xt78kp7tq873 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt78kp7tq873/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1968-07-03  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  3, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, July  3, 1968 1968 1968-07-03 2015 true xt78kp7tq873 section xt78kp7tq873 Tie ECmtweot Kernel
The Soutlis Outstanding College Daily

18

Wednesday Evening, July 3,

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LIX, No. 154

'Highly Doubtful9 Says Chandler

No New Athletic Director Soon
Dy GUY MENDES

Former Gov. A. B. (Happy)
Chandler said Monday night it is
"highly doubtful" that a new
athletic director for the University will be chosen before outgoing UK president John Oswald
leaves for his new jxist in California.
Mr. Chandler, a member of
the University's Athletics Board
and also a Board of Trustees
member, said, "I doubt if anything will be done until after
the present president leaves,"

a tcleplione interview
Monday night.
Dr. Oswald's resignation is
scheduled to take effect on Aug.
10. The next full meeting
necessary for action on the athletic
director matter of the Board is
not scheduled until September.
In the past week there had
been speculation that Gov. Louie
Nunn, chairman of the Board of
Trustees, would call a special
meeting of the Board to take
further action on finding UK a
new athletic director.

during

V

.

meeting of the
Board is scheduled for July 19,
and it was thought that Gov.
Nunn would call a full meeting, necessary for action on the
matter.
A Louisville newspaper, the
Courier-Journareported that
Cov. Nunn had promised fast
action on the matter, but Mr.
Chandler
appointed to the
Board by Nunn said he knew
of no plans for a special meeting.
It was during last week's
Board meeting, that Dr. Oswald
recommended Dr. William
a former UK assistant
football coach and presently head
of the physical education department at Virginia Tech, be named
athletic director to succeed the
late Bernie Shively.
As soon as Dr. Oswald made
his recommendation
which had
come after a
search
by a screening committee of the
Athletics Board Mr. Chandler
made a motion that action on
the matter be postponed indefinitely. The motion was passed
by the Board.
Mr. Chandler asked that action be delayed on the matter
because he favored UK football
coach Charlie Bradshaw being
named to the position.
"I don't think there's any
great hurry on the matter," said
Mr. Chandler. "If it took the
screening committee vycor six
months to come up with a recommendation, you can't expect the
Board to pass on it in one day.

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Children Receiving
Tutoring In The Arts'

By LINDA ROBERTS
d
With
fingers and happy faces some of Lexington's underprivileged children are getting a chance this summer
to learn about the arts by singing, dancing, and painting.
The 'Tutoring in the Arts
Activities in the community
program aims to provide "educenters include wire sculpture,
cational enrichment" in the arts
to children in deprived areas of macaroni beads, tap and ballet
dancing, and finger painting.
the city, according to Jack Dal-todirector of religious affairs Each specific program is performed once at each center.
at the University.
The program has remained
"Tutoring in the Arts" attempts to make the children more very basic because of lack of
space and lack of materials. Mr.
Dalton hopes the program will
See related pictures on
become more sophisticated in the
page 7.
future.
aware of the arts by teaching
A Saturday program has been
music, dancing and arts and started at the campus Presbycrafts. The project began from terian Center which involves
"The athletic department
the interest of some of those children from both
community
we just want
students who worked with the centers in more structured arts. isn't suffering
to find a suitable athletic direcLexington Tutorial Program durMore time can be spent on tor; I feel Charlie Bradshaw is
ing the school year. This is the
first summer for this project.
teaching and discussion during the best qualified man we have,"
the Saturday session than can said Mr. Chandler. "Bradshaw
There are two community centers involved in the new program. be spent in the chaotic atmos- - probably has more votes than
The South End Center in Prall-towContinued on Page 7, Col. 1
Continued on Page 6, CoL 1
a predominantly Negro
neighborhood, is in an old house
next to a pool hall. Community
action bought it and converted
it into the center, Mr. Dalton
explained, because "we always
try to be at the center of the
e
This special
edition of the Kernel is being mailed to
action."
all incoming freshmen and transfer students to help newcomers
The second community center
to the University achieve some insight into the new environment
is the East End Genter, a rethey are about to enter.
novated apartment in the Blue
Besides the regular eight-pag- e
sections
Kerne L two
Crass Housing Project. It is
Campus Issues and Panorama have been added. The Campus
smaller than the South End CenIssues section is designed to inform new students on the relevant
ter, occupying only the second
issues at UK while the Panorama section offers background on
floor of the apartment. The first
campus life.
floor houses the administrative
offices for the program.
five-mon- th

