xt72542j9s19 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72542j9s19/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-09-29 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, September 29, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 29, 1967 1967 1967-09-29 2024 true xt72542j9s19 section xt72542j9s19  

THE KENTUCKY

Friday Afternoon, Sept. 29, 1967

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

KERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 24

 

 

A Yell-In?

 
   

Kerrie by DIckWare

Members of Kappa Delta sorority were among those who gathered to yell and cheer the Wildcats at a'
pep assembly Thursday night in Memorial Coliseum. Students turned out to boost the team in its
home opener eflort Saturday against the University of Missinippi.

 

‘Cultural Shock” And Brotherhood
Keynote Youth’s Visit To Enemy

EDITOR’S NOTE: Ray Mungo,
former editor of the Boston Uni-
versity News, participated in a
meeting of a group of Americans
with North Vietnamese and
members of the National Libera-
tion Front (often called the Viet-
cong). This is the first of two
articles for Libertaion News
Service reporting on that meet-
mg.

By RAYMOND MUNGO
The Collegiate Press Service

BRATISLAVA, Czechoslo—
vakia—“Lyndon Johnson will
have a nightmare when he hears

News Analysis

about this meeting," said Tom
Hayden to 40 Americans and an
equal number of North Viet-
namese and members of the
National Liberation Front.

 

 

“He will have a nightmare
because he has sent 500,000
men to your land to fight the
Vietcong," added Hayden, a

former leader of Students for a
Democratic Society.

“We will tell him he'd better
leave some men at home. Be-
cause, like Spartacus, whose
fellow slaves in Rome protected
his' hiding place by each claim-
ing to be Spartacus, I am the
Vietcong. We are everywhere.
We are all the Vietcong.”

And on that note, the first
major meeting between Ameri-
cans and the “enemies" of their
government ended on Sept. 13
after 10 days of cultural shock.
political programs and fraternal
exchanges. The American dele-
gation, led by Dave Dellinger,
editor of Liberation magazine,
and including blacks, communitv
organizers, American friends.
artists, clergymen and full-time
peace movement workers, was
moved and at times incredulous
at the Vietnamese morale and
willingness to resist in the face
of monstrous military force.

The Vietnamese. for their
part, recognize the relative
smallness of the antiwar move-

ment but foresee its growth as
the ultimate ufitm to US.
intervention in \their afiairs.

Dellinger Embraced
"We can speak to you, dear
friends, as brothers,” began
Nguyen Minh Vy, chairman of
the northern delegation, as he
threw his arms around Dellinger.

Gifts were exchanged, or
more properly, lavished, as
each side delighted in pleasing
the other. Books, sketches of
South Vietnam produced on
elaborate underground “libera-
tion presses," phonograph rec-
ords, pins, rings made of debris
from downed U.S. planes, cloth-
ing, letters from captured U.S.
pilots for delivery to their
families, antiwar pins, books,
pamphlets and little black dolls.

A wizened sixtyish Vietnam-
ese woman (who kept asking
“when the women will all get
together”) grins broadly, point-
ing to her SDS badge.

Continued on Page 9, Col. 1

Quebec Students

MONTREAL (CPS-CUP)—Three students rep-
resenting the National Liberation Front of Viet-
nam were roundly hissed and booed as they at-
temped to address a crowd of 900 rowdy students
in Montreal Thursday.

Sponsored by the Union Generale des Etudiants
du Quebec (UGEQ) on a two-week speaking
tour of Quebec, the students made their first
public appearance before an overflow crowd at
Sir George Williams University.

The crowd was antagonistic from the moment
the student speakers entered the hall.

After unsuccessfully trying to explain their
view of the war, the trio was forced to cancel a
scheduled question period.

Wanted ‘To Explain’

At a press conference at Dorval Airport
Wednesday, Lyuan Sou, the group spokesman,
said the primary purpose in coming to Quebec
was to explain the situation in Vietnam.

The Sir George crowd wouldn’t listen.

Lyuan Sou said "We are a small country,
smaller than the state of Florida and no bigger
than Vancouver island. For 4,000 years we have
been in constant struggle. We have waged wars
against invaders to defend our rights to peace
and freedom and happiness.”

