xt74mw28ck80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt74mw28ck80/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1964-07-17  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 17, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 17, 1964 1964 1964-07-17 2015 true xt74mw28ck80 section xt74mw28ck80 J

Guignol Summer Opera

'Susannah' Opens Wednesday
By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Staff Writer

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"Susannah," the Guignol and Opera Theatre's summer opera production, will open at
8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Guignol Theatre
in the Fine Arts Building.
Carlisle Floyd, who wrote "Susannah," calls it
not an opera, but a music drama. Laid in a remote
section of the Tennessee hills. It Is based on the
biblical story of Susannah and the Elders.
It is-- a story of bigotry, prejudice, and hatred.
The conflict is centered around what happens when

a group of
elders discover Susannah
bathing in the local baptismal creek.
"Susannah" was presented at the Zoo Opera
in Cincinnati during the middle part of July. It
premiered in 1953 at Florida State University, where
Floyd teaches, and opened at the City Center in
New York in 1956.

4

It won the New York Music Critics' Circle Award
for the "best opera in 1956."
Miss Phyllis Jenness, musical director of "Susannah," said, "It's considered by many authorities
to be the outstanding contemporary opera."
The music, Miss Jenness said, has a distinctly
contemporary flavor with the influence of Puccini.
It is being staged by Charles Dickens. Raymond Smith is the scenic designer.
Donna Kelley appears as Susannah Polk, Mike
Seller as Sam Polk, and Wayland Rogers as Olin
Blitch. Others in supporting roles include Vera
Ryen, Judy Warren, Celia Butler, Jo Marie Metcalfe, Danny Hansen, Norman Aich, Pete Stoner,
Randy Williams, and Stephen Atkinson.
The "music drama" will be accompanied by two
pianos with Janet Hall and Charlotte Tacy playing.
Performance time will be 8:30 p.m. next
Wednesday through next Saturday. The box office
in the Fine Arts Building Lobby will be open at 12
noon today, tomorrow, and all next week. The box
office phone number is extension 3300.

"Susannah" opens Wednesday at Guignol

University of Kentucky
Goldwater Rolls
To 1st Ballot Win
Assembly Honors Hammonds
With 883 Votes
Vol. LV, No. 119

Sen. Barry Goldwater ended his
r
campaign for
the Republican presidential nomination Wednesday night
with an overwhelming total of 883 votes for his
four-yea-

first-ball-

victory.
try as he was shutout in only si' of the 53 states and delegations. Goldwater received votes in William Scranton's Pennsylvania, Nelson Rockefeller's New York, and George Rom-ney- 's
Michigan.
The National Broadcasting
Company reported lato Wednesday night that Goldwater had
definitely picked New Yorlc Representative William E. Miller as
his vice presidential candidate.
There was no definite announcement on the second place spot
when the Kernel went to press.
The Goldwater steamroller victory began at the start of the
alphabetical call of the states as
he received all 20 of Alabama's
votes. California's 86 votes put
him over 100 with a big jump
to 131.
He hit 200 with Georgia, 300
with Indiana, 400 with Massachusetts, 500 with New Jersey,
and 600 with Ohio.
As Goldwater hit 509 with New
Jersey, Gov. Scran ton managed
to hit only 102 with New Hampshire, one state earlier.
South Carolina provided the
actual votes that put the Arizona
senator over the top. The 16
votes he received there gave him
663, eight over the 655 needed
to nominate.
The remaining 13 delegations
pushed the total to the final 883.
Gov. Scranton, who had moved
to a command trailer behind the
convention during the roll call,
moved immediately to the platform to move to make the Gold-watvictory unanimous.
Scranton started his speech
with references to Sen. Oold- water's withdrawal statement of
four years ago at the convention
In Chicago that nominated Richard M. Nixon.
Calling for a "spirited defense
of our own principles," Scranton
urged a binding up of differences
and an attack on the Johnson
administration 'that has no policy abroad and a bad policy at
home."
Scranton urged the delegates
to shift the scene of battle and
told them that the Republicans
"must go about their business of
defeating Democrats."
Although the Scranton forct
were beaten as decisively on the
floor fight over the platform, he
said it was ''broad enough for all
of us to stand on, even though
it could be Improved."
He told the delegates that
"without compromising
principles, their ioint of view
haMi't prevailed."
er

their

Dr. Carsie Hammonds, a
leader in agriculture education in Kentucky for 51 years,
was honored Tuesday at a
convocation of the College
of Education.