paint-srnudge-

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...

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Special Edition
16-pa-

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

X

lie ImJJjI

Hassle

Suzanne Wray, a sophomore transfer student from
Community College system, waits patiently
for her IBM cards during orientation proceedings
which began Monday. Over 3,500 entering freshmen
are cxPcctc
S
through the program in the
next few weeks.

Orientation Program Begins;
3,500 Frosh Due On Campus
By DEBBIE

TISSIE

"I am sure that the University can provide you with an

ex-

cellent education . . . cramming may not contribute to the amount
of learning you have when you leave
a scholar has to learn
about people . . . these will be some of the glorious days of your
life
These are a few of the phrases "it was long and drawn out."
thrown at students who attended One student said "f doubt that
the first day of UK's summer it gives a good idea of what UK
will be like."
orientation program.
Other students thought "It
The program, in its eighth
year, was offered Monday was worthwhile because you can
through Wednesday to transfer find out where you are going"
students from UK's community and simply, "It was interesting."
college system.
Beginning next Tuesday, approximately 3,500 freshmen will
be on campus to take part in
the program.
During the program, various
UK officials lecture students
abowt ttudying, staying on campus during weekends, the problems of University living.
ironwork-e- n
Th
strike which slowed work on
Ken Brandenberg, Assistant
Dean of Students, called the ar- the University's
complex has ended. A two-yerival of students upon the Lex"the dawn of a contract was signed last week
ington campus
new era in your lives." He cited by striking iron workers and the
the opportunities to relate to Associated Steel Erectors of Kentucky.
people of different backgrounds
on campus. "The University
Under terms of the new conspares no expense in providing tract, workers have returned to
excellent facilities" but in the full time constnrction on the Uniend, "what you get out of it is versity's
n
dollar
structure.
up to you."
An official of UK's CommunThe new agreement provides
for a
wage boost retroity College system, Stanley Wall,
tried to impress upon the stuactive to June 1, a
wage
dents that they "must be curb(X)st and a
pension into obtain the best eduious
crease Nov. 1, a
wage
cation." He recommended that increase and a
health and
welfare boost next June 1
learning and acquiring the abilinv
and another
ity to get along with people
.
should be the main goals of the crease Nov. 1,
increase of $1.60 to o.Uwrer hour.
college experience.

...

..."

Strike Ends;
Tower Work
Resumes
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Crowd Control Session

Members of the campus police "Emergency Squad"
went through a crowd control training session Friday,
"batons."
complete with safety helmets and three-foLinton Sloan emphasized the session was "just
Capt.
another phase of training" and not preparation for any
expected disturbances.

'..

Students participating

com-

mented that orientation spends
"excess time on speeches that
don't mean anything" and that

Other projects affected by the
strike were school constnictionin
the Louisville area and the new
state office building in Frankfort.

