO COMPANY in association with
countries.
RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents
Besides providing food for
starring
thought, excellent entertainment,
PETER FONDA-DENNIHOPPER
unusual photography, and social
Released
PICTURES
JACK NICHOLSON
COLOR
these films allow discomment,
tinctive insights of eleven unique'CANNES FILM FESTIVAL WINNER! ' Best Film By a New Director"
ly creative individuals, through
the viewing of their art. With
this insight, comes an incredible
talent manifested in the simultaneous utilization of various arStarts 7:30
tistic media, through the primary
Adm. $1.50
media of the film.
Sliding from scenario to scenario, emotions are bubbled and
bounced from one extreme to
another from colleges to puppets, animations to graphics, and
paintings to sketches. Spiderelephants, yes among other things.
Special attention should be
delivered to Belson's "Phenome
in
ena," Bozzetto's "La
a Tin," Svankmajer's "Rakvic-karna,- "
"Two Crilled Fish" and
"Spiderelephant," for outstanding examples of color and animation.
For the weight of sheer content, Bozzoni's "II Cuidice,"
"Cruel Diagonals," and again,
e
in a Tin," seem
"La
to possess an inate seriousness
out-date-

OPEN 6:30
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-- Bob Stlmtggi

"La Pomme" and Svankmajer's

"Rakvickarna."
Although the "Kinetic Art"
is an excellent collection of films,
two possibly irrelevant criticisms
should be mentioned. In regard
to the program itself, the fast
moving films leave too little time
for reflection. Before one has digested the content of the
film, glaring credits herald another.
Secondly, the Student Center
Theatre audio system provides
little assistance to the sound
tracks of the films. The deficiencies of the system become most
evident in Costard's "Why Did

Ridit

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engaged

in bizarre

practices.''

--

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

Board Of Student Publications

mxmmn is

Selects Nine New Members

BOTCH CASSIDV AND
THE SUNDANCE KID

By

DON ECER

out the list of new hoard appointees. They are William N.
Stacy, Mike L. Cot leu r, William
L. Dawson, Barry L. Mayfield,
J. Kent Dunlap, Phil Doty and

Kernel Staff Writer
Nine new members will be
present when the Hoard of Student Publications meets in the
Board Room of the Administration Building at 7 p.m. Thurs-

Terry Barton.
This year two c lunges have
been made to the defined proday.
Dr. Halbert Culley, Speech cesses of tl)e board. The first
Department chairman, joins the modifies the method of selecting
list of faculty members which student representatives, and the
includes Dr. Lyman Ciner, Ed- second concerns itself with the
ucation College; Dr. Cifford
reassignment of the executive vice
Speech Department; and Dr. president's duties and designates
Marion Pearsall, Anthropology
the President as the administrative official who receives the budDepartment.
Tommy Preston, Journalism get proposals for management of
Department, is the new member student publications.
at large. The other two members
On the matter of appointing
include the Rev. Donald Herren student members, the Student
and Mrs. Foster Pettit.
Government president will reSeven student members round
commend a panel of 14 to the
Bly-to-

$

:

Z

V

.(v X I

y

n,

J
W

oKe' WITH

--

.

8,

The Department of Theatre Arts Presents

for student affairs.
e
findiice and Imdet
will lx formed to advise
and consult advisers and editors
pertaining to the financial management of the publication. The
committee, consisting of three
members appointed by the Ixmd
chairman, will assist in the preparation of budget proposals.

vice

A

Planned Meeting
The upcoming Black Student
Union Leadership Workshop will
be held from 9 a.m. until 2:30
p.m. Saturday, Oct. 18, in Room

of the Student Center, and

206

will feature Eugene Robinson of
the Louisville Human Rights
Commission as guest speaker.
It was previously reported that
the conference would take place
earlier this month.

I)

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KENTUCKY

NOW! First Run!
"

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INTUT fOX

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Octobers, 9, 10, 11,
SUNDAY CURTAIN

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The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 4U50t. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
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Published by the Ooard ot Student
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* A

Typical Move

recent administrative decision
has served to lessen our faith in the
good intentions of those who are in
charge of the decisions made at the
University. President Singletary
has issued a memorandum in regard
to the Student Board of Publications which alludes to a closed system.
The Student Board of Publications is a committee whose responsibility it is to oversee the conduct
of all the University's student publications. This 'student board is
made up of fourteen members, of
whom only seven are students. Four
of the members are from the faculty, and for some unexplained
three of them are members-at-largusually townspeople.
A

selectors of the men who will serve
as his critics aborts any reasonable attempt at balancingthe power
on campus.