Also at the convocation, Dr.
Lyman V. Ginger, dean of the
college, reviewed the work of a
recent meeting of the National
Education Association.
A portrait of Dr. Hammonds,
commissioned by the Kentucky
Vocational Agriculture Teachers
Association, was presented to the
college by James Owensby, past
president of the association.

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The portrait was unveiled by

Ronnie

Hammonds Thompson
and Charles Adams Hammonds,
grandsons of Dr. Hammonds. It

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"I

SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER

Republican Nominee

KY., FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1964

LEXINGTON,

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hVif
DR. CASSIS BAM53DKIM
was accepted for the college by
Dr. Ginger.
Dr. Hammonds retired July 1
after 40 years as a member of the
UK faculty. He began his career

Eight Pages

in education in 1913 when he
first taught in a rural school in
Russell County. He held several
other posts at various schools until 1924, when he Joined the UK
staff. In 1925, he became head of
the Department of Agricultural
Education and in 1947 was named
chairman of the Division of Vocational Education in the College
of Education.
In accepting the portrait, Dr.
Ginger said he "appreciates" the
years of work and the contribution to education that Dr. Hammonds has made. Dr. Ginger introduced several members of Dr.
Hammonds' family and others in
the field of agriculture education
who had come to pay tribute to
Dr. Hammonds.
Praises individual and group
have been heaped on Dr. Hammonds. For example, a former
Colleague in the College of
on Page 8

Elam Is State's First
Full Time dim a to logis t
--

Goldwater and Scranton were
only two of the eight candidates
placed in nomination.
Hawaii's Sen. Hiram Fong, former Minnesota
representative
Walter Judd, Maine Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, former Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Rom-neand Rockefeller all received
nomination.
Kentucky cast 21 votes for
Goldwater. Sen. John Sherman
Cooper and two other delegates
cast their votes for Scranton.
The nomination came on the
heels of months of campaigning
in primaries around the nation.
As Goldwater gained delegate
strength and the bandwagon began to roll with Increasing speed
Most delegates and political
observers went to San Francisco
knowing that Goldwater was almost certain to win the nomination. Perhaps the only important
thing uncertain was the platform on which he would stake his
bid for the road to the White
House.
The platform bears heavily the
stamp of Goldwater; the
spokesman for American
conservatives. One of the main
points of the platform stresses
the need for a more aggres&lve
foreign policy and a tougher military stand, a point the senator
has proclaimed all along.
The platform also calls for less
Federal participation in domestic
affairs, a stand that should please
Goldwater, who has advocated
state' right tu various decrw.
y,

fore-mo-

For over

a year, Kentucky
has been served by its first

climatolo,gist. Who
what are the duties
of this type of scientist?
Allen B. Elam, Jr., has a threefold task: documenting the climatology of the entire Commonwealth, serving as a consultant
on climatological matters and
full-tim-

e

is he and

conducting research with weather
data.
From this office in the University's brand new Agricultural
Science Center, Elam draws on
temperature and precipitation reports from some 200 observation
stations to present the state's
compleU weather picture.
.,

.......

As a staffer of the Department
of Commerce Weather Bureau,
he is responsible for providing a
monthly climatological summary
to news
which is distributed
media and, with the weather
data from the observation stations, makes up a detailed climatological
report published
monthly for Kentucky. This, together with similar publications
for the other 49 states, is released
from the National Weather Records Center at Asheville, N.C.
Elam supplies a weather roundup article to the weekly KenBulletin"
tucky
and a monthly report to another
publication, "Storm." He also is
called upon for other reports by
various state and national agen- "Crop-Weath-

er

"

kt

IV U
ALLEN It. ELAM: Kentucky's first

full-tim-

e

climatologUt

including the Soil Conservation Service.
His Reportorial obligation to
"Storm" requires him to check
closely all available sources including newspapers for stories of
unusual or severe weather. Storm
deaths and Inand
juries, estimates of property and
crop damage and descriptions of
Continued on Page 6
cies,

flood-relat-

Ag College Gets

$15,000 Grant
For Tobacco

firm has
A manufacturing
awarded $15,000 to the University
Agricultural Experiment Station
to conduct research In tobacco
growing.
The donor is the R. J. Reynolds
N.C.
Tobacco Co., Winston-SaleAccording to Dr. William A.
Seay, director of the experiment
station and dean of the UK College of Agriculture, the research
will be a Joint project of the
and agricultural engineering departments.
Dr. Seay also reported that the
Chemagro Corporation, Kansas
City, Mo., has presented the University's au'mal health research
department a check for $1,600.
The money is to support antheresearch
lmintic
concerning horses.
Both glfU are subject to approval by the UK Board of
(antl-puras:t-