� 2

18

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, July 5,

Olds May Not Get Vote Until 1971

18-Ye- ar
Hy WALTER GRANT
College Ytcs Service

WASHINGTON (CI'S)-De-sPresident Johnson's sup-Iof a constitutional amendment to lower the voting age to
18, it is highly unlikely that
young Americans will he truly
accepted as participants in the
political process before 1971, at
the very earliest.
The President, in a special
message to Congress this week,
said the time has come to signify to the 12 million persons between the ages of 18 and 21
that they are "participants, not
spectators, in the adventure of
Johnson thus
formally confirmed his support
of a constitutional amendment
designed "to grant our youth
what we ask of them but still
deny them full and responsible
participation in our American
democracy."
A proposal to lower the
voting
age already has been sponsored
by 41 Senators. Most observers,
nevertheless, doubt that Congress
will approve the constitutional
amendment
this year since
pite

rt

present plans call for adjournment the first week in August.
The Senate subcommittee on
constitutional amendments has
held hearings on the prujxwal,
but a spokesman for the suhcont-mittesaid an effort to send the
amendment to the full Judiciary
Committee failed last week due
to the lack of a quorum. He
has said the subcommittee will
not meet again before the middle
of July, at the earliest. Even if
it approves the amendment then,
it would be almost impossible
for the Senate Judiciary Committeewhich is overloaded with
conservatives and the full Congress to act on it in the busy
two or three weeks before the expected adjournment date.
To be effective, the amendment would have to be approved
vote in both the
by a two-thirHouse and the Senate, and then
of the
be ratified by three-fourtstates. Since all but three of the
state legislatures will be in session in early 1969, if Congress
docs not approve the amendment
this year, many of the legislative
bodies may not have a chance
c

to ratify it until they meet in
regular session again in 1971.
Governors of states where the
legislature meets onlybiannually
coukl, of course, call sjx'cial legislative sessions to ratify the
amendment, but this would be a
great expense to the states, and
therefore is improbable.
In addition to these obstacles,
the amendment may face considerable opposition by some of
the states, if not by Congress.
Opponents of extending the right
to vote to
are expected to emphasize two major
arguments:
The recent wave of student
demonstrations
indicates that
young people between the ages
of 18 and 21 lack maturity and
are not ready for the political
process. During the Senate hearings on the amendment,
argued that the demonstrations prove young people "are
prone to take an extreme point
of view and push their ideas to
the exclusion of all others."
The states should retain the
power to set the voting age.
Behind most of the opposition,
opo-ncn-

ts

reached the ballot or have failed.
is the fear of
Most of the arguments in fathat they will be voted
out of office if additional mil- vor of extending the vote to
of course,

lions of young K'ople are given
the right to vote. Some observers
already have x)inted out that
President Johnson did not sup-x- rt
the amendment until after
he decided to drop out of politics, and he still waited so late
that it is unlikely Congress will
have time to act on it this year.
Presently, only two states-Kentu- cky
and Georgia have
lowered the voting age to 18.
Alaska and Hawaii, when entering the Union, set the voting
age at 19 and 20, respectively.
Proposals to lower the voting
age have been introduced at one
time or another in most of the
states, but have either never

bymidliry

mlttee-

-

In its sweeping indictment,
the statement says, "On many
campuses there have been grave
violations oi me principles oi
sound academic governance by
administrations which have denied students reasonable participation in matters of university
policy in which their interests
have been clearly involved, by
faculties which have been indif
ferent to the needs and aspirations of students, and by students who by various actions
have interfered with the processes
of teaching, learning, and the
ngni ro iree speecn.
The civil liberties group, how- ever, admitted that an examina- of the conditions which have
triggered demonstrations shows
mu- uii in a nictjuiuy ui
dents have had a prima facie
justification for their concern, if
not for their manner of expressing it. As examples, the statement points out that students
have protested against compulsory ROTC, the suspension of
politically active students, the
neglect of black students, and

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"Throughout our history as a
nation," Johnson said,
"young people have been called
young

upon by the age of 18 to shoulder
family responsibilities and civic
duties identical w ith their elders.
At the age of 18, young Americans are called upon to bear
arms" and "are treated as adults
before many courts of la wand are
held responsible for their acts."
He also emphasized, "The age
of 18, far more than the age of
21, has been and is the age of
maturity in America -- and never
more than now."

