xt70gb1xh27d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70gb1xh27d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-08-28 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, August 28, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 28, 1967 1967 1967-08-28 2024 true xt70gb1xh27d section xt70gb1xh27d rt"

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THE KENTUCKY

Monday Evening, August 28,

Take

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

1967

 

Five!
When you play a bass drum in a marching band, “take five” is

not as easy as it seems. During practice. one industrious UK
drummer tried two ways to rest without unstrapping the big bass.

 

Two Football Players
Hurt, One Paralyzed

By GUY MENDES
Kernel Sports Editor

Two Wildcat football players
were injured seriously last week
in practice, and one remains in
critical condition.

Creg Page, sophomore defen-
sive end from Middlesobro, was
hurt Tuesday in a light defen-
sive drill and suffered what doc-
tors termed ”a probable bruise
to the spinal cord." He has been
paralyzed from the neck down
since then and remains in the
Intensive Care Unit ofthe Med-
ical Center.

Stan Forston, sophomore quar-
terback from Lexington sustained
severely torn ligaments in his
knee Friday, in drills at prac—
tice. A successful operation was
)erformed on Forston Saturday,
but he apparently has been lost
for the season.

Both accidents occurred in
an unusual manner during light
drills. The drill in which Page
was injured was a pursuit drill
which calls for thedefensivc line-
men to push through the offen-
sive linemen to get to a back
with the ball.

Evidently, Page slipped and
fell into a pile—up and his neck
was somehow snapped back,
causing the injury.

Forston was involved in a

pass drill that pitted the op-
posing lines against each other.
He had rolled out and released
a pass when he was hit by a
lineman.

Coach Charlie Bradshaw was

Continued on Page 14, Col. 3

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY; LEXINGTON

'ERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 1

Splinter Destroyed;
Arson Cited As Cause

Arson is blamed for the fire
that destroyed Splinter Hall, a
campus landmark for two dec-
ades, in the early morning hours
of Aug. 13.

For years students had cursed,
marred and occasionally at-
tempted to burn the wooden
building that was first built in
1946 as an Army barracks.

Though it was officially the
Social Science Building, students
and faculty alike seldom called
it anything but “Splinter," a
questionable tribute to its con-
struction.

‘Practice, ’

Brown Says

. .
0] thmg
United Prea- International,
DETliOlT — Black Power
leader H. Rap Brown told a
cheering crowd ofmore than 3,000
Negroes Sunday that Detroit riot-
ers ”did a good job” and this
city's riot would ”look like a
picnic" when Negroes unite.
Brown, visiting West Side De-
troit exactly five weeks after the
city's bloody riot broke out, was

greeted by wildly enthusiasticA

throngs of Negroes who smashed
a box office window and pushed
through blocked doors in efforts
to get into the small theater
where he spoke.

“The honky (white man) is
your enemy," Brown shouted as
the crowd clapped, cheered,
shouted and stamped feet. Spec-
tators were jammed in the aisles
and at least 2,000 more yelled
outside.

”The brothers are now calling
Detroit destroyed," Brown said
of the savage july riot which left
43 dead here. ”You did a good
here."

But he said the Detroit riot,
the bloodiest and most costly in
modern US. history, would ”look
like a picnic" after black people
unite to ”take their due."

BrOWn said Detroit's riot was
"a war that was-no accident."
He said the United States was
trying to wipe out the Negro

Continued on Page 4, Col. 1

Although the building was
considered totally; destroyed, the
contents were not damaged.

Col. F. C. Dempsey, director
of Safety and Security,attributed
this to the fact that windOWS
and doors in the building were
closed.

Col. Dempsey said there were
numerous instances where adoor
would be charred but papers in
an office on the other side would

be unharmed.

Report Cites Arson

in a report to Vice President
for Business Affairs Robert Ker-.

   
   

a.» 5-.»

The lounge area in the center of Splinter Hall (above) is thought

ley, Col. Dempsey said "without
a doubt the fire was set by a
person or persons unknown with
the intent of destroying the fa-
cility.”