� The Kentucky Kernel

Education Should Follow
Civil Rights Act
President Lyndon Johnson signed
the civil rights bill into law on July
3. With that one stroke of the Executive pen. the most sweeping piece of
legislation since the Reconstruction
period following the collapse of the
south became the law of the land.
The NAACT and CORE, together
with countless other interested citizens across the nation, have seen their
works bear fruit. The Act is the culmination of months and years of strife,
violence, and hatred on both sides of
the struggle. The Act is also a peace
treaty declaring that both sides lay
down their arms and live together in
compatibility and calm. The work
ahead now lies in the hands of the
federal government and the American
lKople.
The Kiriul feels that nothing can
come of continued agitation by college
students and racial organizations-p- ro
and con but increased irritation
and violence. The people of the
United States need education in social
equality, which, like all education,
will take time. No one can erase the
petty prejudices of the South, the
North, the East, and the West overnight
Education does not mean sending

TlicSouth's Outstanding College Daily
University ok Kknti c:ky

FntfTrd

Sul.Tipion

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candidate

do not
really have the time to spare to do
this, but a sense of outrage and injustice compels me to bring this matter to jour attention. I have attended
Summer School for four of the past
five years and have taken during that
time most of my meals at the Student
('enter cafeteria. I wish for you to
know that never in those four years
has the serving situation there been
so poor. This is not to say that the
facilities are inadequate or the personnel inetticient. The cause is the ever
visitors
increasing flood of
who are using this facility. This would
nut bother students so much (though
it inoNt certainly
impairs the academic
character of the surroundings) if adequate provision were made tor serving them, lint this increasingly has not
been done. Especially this year I and
As a doctoral

Do
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Lddille,
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Kenneth Cheen, Frank Drowning, Hal

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Let us who are white work diligently to erase our prejudices and accept the Negro as a
as he by right is. By the same
token, let us who are black work diligently to set an example of willingness
to accept the responsibilities of full
social and legal equality which are
thrust upon all Americans.

n,

The Kernel is at a loss. We cannot decide whether to commend the
Division of Maintenance and Operations and the United States Post Office Department for not having run
down any of our students so far this
summer or to commend the students
for being agile enough to remove
themselves from the path of danger.
At any given time, a student is in
danger of being run down by a pickup
truck, panel truck, dump truck, garbage truck, jeep, or an occasional U.S.
(You girls
Army surplus
get your ROTC boy friends to explain
what is meant by
The Kernel wishes to offer a word
of caution. If you must be hit by a
truck, let it be by an M&O truck instead of a mail truck. The reason is
simple. A court fight wolud result over
who was responsible for burial ex- -

in-ii-

I

The project at the penitentiary,
under the tencial supervision of
Warden Luther Thomas, b u
brick and masonry
building of generous proportions
which will be Used fur education
and recreation.
The first l'.oor will be devoted
almost entirely to education. It
foot library
will hmi e a
..nd leadaig lunin, ;m office
the pniKip.il ,md 10 cla room-- ,
two-sto-

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This is a situation which the
Kernel noticed several weeks ago, but
I cannot see that anything has been
done about it. Do you not think, sir,
that it is time that the persons who
operate this facility are told that their
purpose is to serve the university students and whatever else they do must
in no way hamper that service?
Robert L. Browning

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end of the
prison compound is being erected, the warden said, at a cost of about
$150,000, with the use of inmate
labor and materials
salvaged
from buildings which were razed
when the major portion of Eddy-vill- e
was relocated to make room
for Barkley Lake.
The some 55 prison inmates
who have been working on construction of the building since it
began in August 19C2, get 8 cents
a day each.
The brick, some
steel, and window frames were
salvaged from the old Eddyville
and high school
elementary
building and t h e Eddyville
Haptist Church.
Had the contract for the building been Liven to a private firm.
Warden Thoina said, the loct
.uc.'.d have been about J.'ckI.OOO
i
The
working under
(leu
'l.e direction ol Am A Weir, an
.. '.' pendent.
..' iue con-!- i 1a t,"i.
malt W :r and two correct
:!.cer- ..re t l.e only o .1 ide a.
i

pn.-oi-

Henry

n.