College Press Service
NEW YORK (CPS)-T- he
American Civil Liberties Union issued
a strong statement on campus demonstrations this week which
criticizes students, faculties, and administrations alike.
The statement calls for a "re-,,ut,.,.,t,nnt f mnt rr.inrd
view of the structure and internal faculty members.
relations of the university on
The ACLU charges that pasevery campus," and says univer- sive faculties have allowed most
sities should involve all con- - of the power in the university
cerned groups in the develop- - to
pass into tlie hands of t,e ad.
ment and execution of academic ministration, and "the adminis- policy at every level. The state- - tration has becn oniy too rea(iy
ment is the result of a survey of to
acccpt this X)WeT and to exer.
recent campus disruptions by the cise it in an essentially man- ACLUs Academic Freedom Com- - aKeriai waVf with ittie regard

ONE DAY SERVICE

We

Congress.

Faculties, Administrations

ONE HOUR DRY CLEANING

a
a
a
a
a
a

in the

were outlined

President's special message to

ACLU Criticizes Students,

DeBoor
Hz

jxIi-ticia-

for

the characteristic intellectual

cial realities of academic
antj
iife it is a significant fact that
many UjUVersity administrators
are as much at home on the boards
of large corporations and in the
upper echelons of the bureaucracy
as they are on their own

campuses."

The statement levels a bitter
attack aRainst administrations
which have called police onto

their campuses to break up student protests. "The invitation
of civil authorities onto the cam

pus endangers the autonomy of
lhe institution, and should be
resorted to only when all other
avenues have failed and then
preferably under strict procedur-tio- n
al mies laid down and agreed
to by administration, faculty, and
the statement says.
students,

Education Cost
Up 50 Percent
In Ten Years
According to the U.

of Education,

S.

Office

the nation's

an-

nual investment in its schools
is expected to increase by nearly 50 percent during the next
decade.
In its annual projection of
school data, the Office estimates
that expenditures will be more
than $70 billion by the school
year ending June 1977, compared
with M8.5 billion in 1966-6U.S. Education Commissioner
Harold Howe II explained that
these estimates are based on the
assumption that enrollment will
continue to increase in high
schools and colleges and that
the expenditures per student will
continue to rise at all levels
of education at approximately
the same rate as in the past
ten years.
Howe said that the projections indicate a significant shift
in the allocation of public school
funds over the next decade. The
shift w ill result mainly from larger
teaching staffs, greater use of
subprofessionals such as teacher
aides, increased costs of educational materials and salary hikes.
At the college and university
level, spending to educate each
student is expected to advance
sharply as a result of rising enrollments and increasing costs per
student.
7.

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, July

The Kentucky

.1,

18--

3

ERNELjJg

The Fantasticks

Illuminate Park

fh .0

By D. C. MOORE

The Jenny Wiley Summer Music Theatre, located in Jenny Wiley
State I'ark near Prestonshurg, opened their summer season by
presenting an illuminating production of a decade favorite "The

Fantasticks."

This musical comedy which seems to be a real crowd pleaser
is done time and time again across the country and is perhaps
one musical comedy that in the future will be revived many times.
The musical comedy written by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmitt
of traditional theatrical motifs.

is a carefully selected arrangement

Some of the motifs that can be found are; use of Shakespearean
language style, a story drawn from the romance tradition, and
stock characters. Yet the musical comedy remains fresh in modern
humor and song.
The Jenny Wiley Music Theatre, using these motifs and many
others, offered their version of "The Fantasticks" to the audience.

Crucible Cast

The main plot involves two lovers, Matt (Larry Pauley) and
Louisa (Eileen Barnett Bittman), who think that their fathers
(Hucklebee and Bellamy) object to their romance. In fact it is the
fathers that provide the fuel for the romance to keep going. But
alas the reality of romance turns into fantasy, suggesting the fantasy found in Shakespear's Midsummers Night's Dream.

shown as a clear sign of pending danger.

Opportunity In Crucible

Historical Drama Staged

To surround the plot with fantasy there were songs and illusion-ar- y
characters who symbolized romance, fakery, evil, and blindness
to reality.