H iss NLF Group

He explained that in recent years the wars
have involved first the French. then the Ameri-
cans, and he offered a catalogue of atrocities
of the war in Vietnam.

"We are just a small people who are being
killed by bombs, whose women are being violated
and whose homes are being destroyed. We
admire the American students who now bravely
pronounce themselves against this iniustice."

Freedom 'Denied’

ELong live the friendships of our people,” he
sax .

UGEQ President Pierre LeFrancois said Que
bec students support the struggle of the NLF.

Sir George External Vice President Jean Sicotte
said of the disturbances created by the students:
“Freedom of speech is a basic right in a demo-
cratic society. Students at Sir George have denied
that right in the name of democracy.”

“I am ashamed,” he said.

The other members of the group are Miss
Ngeum Ngok Eung and Mr. Le May. All three
said they were students before the war.

They are now working in the student section
oftheNLF,whichistlupdliealai-mdtho
Viet Cong.

Mayor Asks Funds

For College Cities,
Citing High Costs

OWENSBORO—Lexington Mayor Fred E. F ugazzi's proposal
to have the State Legislature levy a “fee in lieu of taxes" for cities
with state-supported colleges was unanimously endorsed Thursday
by the Kentucky Municipal League.

Need for the funds arose
from the “increased costs of
urban services" generated by
the students, faculty and staff
of a college or university, Mr.
F ugazzi told The Kernel.

“It would not be a personnel
fee by any means," said the
mayor. “It would be a request
before the legislature to help
cities provide the urban services
needed by a university.”

By urban services, Mayor
Fugazzi means fire and city
police protection and sanitation
services.

The matter has got to be re—
searched, he said, but the “costs
are there” nonetheless. He said
the University is accommodating
25,000 students, faculty mem-
bers, employes and visiting
scholars and teachers, and pre—
dicted that by 1980 the Uni-
versity population would total
40,000.

The extra funding to colleges
and universities would not
necessarily cut the amount al-
located to such institutions by
the legislature. “It would prob-
ablv mean extra funds," Mr.
Fugazzi said.

Unanimous Approval

He made the proposal, in
the form of a resolution, before
the Kentucky Municipal League
Wednesday. Unanimous ap—
proval came Thursday, the last
day of the group's meeting here.

Such legislation, if passed,
would provide funds to Lexing-
ton, Bowling Green, Murray,
Richmond, Morehead and
Frankfort, as well as the nine
cities with the University's
Community Colleges.

Stating his resolution before
the body on Wednesday, Mayor
Fugazzi said the money could
come in the form of a fee on
non-local students, visitors and
employes not paying property
taxes to the community, or by
diverting part of the univer-
sity's legislative appropriation.

When asked whether this fee
rould be extended to other

property-tax-exempt institutions
such as hospitals, Mayor Fu-
gazzi said, “It is conceivable."

"There’s no greater friend of
the University than me," said
Mr. Fugazzi, adding that his
resolution was no reflection or
criticism of the University.

“VVe‘re iust trying to mind
the costs of urban services,” he.
said. and the resolution re-
ceived 100 percent endorse-
ment.’

Kentuckian

Barred From
Dorm Sales

The Kentuckian, official year-
book of the University, its pro-
duction budget cut from $24,000
to $15,000, under pressure to
match the total sales figure of
3A!) of last year, hasbeenbarred
from direct sales in the dorm-
itories and cafeterias of the Uni-
versity.

“We just found out Thursday
that our staff will no longer be
permitted to sell the yearbook in
the dormitories and cafeterias,
says Tom Craler, editor of the
1968 Kentuckian.

"According to Rosemary Pond
and Jack Hall, direct sale in the
dorms and cafeterias amounts to
coercing students to buy a year-
book," Crater said.

”It is strange that after all
these years direct sale of The
Kentuckian in the dorms and
cafeterias has been discovered to
be a form of coercion. Every grad-
uating senior is required to buya
Kentuckian. That is coercion. But
the presence of our salesmen in
the dorms and cafeterias is not
coercion," Graler says.