The report says that ”fire in-
spectors sifting through the de-
bris . . . found 10 areas in the
halls which had apparently been
soaked with a liquid and ignited
either by direct flame or ‘flash-
ing'."

The fire started at nine minutes
after midnight, as reported by a ,
nightwatchman who had passed
through the building only min-

Continned on Page 4, Col. 1

.1. v‘

to be the point where the fire started. Although the outside of the

building was undamaged, the interior was gutted, making repair

of the frame structure virtually impossible. This photo is from the
files of the Safety and Security Department.

Farm Purchase Now Grave Problem For UK

In late july the University
moved to purchase a prime horse
farm that is bounded on three
sides by land the school already
owns.

That move has since mush-
roomed into a public controversy

that represents the gravest pub-
lic crisis faced by the adminis-
tration of President John W. Os—
wald since he came to Kentucky
in 1963.

Indeed, so grave are the pos-
sible results of the controversy
that a UK vice president, Dr.
Clenwood l.. (Ireech, already
has publicly said the University
has been threatened by reprisals
in the General Assembly which
will‘be presented with the Uni—
bersity's two—year budget in Jan-
uary.

The Legislative Research
Commission already is investigat-
ing the University’s attempts to
purchase the farm, as is the state

attorney general. And the school
has 5 become involved in 3 fed-
eral suit brought by a California
horseman who also wants the
land. '

How the simple purchase of
a farm became one of the most
controversial issues in recent
years is a matter ofpublic record.
The why of the matter is not
yet quiet clear.

Says UK ‘Used'

Fayette County judge Joe
Johnson, who has taken a posi—
tion in bitter opposition to the
University's purchase ofthe farm,
charges that the school is being
"used" by the Keeneland Asso-
ciation to keep horseman Rex.
C. Ellsworth from moving a part
of his operation to Kentucky.

Mr. Ellsworth, who was out~
bid for the farm by UK
by 358,0“), had said that he would
spend up to $3 million improving

the property and, among other
things, planned a school for
grooms and jockeys and a
breeder's sales on the 721—acre
Maine Chance property, which
was owned by the late Eliza-
beth Arden Graham.

Keeneland operates the only
breeder's sales in the area and
Ellsworth and his backers claim
in a federal suit they have filed
that Keeneland convinced the
University to buy the land in or-
der to stop Ellsworth's plans to
compete with Keeneland.

It has only recently become
known that Lexington financier
Garvice D. Kincaid is backing
Ellsworth and thus has increased
speculation that plans for the
farm might include commercial
and residential development.

It was this type of develop-
ment in the area that the Univer—
sity was seeking to prevent by
purchasing the farm.

From the outset, UK officials
have said the purchase of the
farm was an effort to ”prbtect
the University's properties iln the
area" and to provide land for
agriculture research.

A new group called the Ken
tucky T (Taxpayers) Party has
begun an intensive radio and
television advertising campaign
against the University purchase
of the farm for $2 million and
apparently hopes to influence
state officials to stop the move.

University Trustees, in re-
sponse to the mounting criticism,
met two weeks ago and issued a
lS—page statement defending the
purchase and streSSing that no tax
money would be used.

One thing is certain, however,
the University's image has been
tarnished greatly by the contro-
versy.

 

 I

2 — THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, August 28, 1967

 

‘Hawaii’ Mostly Scenery

By DICK KIMMINS

James Michener's epic novel,
”Hawaii," was a difficult story
to transform into celluloid.
United Artist (lid the best they
could; they managed to capture
all the splendor and beauty of'
the untamed islands but some-
how failed to capture the pro-
cesses outlined by Michener.

Opening with a golden sun-
set behind the clear blue waters
of the Pacific, “Hawaii" drama-
tises missionary activity in the
islands during the early 19th Cen—
tury.

Max Von Sydow plays the
young seminary graduate, Abner

The Cast

HAWAII—Produced by Walter Mir—
lsch. Directed by George Bay Hill.

Performances at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
every day at the Kentucky Theatre.

