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4.    ARCHITECTURE STUDENTS GET HOUSING STUDY AWARD

       Eight students in the School of Architecture have won a
design competition grant of $2,450 for their study of housing and
related problems in Leslie county. They are Ron Case, Marvin
Crider, Chad Reeder, William Sammons, and Sara Tate, all, of Lexing-
ton, Glenn Hubbuch and Rick Feeney, both of Louisville, and James
Ellis, Shelbyville. Announcement of the grant was made in Tokyo
at the annual conference of the National Society of Interior
Designers. The grant was a part of the 1970 educational foundation
student environmental design project competition. Purpose of the
competition is to bring design students into direct contact with
environmental problems in depth, and to encourage them to create
practical solutions. Four faculty advisors aided the students in
the study of Hyden and Leslie county housing. The county presently
needs more than 120 low-income and rent subsidy housing units
located within walking distance of the services needed by occupants,
according to County Judge George Wooten.



S.    POLLUTION WORKSHOPS CONCLUDE TOMORROW

       Workshops being held across the state this spring to discuss
existing air pollution control regulations and to help industry,
municipalities and institutions solve air pollution problems will
be concluded tomorrow. Sponsored by two state agencies and four
state universities, including the University, the program deals
with practicalities, not theories. Speakers for the series include
Frank Partee of the Kentucky Air Pollution Control Commission;
Dr. H. K. Charlesworth, director, Office of Development Services;
David E. Bonn of the American Air Filter Co., Louisville; Dr.
Robert B. Grieves, chairman, Department of Chemical Engineering,
and Prof. 0. W. Stewart of the mechanical engineering department.
A session was in Somerset last Tuesday and the final one will be at
Covington June 10.



6.     ALUMNI AT WORKSHOP ON THURSDAY

       Dr. Curtis W. Tarr, recently named national director of the
Selective Service System, will speak at a meeting of the University
of Kentucky alumni in the Greater Cincinnati area Thursday, which
opens an annual workshop of the Alumni Association's board of
directors. Panelists on "Alumni Associations in the Seventies" will
include Dr. Glenwood L. Creech, vice president, University relations,
speaking for college administrators; George W. Griffin, London,
trustee, speaking from the viewpoint of board members; Dr. Ralph
Angelucci, Lexington, speaking as an alumni association member, and
Frank Tate, associate director of the Ohio State University Alumni
Association and editor of the Ohio State Monthly, speaking for
professional alumni workers. Joe Creason, Louisville, national
president of the Alumni Association, will preside.