Planned distribution of the
1967 Kentuckian during the week
of Oct. 2—6 and a planned cam-
paign have been cancelled.

The office of student affairs
is willing to permit sales to take

Continued on Page 8, 00L 3

 

All of the landscape now- has been com-
pleted and this is how the grave of late

President John F. Kennedy in Arlington,
Va., National Cemetery looks in an aerial
view made Se“. 25. The late President
and two if his children are buried in the

recto-gulls section at loves nIhL' (UPI

1W

 

 2—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept. 29, 1967

 

 

 

 

  
 

"B EST

 

ADULTS ONLY!
STARTS 7:30 — ADM. $1.25

PICTURE

OF THE YEAR!"

 
  
 

__ plus-:—

TIONAL SOCIETY OF FILM CRITICS'II

“ON E OFTHE
YEAR’S 10
BEST FILMS!”

MN. TIMES. NX. KBT
NEWSWEEK

SATURDAY REVIEW

A Carlo Ponti Production

Michelangelo Antonioni’s

BLOW-UP

Vanessa Redgrave
David Hemmings - Sarah Miles

L Recommended for Mature Audiences]
A Premier Production: Co, Inc. Release

 

 

fibrils—“noti— iiinuii'” '

~13-

 

‘The Entertainer’ Opens Oct. 11
With Fortieth Season Underway

”The Entertainer" is coming
to entertain you.

The "Department of Theatre
Arts will open its fortieth season
with the production of John Os-
borne's “The Entertainer” Oct.
11-15.

The play originally opened
in London in 1957 and was later
produced in New York with Lau-
rence Olivier in the title role.The
play takes place at a seaside
resort in the north of England at
the time of the Suez crisis. Told
in the vaudeville style oftbirteen
scenes or ”turns." the play ex-
amines the character of Archie
Rice, a seedy vaudeville actor.
in the atmosphere of decaying
music hall grandeur.

No Newcomer

Playing Archie Rice. the tank
town vaudevillian on the down—

grade, is Bill Nave of Versail-
les. No new-comer to Lexington
audiences, Nave has previously
appeared in five UK productions.
Most recently Nave played Tony
in the Frank Loesser musical.
”The Most Happy Fella."

Bekki J0 Schneider will play
Phoebe. Archie's forlorn and
shabby wife who lives in past
gaiety, present misery and clouds
her troubled existence with a fog
of gin. Miss Schneider has ap-
peared professionally with the
Triangle Theatre in Durham.
North (Iarolina, and with the
USO. This summer she was resi-
dent actress with L'K's (lenien—
nial Theatre.

Last Seen In Vermont

Another Centennial Theatre
resident actress. Elizabeth Hoag-
land. will play Jean. Archie‘s

loyal and understanding dau-
ghter. Miss Hoagland has also
appeared professionally with the
Caravan Theatre in Dorset, Ver-
mont.

Billy Rice, Archie's father—
the grand old pro of vaudeville,
will be played by Gene Arkle. Mr.
Arkle has worked with Danville's
Pioneer Playhouse and locally
with Studio Players. He has ap-
peared in three UK productions.

Frank. Rice, the Rices' son,
will be played by Bryan Harri-
son. .\ir. Harrison last appeared
as Bobin in Centennial's "An
ltalian Straw Hat." He has been
in four L'K productions.

Larry Auld plays the role of
Graham Dodd. Jean's boyfriend.
A native of Hialeah. Florida,
Mr. Auld has worked in pro-
ductions of "My Three Angels"
and "Finian's Rainbow." As a
member of the Centennial The—
atrc company at UK he appeared
in three prrxluctions.

Student Tickets 32 and SI

Brother Bill. Archie's older
brother. is played by Howard
linoch. .\Ir. I‘Inocb has appeared
professionally with the Caravan
Theatre in Dorset. Vermont. and
with l.c\ingtou\(chtcnnial The-
.itrc.

”The Entertainer" will bc (ll'

 

 

rccted by “allacc N. Briggs Wllll

DAY TAYLOR GODFREY G\.

MEVQOCULOR

FAN-1‘. iSION

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Adni. $1.25

TONIGHT!