It is no secret that a SG president has special interest in nearly
all campus affairs. When his successor is selected he naturally wants
a hand in the selection. For his
programs to gain acceptance he obviously wishes to gain all the support he can. This is traditional and
acceptable, but it must be done
through the proper channels. For
one person, especially a person in
the subjective position of the SG
president, to control even indirectly, the policy of the student press
constitutes a serious threat to the
existence of healthy contention, and
Board has the duty of an open airing of opposing viewThe
selectirig annually the editors of the points.
various publications. In the past,
The Board was in need of rethis has been a rather sticky situa- form, but not in the direction in
tion.
which Dr. Singletary took it. If the
The Kernel is charged in part
object of the reform was to increase
with the critical supervision of the student participation in the selecmatters on campus that affect stu- tion process, why did the Presidents. This has often brought The dent not follow a method by which
Kernel and various administrative more than one student would be
and representative bodies, notably involved? SG President Futrell's
Student Government, to assume campaign platform made provision
conflicting positions. It is the editor for student involvement in the seof The Kernel who determines much lection presses, but he included the
of the direction which the paper will SG Assembly in the matter.
take in regard to policy. Because of
With each new step, the adthis fact, President Singletary s announcement comes asquite a shock. ministration seems to be moving
toward a more and more narrow,
Dr. Singletary has made the a more and more closed atpresident of Student Government mosphere. While power accumuresponsible for a major part of the lates in the hands of fewer and fewer
selection of the student members
people, the pawns on campus beof the Board. There is nothing in gin to realize the
they
the announcement which would must tolerate. All possibilities of
prohibit a SG president from using free and open discussion, of heated
this power to his own advantage. but
intelligent debate are gradually
Ours should be a system of being closed by an administration
checks, balanced as fairly as pos- that is obviously more interested in
sible. For the SG president to wield order and harmony than in truth
such a strong hand in choosing the and justice.
res-so- n,
e,

set-bac-

wxx::x::::Kx: Kernel
By DALE MATTHEWS

Have you ever wondered What happened to the American Dream? Chances
are that you have not, not necessarily
because you're 'apathetic, but because
everyone else is complacent and you don't
hear much about it; it died. Unfortunately
it was never buried, which will make
ressurection very difficult.
The "American Dream," that every
man is valued by his worth, not by his
race, or religion, or parentage, or the
length of his hair or which side of the
he was born on, was once
Mason-Dixo-

n

ks

Soapbox
a noble endeavor,
of modern society.

it is now the big lie

Herein lies the problem. Some time after the Revolutionary war, Americansquit
working to make the "Dream" come true,
and we began to believe that it already
had. Now this was bad for several reasons. First of all, it was a lie, there was
still slavery, Puritanism, and other injustices in our system. Secondly, it froze
our social system. Farmers begat farmers,
plumbers were the sons of plumbers and
the rich peoples sons were expected to
increase the family's wealth. Finally, and
most seriously, the "Dream" became an
institution. It was worshiped along with
the Flag, Paul Revere, and Joe McCarthy.
To doubt it was treasonous. Being an institution of this type, the realization of
the best way of life available to man, it
could not be changed; therefore, to work
for the "Dream" was forbidden. If you
worked to bring about the "Dream",
you woukl have to first wake Aneri-can- s
up (which is no easy thing in itself)
and then tell them that they had been
living in a dream world (which is comparable to calling Ceorge Washington
a fairy at a meeting of the Daughters
of the American Revolution). Ami this action woukl automatically brand you as;
(A) a communist; (R) a nigger lover;
(C) an outside agitator (damned foreigner);
(D) all of the above, fit only to be drawn
and quartered in the middle of town.
I think that it is high time that we,
as Americans, admitted to ourselves that
we are not as close to perfection as is
humanly possible, and that neither our virtues nor our vices are Cod' swill, but rat Iter
realizations of our own good and bad
judgment.

World peace . . . world peace
world peace . . . world peace . .

...

55

Kernel Forum: the readers write;
Hope For Reform

or so ourselves but surprise, surprise
your 'Cats proved to have nothing
but teeth and claws. We made too many
mistakes and against a good and determined ball club you just can't win under
those conditions.