The Centennial Theatre will
present for their second production Arthur Miller's "The Cruci-

Some of the songs that symbolized these were "Try to Remember," "Metaphor," "Rape Song" and "I can see It." Some of the
illusionary characters that were symbols were El Callo (Julius
Kukurugya), The Mute (Elaine Eckstein), Henry (Tirn Steffa) and

ble."
This play, which is one of the
few great American historical dramas and one of the favorite of
theatrical groups, offers to the
theatre one of the most challenging plays ever written for the
American Theatre.
Why the play is challenging
is interesting.
The play offers a unique opportunity for the actors to develop strong characters and an opportunity for the technical side
of the theatre to unload all their
creative effort in producing an
accurate historical staging.
It offers even more in the
realm of ideas. Making these
abstract ideas concrete is the most
challenging opportunities of all.
The plot of the play, which
is set against the background of
thesalem witch trials, deals with

Mortimer (Henry Zingg).

songs and characters formed an esthetically sound
production, but it was El Callo who drove the performance and
commanded most of the attention especially when he sang "Try
to Remember."
All theses

the plot had a happy ending and the boy and girl
lived happily ever after, leaving the feeling that there are still
As usual

illusionary characters left somewhere.
.

However the musical theatre group that did "The Fantasticks" is
an unusual one to be found in the rural area where Jenny Wiley
State Park is located.
From all appearances there is nothing to suggest that there is
musical group located in these Eastern Kentucky mountains
that offer such high professional quality. But the group is there
and will be doing musical theatre for the rest of the summer in a
beautiful amphitheatre that provides a natural mountain setting
plus acoustics.
If anyone is going to be in this area, seeing The Jenny Wiley
Summer Music Theatre perform might be an illuminating experience, as was their production of "The Fantasticks."
a

Odd Couple

Good-Fo-

vorced men becomes a bossy wife
type.
These two divorced men,
showing at Turfland
played by Jack Lemmon and
is stocked full of laughs
Walter Matthau are probably the
the first time around.
But on second viewing, the best in the business at this kind
comedy with Lemmon
movie would seem rather dull of rush-ga- g
and common place mainly for becoming the bossy wife type
the reason that it is nothing more and always wanting to know why
than a highly evolved form of Walter Matthau is late for dinner.
The comedy situation is persituation comedy The kind of
has invaded the. fect for the fast line comedy
comedy that
American Theatre, movies and that Niel Simon has brought to
the screen.
television.
But in all of Simon's work
This does not suggest that
there is that lightness that is
the movie is entirely bad. Quite
obvious and the result is a manthe contrary.
ufactured product using all the
"The Odd Couple" is an exold worn theatrical comedy tricks
citing movie with an unusual
situation. The situation comes to get laughs.
Although the manufactured
when one divorced man and one
who is about to be divorced comedy is not obvious in the film
get together and live in an eight version of "The Odd Couple,"
there are certain aspects visible.
room apartment. One of the di

did Couple",

what man will believe and what
he can be subjected to when fear
replaces rational thinking.
John Proctor (who will be
played by William Hayes) is finally subjected to torment because
he is a rational man and does not
actually believe in the nonsense
that surrounds the witch trials

and

superstitions that

the

abound. Still, Proctor is convicted of a crime based upon
lies and not fact. He is then

faced with a choice of life or
death and this is what the play
is all about . . . the test of a
man in a dark period.
The Centennial Theatre will
bring all its professional abilities
to bear on this production and
will try to meet the opportunities that this historical drama
offers.
The play will run July
Reservations can be made by
calling University extension 2929.
4-- 9.

CLOTHES?

f?AVs

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x. oFCouilS

OEDS SHOP

First Time

r

One is the constant poker game,
another is the limited number of
working sets. Both aspects limit
the mobility of the movie. But
none of these aspects take away
the pure entertainment from the
movie.
The entertainment comes from
watching the combined talents
of Matthau and Lemmon which
made the movie possible from
such a limited beginning.
From the time Jack Lemmon
try s to kill himself to the time he
moves in with two english models
who happen to love his sensitivity, "The Odd Couple" works
wonders for the institution of marriage and what could happen,
when two divorced men divorce
each other.
The movie like the subject
matter might be dull second time
around.