"WHA T’S UP FRONT”

Jerry Tessem .
sYotanda Marino
*Ann Lindsay

John Osborne's play "The Entertainer" opens the 40th season of

UK Theatre Art's productions. Pictured from left to right are Ccnc

Arkle, Bckki Jo Schneider. Bryan Harrison. and Elizabeth Hoag-
land rehearsing a scene from the play.

BONUS FEATURE TONIGHT 8. SAT.

 

 

Atlmersai Release

TECHN|COLOR® TECHNISCOPE®

 

 

  

M ,r
succuvro roe MATURE AUDtENCiS

 

 

 

 

 

h v

W~4
V _.-I \

 

 

and lighting designed by
(Iharlcs (Lriinslcy. The bo\ officc
will opcn on October 4. Ticket
prices will bc $3 and SI for stu-
dents.

scts

PERSPECTIVE: FUTURE AND PAST
CENTENNIAL THEATRE IS BRIGHT

By MITCHELL DOUGLAS

Let's look back now that the
third season of Centennial The-
atre. Lexington's professional
summer theatre, has drawn to
a close.

Is it a worthwhile program?
Definitely. and a roar of hur-
rahs should be given tothe group
for a job well done. Louisville
Times critic Dudley Saunders
called the summer theatre spon-
sored by the UK Department of
Theatre Arts, “the best thing
to happen to Kentucky summer
theatre in years."

Jean Dietrich of the Louis-
ville (Jourier—Journal wrote. "If
regional theatres . . . are to keep
theatre alive in the L'nited States,
the Centennial players . . . make
a good argument for the case.“

Are people coming to see the
summer stock:J Yes. and accord-
ing to managing director (Ibarles
Dickens the future looks bright.
Dickens pointed out that al-
though attendance was secondary
to the professional and educa-
tional objectives, there was a con—
siderable increase in attendance
this summer.

 

E:

 

  

A MAtABRi
STORY OF TWO
MOTORtYCLE
RIDING,
KNIFE-WIEIDING.
AXE-SWINGING,
SCALPEt-FIASHING.
MID-THROWING,
GUN-SHOOTING,

, CHAIN-lASHING.
ARM-TWISTING,
SHIV 'SHAVING,
NECK-WRINGING,
EYE-GOUGING,
BONE-BREAKING,

' PATHOLOGKAI
NUTS AND THEIR

. PM THE

' UNDERTAKER...

HF

   
  
 

 

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”The number of regular cus-
tomers increased. indicating that
Centennial Theatre is becoming
a regular habit with more and
more people." he added.

The director continued. ”The
third season is often the crucial
season for a program of this
type for the novelty factor has
worn off and audiences expect
significant growth and develop—
ment."

The novelty didn‘t seem to
wear off this summer as the at-
tendance from the Central Ken-
tucky area climbed.

”Professional" Job

Founded in 1965. the (Zen-
tcnuial Theatre apprentice corn-
pany has grown from ten tomorc
than 20 apprentices working in
all phases of production. The
group presented their first musi-
cal “Stop the World . . . .. this
summer utilizing a full orchestra
and importing a guest star and
choreographer.

Looking ahead Dickens said.
“In most rcspcits thcscasonthat
just cndcd was our most proicsi
sional to (hill: and thc lcssolls
lcarncd in thc last tbrcc ycars
should hopefully Icsult in an
c\cit|ng and maturc iourth sca
son.

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lex-
ingtor. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly durinl the
school year except holidays and exam
periods. and once during the summer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Office Box 4986.

Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.

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 —— $9.27
Per copy. from files —- $.10

KERNEL TELEPHONES

Editor, Managing Editor ......... 3321
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors. Sports ...... 2320
4.: News Desk ...................... 2M7
Advertising. Business.
‘ 2319
W vv .i

 

 

 

fftrculatton ....................

  

ifhe

:Frog

By JOE HINDS
Kernel Arts Editor
(Note: The following fairy tale is the first in a series designed
to put this style of writing back on the market. This story should

counterbalance the adults only
an adult, read no farther.
Once upon a time

movies when I say,
You won't want to understand it.
there was a frog who got the hell out.