i.,- .tl Die laurlli

Cowan, superintendent

.

education

with

building,

all

grades in attendance at one
time.
Cowan said 340 prisoners are
presently engaged in some type
of school work. Of this number,
57 are being
taught to read and
write. In grades one through
tight, the student body numbers
110. A much smaller group is in
high school. The average prisoner
1ms a fifth to sixth grade

A

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11.
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First is that if M&O has such an
abundance of rolling stock and navigable roadway (we should say sidewalk), we think that transportation
should be provided from one classroom building to another. This would
save the student hundreds of miles a
semester. As the situation stands now,
a student could apply after a week of
classes for the Hiking Merit liadge
(70 miles required) from the Boy
Scouts of America and receive it, no
questions asked. Also, this idea would
cost the University nothing extra because the trucks are always on campus anyway.
Our second proposal concerns student entertainment and the chance to
do a little friendly gambling. We suggest the authorities mark off a speedway on this projective route. The
start would be at the main gate on
the administration drive. The race
proceeds to the sidewalk between the
administration building and the annex.
A sharp right turn onto the sidewalk,
a straightaway past Miller Hall, and
a right curve in front of Lafferty Hall.

of the prison school at Eddyville,
is delighted with the prospect of
new quarters. Presently, he said,
there is only "a one-rooschool
in the old structure used n.s un

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federal government bepenscs-t- he
cause it was their truck, or the state
because it happened on their property. While this goes on, you lay there
and, shall we say, deteriorate.
In light of the fact that the existing danger shall probably continue,
the Kernel has two proposals to offer.

the men rather than to push
them into the back end of a
prison, and then forget them as
fast as possible.

Warden . Thomas noted that
prison policy now is to attempt
to "rehabiliate and rrmotivate"

t

Kemp, and Len Cobb

Works At Prison

inmates gain from the construe
tion is the training they get.
Trades involved, Weir said, include steelwork, brick masonry,
concrete
finishing,
carpentry,
painting, plumbing and electrical
work. Target date for completion
is this August.

i

I'"

Then left between the Library and
Pence Hall. Next, a sharp right and
down the road toward Funkhouser.
Another right by Funkhouser and
a left between Funkhouser and the
Home Ec Building. Then, if M&O
will reopen Graham Avenue, a right
turn to Limestone and then a straightaway on Lime to the finish.
We sincerely believe that both of
these proposals have obvious merit
and we strongly urge that they be
thoroughly studied and given careful
consideration.

(Editor's Note: The Kernel received a copy of this letter which is
addressed to Dr. John W. Oswald.
Mr. Browning is chairman of the Department of English and Speech at
Oakland City College. Oakland City,
Indiana. )

--

Yniuiili.il
ait- pushing to
waul completion ol one ol
ihe biggest do it voiu t II jobs,
in ('.oninioiiuc.iltli lntoi.

i

disgusted. Most were forced to go
other places to eat or simply go on
to a long morning of classes on an
empty stomach.

It Yourself Project

kinliukv State

he

,rom

Word Of Caution
Watch For M&O Trucks

This education and remodeling of
ideas must not indeed, it cannot be
affair. If it is, what is
a
gained will be lost again. Negroes
must realize that total social equality
comes as quite a shock to many white
Americans. In turn, the whites must
realize that the hour of the Negro
has come, and it shall not be denied.

hundreds of other students have been
forced to stand in long lines or go to
other establishments in order to eat.
I do not need to inform
you that time
is a very precious factor to the Summer School student. Not only is the
session accelerated, but there are a
preponderance of graduate students
at the university at this time, people
who are working hard and feel put
upon when their time is needlessly
wasted.
The final aggravation which drove
me to write you this letter came this
morning. I found as I arrived for
breakfast that there were alout half a
dozen busses with Boy Scout banners
on them in the Student Center parking lot and they were all in the grille
line for breakfast. No student could
get within a inlie of the facilities. You
may be sure the students who were
arriving for breakfast were upset and

nV

Editor

Rosenthal, Sport Editor
Tom Finme, Circulation Manager

Letters To The Editor
Dear Sir:

mntlrt .in.l.f Ihr Art of March 3. 1879.