By D. C. MOORE

"The

In this rehearsal scene from "The Crucible" the pain, fear, and deep faith
caused by the Salem witch trials is

now

Cinema-On-The-Ma-

P.S.
find

Curly-haire- d

top-grad-

e

undergrads, girls and boys, will
fashions at both Graves-Colocations,
x

Downtown on Main, just west of Limestone and in
Turfland Mall. . . . There's a good old Summer Sale
going on now.

Kentucky Typewriter Service
H

Every

it

7.

SALES

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ADLER

nurtsYuy t'Y

SERVICE
TYPEWRITERS

OLIVETTI-PORTABL-

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MACHINES

ELECTRIC AND MANUAL TYPEWRITERS
PRINTING

CARBON PAPER

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Phone

CALCULATORS

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� 4

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wnlncvlay, July 3,

To ALL

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wctlncvlay, July X l8--

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mm PAR

Add

MT.
1

V

RVE

As you come to the UK campus you will be seeing and hearing a lot

about the merits of buying your books and supplies from this or that
book store. Everyone recognizes the savings that can be had by purchasing USED BOOKS, and each store at UK has SOME used books for
SOME courses; however, we want to make it quite clear . . .

U

&H"""

It

'I

Comrapare

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NEW BOOKS

GOOD USED

prefer

Reserved books will be held through August 27, 1968

CC

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FIRST CLASS

space (the largest college store in Kentucky)
check-olanes (for special service)
experience (17 years serving UK students)
art, architecture and engineering supplies
paperback books (for required or leisure reading)
phonograph records (foryour listening pleasure)
notebooks and wircbound books (better note taking)
study aids and outlines (for better grades)
UK sweatshirts and
health and beauty aids
UK novelties and souvenirs

PERMIT NO.

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BUSINESS REPLY MAIL
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POSTAGE STAMP NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED

STATES

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books arc guaranteed correct for your courses.

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If you come to campus this summer and choose to purchase your books for the Fall semester, we will be prepared to supply you with the required books and supplies for each course
you will be taking. All you will need is the course number. We will gladly accept your checks,

mm

YOm

Simply specify on this form the courses you will be taking and cither
GOOD USED or NEW BOOKS as you specify will be bagged and waiting for you when you come to the campus. No deposit required. ... All

to see whoclh) store has fxAoire Used Books!

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1

The KENNEDY Book Store HAS MORE USED BOOKS FOR MORE
COURSES THAN ANY OTHER STORE SERVING UK STUDENTS! . . .
NO STORE SELLS AT LOWER PRICES THAN KENNEDY'S . . . thus,
KENNEDY BOOK STORE WILL SAVE MORE STUDENTS MORE
MONEY THAN ANY OTHER STORE.

PEC

pick-u- p

date

ZIP

5

� fi--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, July 3,

TIIE

No New AD
Continued from Pajre One
anyone else right now," he added.
Mr. Chandler emphasized that
he is in no hurry. He said he
had receivtxl a letter from Tim
Futrell, the vice president of the
UK Student Government, representing 13,000 students and asking for quick action on appointing a new AD.

18

Soon-Chand-

ler

do a good job," Mr. Chandler
concluded.
Dr. Ralph Angclucci, chairman of the UK Athletics Board,
. . . I've been interested in UK's
athletic program for 52 years,' said he had no idea as to what
I don't want him to be hurryaction must now be taken or
ing me; he's putting the 'rush-ac- t when it will be taken. He speculated that the search for a new
'on.
AD might have to start from
"We ought to take time and scratch.

"I don't think he represents

students," Mr. Chandler
said. "He's just in a great hurry
13,000

Parking Structure Contract Let

A contract for Parking Structure No. 2 at UK has been granted
to the Foster and Creighton Co.
of Nashville, Tenn., who presented a low bid of $1,943,600.
The state issued a work order
to the company calling for construction to begin within 10 days
and for completion by August,

1969.