If you are

He got away from the hoppies, the wart- -in s and the croak-
outs. He firmly told his friends before hopping Off that peanut-
butter-fIavored yogurt wasn't camp anymore.

‘ (,ronk, gronk

his grokker friends said as he left because he

had sold his lily pad to a cat who thought he was a frog. His
neighbors were disgusted when they heard that a stranger was

moving in next to them.

And what made it worse was the fact

that the new frog citizen was diff.erent He wasn t a beautiful green

like they were

H‘Illt frog traveled for miles before he came to the city limits.
The first person he met was a lady selling hats.

”,Oh you poor beast
can you survive

It s easy,

interrupted the frog.

' she drooled. How can you live? How

“ithout one of my psychedeliL hats” It s the newest kick and
may body s buying one. just look at the panther pink the orange—

IIIIL ( orange.

' (.ronk.

said the frog as he hopped off He saw a man walking

do“ 11 a beath path and bounced over to meet him

He introduced himself very politLly

Hi I in the frog

Ihe man smiled and put his right forefinger around the frog s

baLk.
Oh yes. l see. Is it sharp?"
”Certainly.
frog into little pieces.

Let me show you.“

Hi frog. I have a sLythe here ‘

And the friendly man cut the

Wendell Berry Writes

About Kentucky Town

A new novel by Wendell Berry, assistant professor of English

at the L111versity of Kentucky.
court. Brace a World Iuc.,

Entitled ”A Place on I‘Iarth.”
the BBQ-page novel depicts life
in the Kentucky town of "Port
William“ during World War II.

Frances .\Ionsou. writing in
the Book of the Month Club
News, says: "With the publica-
tion of this, his second novel,
it becomes clear he (Berry) is a
novelist of distinction and power.
Ile has a profound feeling for
place, for the land and the peo—
ple who live close to it. His
portrait of Port William and its

IE2©ILAINI

will be published Sept.
New York.

27 by Har-

residents is (Irawn in strong, lyri—
cal, quietly evocative prose that
compensates in its richness for
the book's inordinate length. ‘A
Place on Earth' is a particularly
American novel and as such
should be read for years to come.”

A native of Henry County.
Berry attended Millersburg Mil-
itary Institute, graduating in
1952. He received his bachelor
of arts and master of arts degree
from UK.

ID§

 

I 26 E. Main Street
Lexington, Kentucky 40507

ll not deliverable, do not return

PRIVATE

Sale
Days:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
October
2—3—4

1‘ THE KENTUCKY K,ERNEL Friday, 51:91 29,1961'13

Six Symphony Concerts Coming,
Orchestra Performs 1st Sunday

The University of Kentucky
Symphony Orchestra, under the
direction of Phillip Miller, opens
its 1967—68 season Sunday, Octo-
ber I, with a concert at 3 pm.
in Memorial Hall.

This will be the first in a
series of six concerts to be pre-
sented by the orchestra.

Featured soloist for the pro—
gram will be pianist Robert Floyd
of Northern Illinois University.
He will perform Brahms' ”Con-
certo for Piano and Orchestra
No. 2 in Bb, Opus 83."

ONE, TWO, THREE . . .

‘Telemark’ Next
Movie At SUB

”The Heroes
starring Kirk Douglas is replac—
ing ”Flower Drum Song" as this
weekend's movie in the Student

l Center Theatre.

The movie is about nine Nor-
way resistance fighters who at—
tempt a daring feat of sabotage.
They have orders to sink a Ger-
man ship carrying heavy water
for a Nazi bomb.

Show times are Friday and
Saturday at 6:30 pm. and 9:15
p.111. It starts 3 pm. Sunday.

SALE DAYS

You Get First Choice of EVERYTHING . . .
before we release this Sale to the public.
Soon you'll see our newspaper ads head-
lining the same GlGANTtC VALUES that
are in your hands right now! The savings
in this store-wide event are among the
greatest we’ve ever offered!

Come Early!
Don't Miss Any Part of

this Anniversary Sale!
UK COED DAY— Saturday, Sept. 30
Come In, We'll Be Looking For You!