Julie Andrews, Jeruaha Bromley Hale
Max Von Sydow Rev. Abner Hale
Richard Harrie. Capt. Rater lioxworth

 

Hale, “called" to Hawaii. The
college sponsoring the mission
insists Hale be accompanied by
a wife; a quick arrangement with
Julie Andrews, cast as jerusha
Bromley, serves as Mrs. Hale
to the reverend's satisfaction.
Together they journey around
the Straits of Magellan to pagan
Hawaii, carrying with them the
ethnocentric desire to change the

natives for the better. The movie
focuses on two aspects of the
missionary personality, egotisin
and moral altruism. First one
wishes the missionaries would
pack up and go home where
they belong; but their ingrained
faith in their cause has to be
admired. .

An analysis of the whole prob—
lem of change is attempted in
”Hawaii."

But Director George Roy Hill
has only superficially shown us
what has gone on in the land
at that time. He is content to
let the overwhelming scenery take
up where the actors leave off.

i The Traditional Shop I

for Gentlemen and Gentle Women
l where “Ed's" and Coeds shop

PURDUE U.
OHIO STATE U.
MIAMI U., Oliio
BOWLING GREEN SU.
UNIVERSITY of KENTUCKY

    
   

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Our CUSTOM SHIRTS priced from .................. $3.95 up
PRINGLE SWEATERS priced from .................. $15.95 up
3-piece VESTED SUITS from .......................... $65.00 up
SPORT COATS, many patterns from .............. $39.95 up

LADIES look for . . .

Our CUSTOM SHIRTS priced ........ $4.95 up
SWEATERS and SKIRTS priced ...................... $11.95 up
DRESSES — CASUAL TO AFTER 6 p.m.

SUITS — Tweeds, Window Pane Plaids, Solids

YOU'LL FIND NAMES —— Villager, Ladybug, Pringer,
John Meyer, Seaton Hall, Warner's. ..

 

407 S. Limestone

 
 
  

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Also items advertised in Glamour.

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Julie Andrews and Max Von Sydow play man and wife inoth’e
United Artists production of James Michener's novel "Hawaii.
There are two performances daily at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.

 

STARTS 7:45 ADM. $1.15

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"Hang them!”
for Murder!
Hang them
for taking
the pawn!"

      

  
 
   

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“0mm .9"; —PlUS-—

 

 

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METROCOLOR
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—W augm—

 

 

 

 

 

Baez Record—
“Years Best

By W..H. MCNEW

JOAN—Joan Baez. with orchestra
led by Peter Schickele. Vanguard
VSD-‘IOMO, VHS-9340.

It was in Boston. and more
years ago than I care to remem-
her that I first saw Joan Baez.

That night as always. the
old l'ulcoru (ioflcc House was
dark; and the paleteenagerstaud-
lllg III back was so slight it
seemed that at any morucut she
nnght duck behind her guitar
and hide. llut then she sang.
and no one there. heat or llo~
tarian. hi/./,y or high. \\oIIld ever
again suspect her of wanting

. to hide,

Sings Directly

Later she was discovered at
the \cwport Folk Festival. and
each year since then. she has
released one record. Listening
back over those records now.
it seems that although each has
said something to its time, this
years new one. "Joan.” speaks
particularly directly.

llathcr than the mumbled lll-
cohereucics of Bob Dylan, she
has tllrned to such songs as the
lleatles‘ "Eleanor lligl)y” and
Simon and (Largunkcl‘s ”Dang—
ling Conversation.“ She treats
these in her own way" for Simon
and (Zarfunkel and the Beatles
are supreme in their ways; and
loans results are both personal
and appealing.

Her voice is still at the same
time clear and dark, as mountain
air can be both clear and dark;
and that voice never sounded
more powerful than it does here.

Indeed, were not some ofthe
orchestral arrangements too cute
and tricky, this would be joan‘s
most successful record. As it is,
”loan" is one of the best records
of this year; and it deserves, like
her others, playing over and over
again.