Parking Structure No. 2 will
be located in the
area of the campus between Clifton and Hilltop Avenues adjacent
to Rose Street.
The new structure, with four
east-centr- al

levels, will have space for 756
cars and will house the university's central telephone exchange
in the basement.
Parking Structure No. 2 is
among three planned for UK to
relieve an acute parking prob

lem. Structure No. lis now under
construction on the south side
of campus. Plans for the third
structure are underway and the
proposed site is the north side
of Euclid Avenue near the Coli- -

:

....

s

:

NER Distributes WBKY Program
A
nationally by NER, National Edradio pro- ucational Radio.
a half-hoThe program consists of songs
gram produced at the University's educational radio station, performed by Mr. Niles in concert
WBKY-Fis being distributed on the University campus on his
75th birthday, plus remarks he
made about his life and music.
His comments were edited
from a three-hou- r
interview by
the producers, Kate Kennedy and
Don Wheeler. Miss Kennedy is a
senior from Connersville, Ind.,
in
majoring
Wheeler is manager of WBKY.

"John Jacob Niles:

,"

Radio-TV-Film-

On Dry Cleaning

5t

w

'Jt

Kernel Photos by Schley Cox

Not quite. UK coed Sarah McDonald explains simply that studying in trees is
"very comfortable." What was she studying? S ome works of Rousseau's for a
literature class on what else? returning
to nature.

Out Of
Her Tree?

s;

With this Ad.

Shirts

- 5 for $1.23

IBM Bans Discrimination

CROILEY CLEANERS
Phone
GOOD QUALITY WORK

116 W. Maxwell

255-421-

3

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) in Lexington has announced it will no
longer do business with realtors
who discriminate in property
sales.
Since the company guarantees
the sale of any employe's home
when he is tr&nsferred, the decision is expected to affect the
entire Lexington real estate market.
The announcement was received in a letter from C. F.
Vough, vice
to First Security National
president-manufacturin-

g,

Bank and Trust Co. which acts
as the company's agent in listing
homes for sale under IBM's home
guarantee plan.
Mr. Vough, s letter said "IBM
policy is to utilize only those
realtors who provided their services to prospective purchasers
without discrimination . . . because of race, color, religion or

open-housin-

law."

CLASSIFIED

national origin."

Relating to the IBM letter,
Lexington realtor Ben Story Jr.
said, "This is the end of discrimination in housing in

To pUee a cUnlfled phona UK
ztemlon 2319 or stop la mt th office, 111 Jonrnalltm, from 8 to noon,
1 to S. Monday through
Friday.
Rates are 11.25 for 20 word, 13 for
three consecntlre Insertions of same
ad or $3.75 per week. Deadline U 11
a.m. day prior to publication.
No adTertliement may cite race,
or national orlfln aa a qnall-flcatlfor renting rooms or for employment.
FOR SALE

paramount pictures
present j

FOR SALE
Golf clubs, brand new,
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.
11JU
Phone

Jack

10'x40'

1960

heat,
and book space;

trailer; oil

Lots

or desk

3J11

$1650.

1961 FORD

JX

i

Vough said that his letter
a change in
IBM's policy. "It is just an effort
on our part to show support
for
g
Kentucky's

didn't represent

FALCON BUS Outfitted
for camping.
Good condition, good

and

tires,

3Jllt

$423.

FOB BENT

EMSGoaos

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are

1

d TRee

TO

X

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FOR RENT One bedroom furnished,
2 bedrooms
unfurnished Apts. Within walking distance of University,
0.
off Waller Ave.
3J13t

16

A Norman

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ailing

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EXCLUSIVE
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NOW AT
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Who can put a price tag
on a good climbing tree?
Or on a campsite, cool
and shady beside a
stream full of fish?
The beauty of southern

forests . . . the enjoyment
.
they provide ... are
price-less-

Therefore,