""

Kernel Staff:

is in

citi-ize-

fml

M

ool

a

H. Chant, Traduction Aide
Bex ny Andehson. Advertising Manager

the schools and churches, not in the
stree ts and swamps. The young should
1h- taught, while the adults will have
to remold their thoughts and ideas to
come a little closer to the new ideas
of a changing society.

full-fledg-

7

William

years ago.

one-side-

ralrt:

E. Stevenson,

thousands of college students to Mississippi to force integration. For the
most part, these students know little
about the South except what Harriet
Beecher Stowe wrote about it 100

Tie place for this education

Lrinirton. Kmlucky

pmt office

at th

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THE KENTUCKV KERNEL,, rrMlayiJu,

She's

Venezuelan First Lady

Young at 62 Her

By VIVIAN BROWN

AP Newsfeatures Writer
At 62, Lizalotta
Valesca's
figure is more youthful looking
even than it was a few years ago.
How does she do it?
The former Miss Finland attributes her size 10,
figure to exercise and proper
diet and points out that seven
years ago, before she began her
regimen, she had capillaries over
her legs and arthritic problems.
"Few people stop to consider
how nerves branch out in their,
bodies, and how they can be
helped by exercise. If they would
think about it, they could rid
themselves of aches and pains."
Three important things in keeping youthful and healthy, she
believes, are (1) a supple spine,
(2) a healthy abdomen (where vital
organs are located) and (3) good
breathing. And to exercise a person must learn to breathe properly, she says.
"We can improve, arrest, repair and prevent body ills if we
would take the time," she says.
"Walking is one of the most
beneficial exercises. It promotes
better blood circulation and is
essential to muscles."
When she wrote a book, "More
Than Beauty," many older people
wrote for advice about "cricks
in

their

knees,

collarbones,

shoulders andTiacks," and in
lectures and private
giving
lessons to people, she has come
to the conclusion that people
encourage old age by doing nothing to prevent it.
Exercises should always be
done slowly, she says. But one
should often just sit motionless
for perfect relaxation,
and at
least two minutes a day should
be spent in just standing in a
feet
rigid
position,
keeping
together.
She is willing to share these
personal exercises with you:
Strengthen arms, (particularly
flabby upper arm part) Clench
hand into fist, twist arm from
wrist up and hold it taut.
Strengthen thighs: (Particularly
flabby inner part) Stand on toes,

0-

17, 1964- -3

-

and slow bendknees as you drop
down. (Hold back of chair with
one hand if you need support.)
Strengthen abdominal muscles
and intestinal tract: Lie on floor,
palpitate abdominal area in an
"in," "out," muscle control.
Neck muscles, thyroid gland
stimulator: Lie flat, raise neck
a few inches from floor, hold for
a minute or so. Relax.
Another for neck muscles may
be done sitting down: Roll head
in a clockwise movement.
Spine Strengthener: Lie down,
raise knees toward chest, clasp
hands, rock gently forward and
backward along spine.
Spine strengther and organ
toner: Lie on back, raise legs
together up and over head as far
as possible. Keep chin pressed
to chest. Bring legs to original
position. Repeat.
Stomach Muscle Strengthener:
Lie on floor, raising legs slowly
as you count to 10 .
For toning innards: Lie down,
palms on floor, raise head and
upper trunk of body. Lower yourself and repeat. Should be done
slowly.
For all muscles: Lie on floor,
crawl snakelike across floor,
moving body in all directions in
a shaking motion.
Leg muscles: Strengthen them
by walking on all fours across
the room without bending knees.
And when spine feels stiff or
achy, merely rub calves upwards
with your hands for a brief
moment.
For circulatory and respiratory
system, this is one of Mrs.
Valcsca's favorite exercises:
Lie on floor or bed. Slowly
raise legs and trunk, supporting
your back with your hands. Bring
legs up as far as possible even
if you must use wall for support,
and you will at first. Head and
shoulders touch floor as legs go
up. Breathe slowly, avoid jerky
motion. Hold position for one or
more minutes. This is a variation
of the Yoga headstand, she says,
and gives the same results
an
by "bringing
alert, keen mind
blood to the brain cells."