 

 

—Phillip Miller conducts the UK Sym-
phony Orchestra in preparation for their opening performance
Sunday at 3 p.m. in Memorial Hall.

of Telemark”

He holds Bachelor’s and Mas-
ter's degrees from North Texas
State University and "the Doc-
torate of Music in Performance
from Indiana University, and has
studied with Silvio and Isabel
Scionti and Sidney Foster.

Completing the program will
be Bossini's ”Overture to the
Barber of Seville” and Hinde-
miths ‘Symphony in Eb Ma—
jor.

Floyd won the National Guild
of Piano Teachers' Young Art-
ists Competition in 1962 and has
combined a career as a concert
artist and teacher. He earned

Capitol Exhibit

A11 art exhibit entitled The
Face of Kentucky Will, be 011
display in the rotunda of the
Capitol in Frankfort Oct. 2
through Nov. 12.

The exhibition, featuring 53
works by Kentuckians, isthe first
in a series of exhibits sponsored
by the Kentucky Arts Commis—
sion. Works range from oil paint—
ings to fabric collages.

a:

critical approval for his three re-
citals in New York Citst Town
Hall and for two series of reci—
tals in Mexico.

 

FLOWERS

For Any
Occasion

CALL

MICHLER
FLORIST

Dial 254-0383
417 East Maxwell

 

 

GIRLS!
WANT THE NEW LOOK?
VISIT THE BEAUTY NOOK!

442V2 S. Ashland
266-6429

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

S P E C I A L
SPORTSWEAR SALE

just at the beginning
of the season!

   

0 TRANSITIONAL DRESSES
Famous name. Originally $19 to $23,
now 'A off

FAMOUS NAME

' SKIRTS—wool, a-line, pleated; solids,
plaids, checks, herringbone. Orig. $11
to $l5. Now S8 to $11

' SWEATERS—wooI—long sleeve, belt-
ed pullover; short sleeve pullover;
classic v-neck pullover; long sleeve
skirt sweater; fisherman knits; long
sleeve striped pullover. Orig. $10
to $16. Now $7 to $12

' JACKETS —— wool—single breasted,
nortolk; checked, herringbone. Orig.
$20 to $22. Now $15 to $18

' SUITS—wool—single breasted, nor-
folk; checked, herringbone. Orig. $35.
Now $26.

' SLACKS and BERMUDAS -——- wool,
solids, checks, herringbone. Orig. $9
to $14. Now $7 to $10.

I

ON-THE-CAMPUS
Across from Holmes Hall

 

 

  

l
4-—'I‘HE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept. 29, 1967

 

llllllllllflllllll ,
, 4/,» IIHHIIIIINIIIIIJIIINII. I ’
,~' . ‘ ‘

llll

mug; MAN ON CAMPUS

   
 

D
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- 1 all

 

. _/
/ ¢.//‘V’.« ‘1:
my; _ -..,

'I 05.1ch THIé u

 

 

 

 

 

 

CAMPUS NEWS BRIEFS

 

 

 

 

 

 

     

we or Quesnomne, Worm." ‘

 

The Ribby Knit is Top Fashion

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hand-Knit it in Orlon®

Free instructions!

You’re all ribbed up and ready to go anywhere. A pair
of knitting needles and "Wintuk” yarn of 100°/o Orlon'
acrylic that washes by hand or machine and won't felt or
shrink is all you need except for free instructions
which are obtainable by sending a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to: Room 1806CN2, National Hand Knitting Yarn
Association, Inc., 1 5 East 26 St., New York, N. Y. 10010.

Q Du Pont registered TM

 

 

 

 

DETROIT
PUBLIC SCHOOLS

WILL INTERVIEW TEACHERS .IN

LEXINGTON

ON

OCTOBER 21, I967

See Your Placement Office For Details f

”‘03 :5.th
._ ..

 

 

Splinter Hall will not be re-
placed in the near future, ac-
cording to R. E. Shaver, director
of the Physical Plant Develop-

ment Division.
The site is being resodded.
O O O

The UK Research Founda-
tion has received a grant of
$427,569 from the U. S. Public
Health Service.