 

KERNEL CLASSIFIED ADS
BRING RESULTS

 

THE KENTUCKY Karim-1L

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station. University of Kentucky. Lex-
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second clan
postage paid at Lexin n. Kentucky.
Mailed five timea w ly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
Publicationl. UK Post Office Box 4906.

Begun an the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously on the Kernel
since 1916.

Advertising published herein is in-
tended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly. by mail — ”.00
Per copy, from files — $.10

KERN EL TELEPHON ES

Editor. Managing Editor ......... 2321
Editorial P Editor,

Associate itorl. Sports ...... 1330
News Desk ...................... 3447

Advertising. Busineu.
Circulation .................... 8319

 

 

 

 

   
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
   

 

  
  
 
   
 
     
  
 
 
 
 
 
    
   
   
   
   
     
    

F

 

 

    

/

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, August 28, 1967—3

Central Kentucky’s Largest Concentration of Fashion - is on

Main Street East

in Downtown Lexington

\

Three blocks from the heart of campus, bordering Harrison
Avenue Viaduct and Walnut Street, you will-find more fash-
ion and quality than anywhere in Central Kentucky. Here i

at these great stores:

49?; w, _ {Ignacio

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$3ng 13me

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All 'e L st in

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4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, August 28, 1967

Splinter‘
Fire Said
To .Be Arson

Gustinued From Page 1
utes before. The nightwatchman,
W. H. Planck, reported smelling
smoke in the building but was
infomied of another fire at the
Brown and Williamson Tobacco
Company when he called the
Security dispatcher to report.
Mr. Planck saw the flames
rising in the Social Science Build-
ing when checking the Fine Arts
Building. Six minutes after the
blaze was reported, Companies
5 and 6 of the Lexington Fire
Department arrived.

Tried It Before

Splinter Hall was built just
after the close of World War Two
as an Army barracks.
tried to burn it down every year,
I hear," said Col. Dempsey, “al-
though its the first time this has
happened while I've been here."

Razing of the structure began
Aug. 17. Classes scheduled in the

. building have not as yet been of-

ficially moved to other locations.

The Social Science Building
was insured for $170,000, accord-
ing to Vice President Kerley. The
University will collect about 60
percent of that figure, as $70,000
of the amount was for the un-
harmed contents of the building.

Brown Says

Continued From Page 1
population through the Vietnam
war, birth control programs, star-
vation of Negro children in the
South and an unfair system of
justice,

”Within 20 years we will be
just like the buffalo," said Brown,
chairman of the Student Non-
violent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC). ”We're going to have to
defend ourselves. The white man
is not going to defend us."

Brown addressed the crowdin
the theater, located within a
block ofriot-damaged stores, then
went outside to address the
screaming, milling crowd there.

The crowd rushed forward.
Traffic was blocked for miles.

Police said they had no re-
ports of violence or trouble.

Brown said he does not preach
hate or violence He said it was
not necesery_

”Students ,

 

 

Bulldozers moved in on Splinter Hall Aug. 17 to do what a severe
fire had not done. Arson is believed to be the cause of the fire.

Detroit Riots ‘Practice’

”America teaches black
people violence and we go forit,"
he said.

He said the war in Vietnam
was a "racist war." He said the
United States was ”using black
people to fight brown people for
a white cause."

”It is no accident that 22 per-
cent of the men killed in Viet-
nam are Negro," he shouted.

”I'm glad the civil rights
movement is dead," Brown said.
”Honkies can't benequal to me
until they serve 400' years under

Brown said Negroes will gain
power ”when we begin to de-
fend ourselves. .

”You’ve got to be able to de-
fend your community before you
can control it," he said.

Brown quoted the Bible in
predicting the future saying,
God gave Noah the rainbow

 

Patio. He will

 

STUDENTS

To Order
, (11112 @nurirr;?flnurnal

at the special low rate contact
the Courier-Journal represen-

tative at the Student center

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Au-
gust 28 through Friday, Sept. I

be there from

 

 

sign. No more water. The fire
nexttime."