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In an orphanage.

DONA' ME NC A LEONI offers hot lunch to hungry youngsters
By PAUL H. FINCH
CARACAS (AP) Menca Leoni, first lady of Venezuela, describes
herself as a "country girl (campeslna) on loan to the city."
But Dona Menca appears at ease in the heavily guarded presiden-

tial house "Los Nunez" and is considered the best public relations
asset of her husband, President Raul Leoni, who succeeded Romulo
Betancourt last March.
"It's true I talk a lot about Filling a legal requirement, Dona
Raul I'm never shy on my Menca
recently listed her
favorite subject," she told an property at a value of $350,000
interviewer.
while Leoni stated his worth
Dona Menca presides at social $3,500.
events and public works InLeoni is also from the Guayana
with an outgoing and Is her second cousin but
augurations
personality, easy smile and they didn't meet until 1945 when
friendly chatter. It contrasts to Leoni returned from political
the reserve of Leoni and that of exile on the fall of a military
her predecessor, Carmen regime.
"It wasn't love at first sight,"
Betancourt.
Her major wish is to use the she smiled. Leoni didn't makeup
prestige of her position to help his mind until he had served as
labor minister In two democratic
an estimated 170,000 abandoned
children. Sixty-fiv- e
per cent of governments and was again exiled
Venezuelan children are born out by another military takeover.
He proposed by telegram from
of wedlock.
"Being first lady Is a great Washington. She accepted and
flew there, where they married
responsibility. I think I can promote support from all circles to in 1949.
was
"Raul
shy but in
organize a program to take care
of these children and educate
Washington I suppose he realized
them," she said. "If Iaccompllsh he was lonely," she explained.
Of their five children only
this I ask nothing else."
She was born Carmen America
but her family dubbed her Menca
by contrac'ng the last syllables.
Her
father Juan Fernandez
Amaparan prospected for gold in
the rugged Guayana region 14
years before he found It. He died
in 1947 leaving his widow, who
died in 1956, and four daughters
with several cattle' ranches.

Alvaro was born in
Venezuela. Carmen Sofia, 13,
was born in Washington. Luisana,
12, Raul Andres 11, and Lorena,
9, were all born during a Costa
Rica period of their exile.
"I'm really a housewife and
not political," said Dona Menca.
"My Job is still my family. Raul
isn't at home as much as he

used to be but we try to live the
same as we always did."

insists

She

osional

on

shopping tours accompanied by
only one bodyguard but she and
Leoni no longer attend public
movies. They watch their favorite
westerns on a screen in the
patio, as did the Betancourts.
keeps

close

relations with old friends

and her

Dona

Menca

family. She's In dally radio
contact with her sister Sofia
who lives on the biggest family
ranch, Puedpa.
She feels Venezuelan women
should collaborate with their men
not compete with them. Her
views reflect those generally
held by upper middle class
Venezuelans but the country is
Four women were
changing:
to
elected
last
Congress
and an Increasing
December
number of women are becoming
lawyers, physicians and artists.
Yet Dona Menca's job Is boosting
her husband, whom she describes
as a dedicated, thoughtful and
punctual family man, a scholarly
introvert, and leader.
When a reporter asked Leoni
if he had thought frequently in
the past of becoming president,
his wife answered for him:

"If

he never thought of It I
After his many years of
struggle, and battle, there is no
one better to direct the destinies
of the country he loves."

did.

New Contemporary

HERE'S HOW.. .Lizalotta Valesca, who looks 20 years younger
than her 62, demonstrates her favorite exercises: 1,
Shoulders stand From supine position slowly raise legs,
trunk, supporting back with hands. 2. Lie on back, raise legs
up overhead far as possible. 3. Walk on all fours. 4. Lie
down, raise knees to chest, clasp hands around them, rock.
5. Stand on toes, slowly bend knees as drop down.