The grant is the fourth in a
series of six. it is to finance the
General Clinic Research Center,
a disease-research unit located
in the Medical Center.

Dr. William W. Winterwitz,
professor of medicine, is the
program director.

O O O

A Cabot Laboratory for re-

search in the geological sciences

has been transferred from the

Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology to the University, Dr.
Wiilliam H. Dennen, chairman
of the Department of Geology
and former director of the
laboratory at MIT, has an-
nounced.

Established at MIT in 1954
as a gift from the Cabot Founda-
tion in honor of Godfrey L.
Cabot. industrialist and finan-
cier, the laboratory is to be used
for research dealing with routine

analysis and spectrographic re-

search in the geological sciences.

Directed by Dr. William H.
Blackburn, UK assistant pro-
fessor of geology, with the help
of one graduate student, the
laboratory will be housed in
Kastle Hall. It will have four
spectrographs with power
sources, a large amount of
physical and chemical prepara-

tions, microscopes, a Laser
microprobe and microphoto-
meters.

O O O

If you're a UK coed from
India. there's a place waiting
for you in the campus India
Association.

The club at its Sunday night
meeting found itself with an all-
male attendance. To correct the
situation, Dr. Divakar Bhat-
tacharya, the president, invites
all Indian students and pro-
fessors to contact him.

O O O

A cast has been selected for
Prestonsburg Community Col-
lege's production of "The
Fantasticks."

Sam Bittman, Eileen Bittman,
John Mochnick, Dick Cumm-
ings, Paul Cox, Gary Parr, Clay
Coebeler and Devon Scalf will
be featured.

Production dates are Oct. 20-
21 and 27-28.

1 4

 

The Year of The Turtle by Villager

Part of the wittiest coordinating of the
season begins with the just right sweater
by Villager. A whole array of colors and
styles await you. And of course we have
coordinating skirts, slacks, dresses and
suits. Sweater sketched $15.

,. 1c. - WM”. "'90-

-i‘

 

Fred Weikel, Cincinanti En-
quirer columnist, notes that
members of the Greater Cin-
cinnati Club of the UK Alumni
Association voted to uphold the
UK Marching 100's playing of
“Dixie" at football games.

”It is one of the reasons I go
to the football games," said the
alumnus who promoted the Vote.
“ ‘Dixie' is part of our tradi-

tion."
O O O

The first speaker in the newly
inaugurated colloquium series of
the Department of Library
Science will be Prof. Theodore
Melnechuck, director of com-
munications of the Neuro-
sciences Research Program at
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.

Prof. Melnechuck will speak
at 1 pm. Friday in room 245
of the Student Center.

The founding director of Bos-
ton University's graduate pro-
gram in science communications,
Prof. Melnechuck also is tech-
nical advisor of the multi-
disciplinary-multimedia s t u d y
plan at the University of Cali—
fornia, San Diego.

Peace Corps
Volunteers

Train At UK

Fifty Pgace Corps volunteers
presently" are being trained at
the University through the Cen-
ter for Developmental Change.

The volunteers pimarily will
be family extension educators
in Bihar State, India. They
will be working with Indian
counterparts at the block, or
village level, with a few possibly
working at the district level.

The Peace Corps training
program was contracted through
the government.

Wesley Leach, training di-
rector, said that the govem-
ment’s interest in the University
as a training center is primarily
because of the interest of
the Center for Developmental
Change in planning and design-
ing Peace Corps training pro-
grams.

Mr. Leach said to obtain a
contract for training Peace
Corps volunteers the center
formulates a training program
and budget. The program then
is approved by the Peace Corps
and is financed through the gov-

emment.

The initial request for volun-
teers came from the Bihar State
Government.

The training will cover ap-
proximately 11 weeks, the first
three weeks spent in intensive
studv of the Hindi language.

Mr. Leach said the volun-
teers will have approximately
400 hours of actual class time
and possess a functional Hindi
vocabulary of about 5000 words.

Four additional weeks of
training will be conducted at
Rajgir, India to give the volun-
teers their first experience in
Indian villages. It will also give
them a chance to adjust them-
selves to the change in climate

and food.