Local black nationalists
greeted Brown at the airport.

Brown, his flight delayed by
bad weather in the New York
area, arrived two hours late but
was met by thousands of en-
thusiastic Negroes who thronged
the streets and jammed the small
theater building.

College Editors Ask
Rejection Of LBJ

IS Minn. (UPI)—
MINNEAPOL n meeting in Minneapolis, have en-

“new administration in 1968, it

editors from across the natio
dorsed a statement calling for a
was announced Sunday.

The statement was endorsed
earlier by 400 students at the Na-
tional Student Congress at Col
lege Park, Md. Saturday.

Increasing involvement 1n an
interminable and increasingly
senseless war" in Vietnam as
well as the recent bombing raids
near the Chinese border were
cited as why "we are convinced
that it is necessary to obtain a
new administration."

The student leaders said if

One- hundred college newspaper

President Johnson is unopposed
next year in the Democratic con-

.yention, they will work for an

alternative candidate.

However, if the Republican
party ”offers no valid alterna-
tive, the students said, they are
”committing ourselves to an in-
tercollegiate political year during
which hundreds of thousands of
young people will engage in po-
litical activity designed to assure
that the next President does not
pursue the policies which are
leading this nation to disaster."

UK Graduates Named
To St. Augustine Staff

Two University of Kentucky graduates the Rev. William K

Hubbell and Robert B. Horine Jr.,

have been named chaplain

and assistant chaplain of St. Augustine Episcopal Chapel, 472

Rose Street.

Father Hubbell succeeds the
Rev. C. Dudley Barksdale, who
resigned to become rector of
Grace Church, Florence.

The new chaplain graduated
from UK in 1949 with honors
in sociology. He was a member
of Phi Beta Kappa. Horine re-
ceived his bachelor of arts in
journalism from UK in 1956.

Father Hubbell also received
a master's degree in sociology
from the University ofNorthCar-
olina in 1952 and a bachelor
of divinity from the Episcopal
Theological Seminary in Ken-
tucky, Lexington, in 1961, grad-
uating with distinction.

He servéd in the Air Force,

was a book designer for the Uni- '

versity Press from 1%3 to 1957

and was professor of church his-
tory at the seminary from 1961
to 1966. He now is managing
editor of a journal of applied

anthropology at UK.

Horine was a distinguished
military graduate and served in
Air Force Intelligence in Europe
in 1956-57. He joined the staff
of The Lexington Leader in 1%3
and worked until this year for
The Lexington Herald.

He is a senior at the Episco-
pal Theological Seminary in Ken-
tucky and is a member of the
Third Order of the American Con-
gregation of Franciscans.

Both men are Lexington na-
tives and graduates of Henry
Clay High School.

UK Seeking 41 New Interns
For Teacher Corps Program

The L'niversity is conducting
an intensive recruiting campaign
for 41 new Teacher Corps interns
this fall. Twenty-six interns from
throughout the country already
have been accepted.

Dr. Harry Robinson, director
of the Teacher Corps program
in the UK College of Education,
has returned from Washington,
D. C., where he visited Ken-
tucky congressmen, finding that
many of them are planning to
contact recent college graduates
in their districts and inform them
of opportunities in the program.

Most of the congressmen, Dr.
Robinson reports, plan to send
a personal letter to each June
college graduate in their districts
regardless of the institution at-
tended.

Congressman William O. Cow-
ger of Louisville is preparing
a series of taped radio appeals,
and will discuss the program
in a Louisville television appear-
ance.

Dr. Robinson also made an
appearance at a Phi Delta Kappa
natidnal meeting while in Wash-
ington. With Dr. Graham Rich,
national director of the Teacher
Corps, he answered questions
from the floor for members bf
the education leadership society.

The first group of 26 interns
who began the two-year program
at UK last fall were in summer
school this year, Dr. Robinson
noted. He said their studies will
lead to a master's degree.