Women

in

-

MONTREAL (AP)
Canadian
women may be getting themselves into a professional rut.

per cent of all
with aptitude for
higher education pick a teaching or nursing career, aays
Marion Royce, director of the
Women's Bureau of the Federal
Labor l)e parlment.
"Beyond these professions
their impact is negligible."
Miss R"ce says girls are
still conditioned to trie idea that
they ill eventually many unu
stay home with the childirn.
"IhlS uitfumciil is tllogual
Sixty-si- x

young women

:.Kia,

a..u,c

50 per

ml

ot

Career Rut?
all women in Canada's labor
force are married.
"Women leave the labor force
through their
but they return."
child-rearin-

g

To fill cream puffs the proway, don't slice off
Make a hole in the
bottom of each, using a small

fessional
the tops'

shaip knife; fill a pastry bag
J
with thick chocolatc-tlavoi- r
whipped cream or custard and
pipe the filling into the cream
pi. lis through the bottom holes.

Furniture with Elegant Air
By EDWARD S. KITCH

(AP) Furniture designers are creating decorative
Interior furnishings with an air of elegance borrowed from all
periods of history. They have evolved a new Contemporary.
"This year. Contemporary has combined with the existing trend
toward elernce and richness to produce loungy,
Lawrence
furniture,"
says
Peabody of Boston.
grade back." he contends, "be"Even rugs are richer and cause furniture styles go in
more plushy, due to miracle obvious cycles. Modern had befibers," he says. "This harking come associated with cheap
back is very important because
furniture and color had been
it brings in the best of craftsoverused."
Because of this, designers feel
manship. Designers are borrow,
that Mrs. America returned to
lng from Morocco, for Instance
not doing
Moroccan designs
solid Faily American furniture
but utilizing the richness of and other traditional types that
the craft. In fact, craftsmen of are decorative in themselves and
all cultures of the world are need no embellishment to dress
becoming very importjrit."
up a room,
Another
"(jo.n1 modern is a real test
designer, II a n s
be.
Juerens, believes Coiitemp,,-r.i- r if taste,''
has retimed with a bnm.it . cause the . u n i,e inn m e her
.!
r
"Moth (Vi.terrporarv an
skt:l ai.-- ti irhi.,'l...i t... m h te
h ae had a h if. tin
iH. tie a iiM'in."
CHICAGO

,is

i

I

I

Designer Henry P. Glass says
the homemaker Is demanding her
money's worth more and more.
She buys accord'ng to value
rather than style.
In the field of traditional
furniture, the eleganctof Spanish
furniture dominates the field
rather than French or Italian.
Most of the design derivations
are identified in pieces where
woods are carved to Incorporate
the foreign and historic elements
and motifs.
Occasional tables, dining room
furniture and ledroom groupings
are the Indicators of specific
stvles and periods. There Is
more flexibility in furniture tint
ies thiiis
il

lu.-ts- ,

Hook,
Id fi

le. cs

sleeper'
tesi.'i.ers .,!,

lies,
hi

Its

toiae
a

the

the
i

r
tAt

..f

the

vii,,

nd

ihiicte tint
1!

e:.t

� 4

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, July

17, 1964

Pros Must Leave Hooks at Home
For Coming PGA Championship
By DON SHOCK

DALLAS, Tex. (AP) Patty
Berg, who was there when the
women's professional golf tour
started, Is happy to see the girls
scoring In the sixties and winning
all that money.
Patty hopes they break her
record of 64 set at Richmond,
Calif., In 1952 and tied by Ruth
Jessen In the Dallas Clvltan Open

off-llm- lt

seml-clrcl-

of hopes.
The first tee Is 40 feet above
the fairway, and the green Is
hidden among trees on another
hillside 410 yards away. It's a
dogleg to the left, the green
invisible from the tee, and any
attempt to cut the corner could
be costly.
The second, 422 yards, finds
both the tee and green only a few
fence
yards from an
e
guarding a
highway. A
shot straight at the green winds
up In trees along the fence, so
the round-aboroute Is best.
Real trouble looms at No. 3,
a
The tee Is nestled
woods
against an
which extends all the way to the
green, a huge tree menaces wood
shots which stray to the right,
and the
green Is
high on a hillside. Chances are
most of the players will use an
Iron off the tee for accuracy,
for any long wood shot not
straight down the narrow middle
means trouble.
340-yard-

d

The, fourth, 425 yards, also
has trees hanging over the tee
and running along the left side
of the hilly fairway. A hook here
Is fatal.

The course turns "Inland"
starting at No. 5, getting away
from the menacing

Iowa Helps

1

O
stakes which

It picks up again

on the closing

three holes.

Every shot In the bag will