Each Peace Corps volunteer
serves two years exclusive of
the training period.

Present plans call for the
volunteers to be in Bihar State
by Jan. 1, 1968.

 

 Law Hubpbies Gain Assistance

By GLENNA ADAMS

Earning a law degree is
never simple, but for some men
the way is being made smoother
by an organization known as
the Wives Auxiliary of the Stu-
dent Bar Association. The pur-
pose of the Wives Auxiliary,
according to Mrs. Charles
Wheeler, president, is “to as-
sist the Student Bar whenever
called upon, especially in the
areas of social and group func-
tions.”

The main interest of each of
the approximately 200 members
is to be of assistance to their
husbands who are working for
law degrees. Each semester one
of the wives is chosen to re-
ceive the H.H.T. (Helping
Hubby Through) award for out-
standing assistance ,in the
auxillary's social functions.

The Wives Auxiliary meets
on the third Tuesday of each
month for a planned program
concerning things of interest to

Grades And Money Mix For A Few

By BOB BROWN

Have you ever pondered the
irony that in the years when
you need money most (18-22)
you are least able to earn it?
This becomes a problem only
when the folks are unable or
unwilling to pay the cost of
education plus the necessary
weekly allowance.

if this is your case, you may
consider joining the growing
ranks of students who work part-
time during the school year. M.
C. Foushee, director of the Stu-
dent Employment Agency, esti—
mates that from l,400-1,600
students work part time through
his oflice, this in addition to
those who have secured jobs on
their own.

You may gape in amazement
if you’re sweating out a 2.1
with your 15 hours and en-
counter someone like Bob Valen-
tine. Bob, a senior history major,
not only pulls three-point
semesters habitually, but works
20-30 hours a week as a dorm
adviser, spending at least seven
weekends each semester on the
road with the debate team, and
devoting 2 to 4 afternoons week-
ly to practice and research.

A social fraternity, an honor—
ary, and a political club occupy
most of his time in between.
Spare time? “It comes in handy
for sleeping," he said.

Other e x a m p l e s include
Charles Hodges, a senior music
major who works part-time for
the Fine Arts Department. Does
employment restrict his social
life? Evidently not, for (Ihoir-
isters, marching and symphonic
hands, Men's Glee Club, Phi
Mu Alpha (president), Alpha
Phi Alpha (past president),
Pythagorans Order of De Molays
(Kentucky president) are found
on his activities list.

john Lyons, a physchology
major from Monticello, man-
ages to support a wife and son,

Pisacano Heads
Student ‘Haven’

A ”haven for advice” now
exists in Bradley Hall for all
pre—med and pre-dental students.
It is steered by Dr. Nicholas
J. l’isacano. assistant dean of
the (Iollege of Arts and Sciences.

”1 don‘t want a student to
leave here saying he couldn't
get advice—if he wants it, that
is," Dr. l’isacano said.

Dr. l’isacano einphasizalthat
a student may continue to get
advice in his undergraduate col—
lege, but he wants all students
now in the pre—med or pre—den—
tal curriculum, or who may de-
cide on that course, to have a
”home base."

To dispell some of the myths
of undergraduate requirements is
one part of Dr. l’isacano‘s plan.
He pointed out that many stu-
dents think they need medical
German, when it is not required
in all cases.

Pre—med and pre-dental stu—
dents are urged to attend a short
meeting at 7 p.m., Friday, Sept.
29, in the Med Center An—
ditorium, sixth floor of the hos-
pital. Students are also urged
to make an appointment with Dr.
Pisacano by calling his office
in Bradley Hall.

carry a full class schedule and
work enough to pay for it all.

Inspiring examples of law
students by day, grease monkeys
by night and family men on
weekends are common. How do
they do it? Organization. Their
constant occupation is to make
every minute count.

Mr. Fouschee, h o w e v e r,
strongly discourages undergrad-
uates from working until they
have settled into academia.
Student loans are often pre-
ferable to jobs, but if you have
a two-point standing and a few
extra hours you would like to
convert into money, yo