The UK program this year
"will add three new team leaders,
who. are experienced teachers, to
the staff of five leaders who
served last year. All the team
leaders and the new interns will
participate in a 12-week [reser-

vice program which begins Au-
gust 28.

The purpose of the Teacher
Corps is to reach and teach poorer
children at the elementary level.
The program at UK directs interns
into the inner-city schools of Lou-
isville and Lexington, and to
schools in Harlan and Breathitt
counties, “to gain experience."

They work with small groups
of children under the direction
of the regular classroom teacher.
The children receive special tuto-
rial help, take field trips, and are
generally ”listened to," by the
intern, feeling the regular teacher

- to teach,.Dr. Robinson said.

The interns also work in the
community, making home visits,
working in neighborhood centers
where they tutor children and
conduct recreati n programs.
"This is done to contribute to the
children's needs and to help the
interns better understand the
children and their environment,"
he added.

”We are looking for ways to
improve instniction of the cul-
turally disadvantaged and to im-
prove teacher education,” Dr.
Robinson said. ”We have had
wonderful cooperation with the
public schools."

Dr. Robinson said federal of-
ficials informed him that the UK
program has the largest research
component of any of the 60-70
Teacher Corps training institu-
tions in the country.

”We are not training social
workers or missionaries, but tea-
chers with social consciousness
so that they can help the child's
learning environment, to promote
his growth," he said. ”We are not
trying to create these children
in our own images."

Teacher Corps interns at UK
range from a Dartmouth graduate
who majored in anthropology, to
a person who is already well-
prepared to teach at a little known
college in another state, Dr. Rob-
inson said.

 

 

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..~. ...,
YIt.I ’ [1"

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, August 28, 1967— 5

 

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g g
g SAVE 2 2 H b k I g
g $.50ntls an acne g
2 Here are “151' a few of the many courses for thch KENNEDY'S has started E:
g the fall semester WII'I‘I a large stock of g
3 USED BOOKS at a 25% SAVING! g
E Acctg. 301—25 used copies Geol. 100, 104—365 used copies *P.E. 140—93 used copies g
E *ACdQ- 570—15 used capies Geol. 105—135 used copies Phys. 191—91 used copies E
g Anthro. 100—200 used copies Germ. 121, 122—95 used copies Phys. 231—250 used copies E
E Anthro. 121—125 used copies Hist. 108—485 used copies P.S. 151—620 used copies 2
E Art 200 8: 203—75 used copies Hist. 109—150 used copies P.S. 200—20 used copies E
E Beh. Sci. 212—70 used copies Hist. 208—28 used copies P.S. 265—60 used copies E
E *B.A. 330—190 used copies Hist. 229—70 used copies P.S. 280—65 used copies 2
g *B.A. 332—25 used copies Hist. 285—21 used copies P.S. 552—40 used copies E
E *B.A. 335—165 used copies Hist. 295—10 used copies Psych. 104—900 used copies E
E B.A. 341—70 used copies Hist. 523—15 used copies Psych. 200—85 used copies E
E *B.A. 345—132 used copies Hist 525—30 used copies Psych. 201—30 used copies 3
E B.A. 450—16 used copies Hist. 534—-24 used copies Psych. 509—12 used copies E
E Chem. 100—45 used copies Hist. 574—22 used copies *Psych. 521-1—17 used copies E
3 *Chem. 102—235 used copies Hist. 57—26 used copies Psych. 521-2—35 used copies E
3 Chem. 110—326 used copies H.E. 120—27 used copies Psych. $23—25 used copies E
E Econ. 207—90 used copies H. E. 206—20 used copies ' Psych. 535—30 used copies E
E Econ. 402——65 used copies H. E. 255-—40 used copies Psych. 544—30 used copies g
E Econ. 504—60 used copies““‘” H. E. 261—20 used copies Psych. 550-1—23 used copies E
E Econ. 530—16 used copies H. E. 358——25 used copies Psych. 550-2—15 used copies 2
g *Econ. 534—15 used copies H. E. 361—25 used copies R. T. V. 101—60 used copies E
“g B.O.E. 117 8. 118—70 used copies H. E. 402—20 used copies R. T. V. 201—12 used copies 2
E *B.O.E. 445—22 used copies H. E. 562—25 used copies S.W. 222—28 used copies 3
E Educ. 324-1—41 used copies Hy .110—315 used copies S.W. 505—14 used copies g
E Educ. $44—52 used copies .501—17 used copies S.W. 540—10 used copies 2
E C.E. 100—16 used copies Jougr.101—78 used copies Soc. 151—230 used copies E
g C.E. 206—20 used copies *Jour. 501—17 used copies Soc. 220—‘190 used copies 2
5'3“: *E.E. 415—20 used copies Jour. 561—25 used copies Soc. 240—85 used copies g
E E.M. 222—35 used copies *Math. 111—100 used copies Soc. 501—25 used copies ;__f
:3: E.M. 322—20 used copies Math. 122—210 used copies Soc. 509-1—25 used copies E
E M.E. 105——45 used copies Math. 201—65 used copies Soc. 509-2—25 used copies E
E M. E. 220—50 used copies *Math. 222—35 used copies Soc. $25—18 used copies :-
2 Eng I. 105—175 used copies *Math. 431—30 used copies Soc. 531—24 used copies E
E *Eng I. 161—71 used copies Micro. 500—15 used copies Soc. 532—16 used copies 3
g Engl. 203—140 used copies Music 170—45 used copies Soc. 581—8 used copies g
E Eng I. 221—215 used copies Music 200—190 used copies Spa. 211—40 used copies E
E Eng I. 222—84 used copies Music 260—65 used cepies Spa. 241—75 used copies E
E Engl. 509—50 used copies Music 261—50 used copies Ital. 191—30 used copies 2
E Fr. 201—100 ea. used copies Music 272—15 used copies T.A. 292—12 used copies g
E Geog 151—110 used copies Pharm. 856—24 used copies Zoo. 200—60 used copies E
g Geog. 152—247 used copies Phil. 220—95 used copies Zoo. 502—16 used copies 2
g * Books for these courses have never been used at UK. 2
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6“— THL KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, August 28,