30

Students and faculty members at this
University have been among the strongest
supporters of a modern Constitution for
Kentucky. In the November 4 election
they will have a chance to take a major
step in that direction by approving the
constitutional amendment for annual
legislative sessions that is on the ballot
(Amendment Number 2). Students should
remember that if they are going to vote
by absentee ballot it is necessary to get
an application for such a ballot, get it
notarized, and return the application to
the county clerk of their home county
no later than October 16. There is little
time to lose.
The constitutional amendment would
permit the legislature to meet every year,
as 31 other states already do. It would
make the legislative schedule flexible because the 60 day limit on each session
would apply only to days when one or
both houses held a session rather than
every calendar day (other than Sundays
and holidays) as at present. This means
that committee hearings could be held
in between meetings of the House and
Senate, and there would be time for
more public hearings and a thorough
study of the budget. The legislature would
not have to adjourn until the end of
June each year. The proposed amendment would restore the balance between
the legislature and the governor and would
represent a major step in the revitaliza-tioof the states as partners in the fedn

eral system.

MALCOLM E. JEWELL
Professor of Political Science

Congratulations UK
There comes a time in almost every
football season when Ole Miss suddenly
finds out that they are not infallible and
are jarred back to reality. It has been four
years since Kentucky provided the Red
and Blue with that le'sson. Perhaps we
took you folks too lightly with your young
team and new coach but the Wildcats
sure managed to jerk our Rebels down
from their "high horse" in an impressive
fashion. After Indiana scored 5S points
on you good folks most of us down here
thought that Archie Manning and the
Rebel Express could roll up at least

...

'

For years we have always admired
your basketball team and dreaded facing
them on the court and now it looks as if
your football team will be feared as well.
Your team will represent the Southeastern
Conference well in the years to come and
we wish you much success and best of
luck (just let us beat you once in a while,
please). Congratulations on your victory
and may the rest of your games this
season be as sweet. Hopefully, the Johnny
Rebs can recover against Alabama as well
as your team did against us.
Again congratulations to a fine football team and your new coach. Your
athletic department has always been nice
to us and a pleasure to work with and
it's nice to know you're holding the banner high for the SEC. Good luck and see
you come basketball season.
BILL EDWARDS

Operations Manager

WCBH Radio
of Mississippi
University

LPD At UK Why?
On Monday morning Oct. 6, Andrew
Thornton, LPD, was observed by several
students, including myself, calmly sitting
in the Student Center Grille. He was approached by the students and his reasons
for being on campus were questioned.
His only reply was that he was on duty,
and that he had stopped by for some
coffee (is the coffee here that good?). Is
this campus a place for the city police
to gather; or is it an academic community?
When will students such as Starr
Michel, a Student Government representative, realize that the actions of the local
authorities represent the repressive tactics
of 1084. Perhaps soon the UK student
body will realize the need for limiting the
Lexington Police Department to Lexington
proper where they allow crime to run unchecked.
FRANK SHANNON
AficS

Jr.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

YR's Rally For Cravens
The Young Republicans have
endorsed a mass meeting in support of Cene Cravens for State
Senator. The meeting will be
Saturday, Oct. 11 at 9 a.m. on
the Student Center patio.
"The purpose of this meeting
is to get people moving and get
Cene Cravens elected state senator," exclaimed Caroline Smilof the campaign
ey,
committee. "All we ask is for
one day of the members time for
precinct and shopping center
work," she added. Transportation from the Student Center to

.

A meeting of the Graduate Student
Association will be held at 7:30 p.m.
tonight in Room 153 of the Chemistry-Physics
Bldg. Discussion will be
on the Oct. 15 Moratorium, whether
to cancel classes, discussion of the
war instead of class dismissal and
program of the Teach-IJ. M. Synge's Irish comedy "Playboy of the Western World" will open
at the Guignol Theatre tonight. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. Wednesday
through Saturday; 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
Admission is $2.00; $1.00 for students
with I.D. cards and for groups over 10.
Opening on Oct. 8 and running
through Oct. 12. the Department of
Theatre Arts will present at its Guignol Theatre, J. M. Synge's "Playboy
of the Western World." This will be
the first in a series of three highly
exciting and provocative dramas. The
second production will be an
production of Thornton Wild-er- 's
"The Skin of Our Teeth," to be
Oct. 23 through the 26. followed
given
by "Billy Budd" which will be shown
December
All interested students, faculty and
staff are welcomed at the Christian
Science College Organization meetings. The next meeting Is in the
Complex Commons, Room 308 at 5
p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 8.
Applications for the Little Kentucky Derby subcommittees may be
picked up at the East Information
Desk at the Student Center.
Application forms for the Rhodes
Scholarship are now available along
with information pertaining to the
qualifications necessary in Bowman
Hall, Room 326. Applications should
be filed as early in October as possible.
n.

Students living in University
Students in

Following the "Mass Effort
Day" activities will be acookout
sponsored
by Cene Cravens.
"Bring yourself, dates, and Rover
for a real good time with free
food," said Allen Fin