 

 

 

 

New Approach To Sculpture

Up until the Twentit-th Century. xt'ulptun‘
meant the photograph—like representation ofa man.
a hurw. or \n l(lt‘.t \\.i\
new-r rcprt‘xt‘ntcdi .‘.l;in\ (‘\[).|ll\l()llll|ttlll1t‘rt‘.lllll\
of scicnu- also heralded a nt-w approach in sculir
ture‘ as (-2111 he seen an this page. 4

Sou-n sturlentx in the Departnwnt (it l’int' Arts
\mrkml all summer in a xt'ulpturo \\’t)l’l(\ll<)1> ltlltlt‘l
thc (lin-t-tiun of Michael Hall. The Sunum-r Si 1in-
turv \Vurlohnp “as unlimitwl III tht'
\t'ulptun; .uul (with all the \tutlvnh twink .1 tlll
h-rvnt art lHt’leVVltlllIl tlw R‘dllH Ul tlu- glintu

\‘Ulllt‘ ('4 MIL lt'lt' ”lilt't'l

mmlt- ml

. fi'
,» ' 13“.,
‘ ‘ '
‘I‘WW’WBO-le’ ~-clc.-'-|Ln'v'tvuvo.a\r\"‘-_.i).A .‘ ..
A_A ‘ ‘4.

art.» Some.- stutlt-ntx used hronux others usetlfiber—
glass, plcxiglasx. and steel, and one used ”It”
ancient method of lmt wax to product the sculp
turt- \m-n in thv tut) [)lt‘llllt'K .it tln- top ()l tlu-
page

'l‘hc \xurltx \\t‘lt \lumu liixt Mn lllt‘ Spintllvtnp
llt'V'dlkll (,r-ntw gimuulx. lhm \xilllytigam 1",
shown at l,nuis\illv\ Sprawl \luwuni Sept 10
through 17

Stan \lmL l\ \lwun