xt78w950jx4m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78w950jx4m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640501  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May  1, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, May  1, 1964 1964 2015 true xt78w950jx4m section xt78w950jx4m Student Achievement Committee

Gap Debated At Hearing

Faculty-Stude- nt
By SUE ENDICOTT
Kernel Editor
Is it the responsibility

of the stu-o- r
the faculty, to bridge the grip
relationships?
.is was the center of debate
Wednesday night at the final student
achievement hearing held at the Faculty Club Lounge.
Suzanne Bellew, a sophomore psychology major, said that it is the student's
duty to get to know the faculty. There
should be some kind of things to make
the students want to become acquainted
with the faculty," she said.
Citing the idea of a community of
scholars, Bill Drescher, a member of the
committee, said that the formality of the
classroom does not develop a friendly

Some of the programs mentioned as
steps toward improving faculty-studeincluded the Blazer Hall
relationships
seminar and programs In other residence
halls where faculty members were invited
to dinner and to speak.
Of this type relationship, Dr. Stanley
Zyzniawskl, assoclnte professor of history,
said it Is "artificial hothouse fertilization."
He said that if students hpve a sincere
interest in the field they should sign up
acfor a course and that
tivities are making up for these omissions.
Joe Coughlin, a senior in commerce,
said that students must learn to discuss
Intellectual topics among themselves before attempting to establish a similar relationship among faculty members. He
aid:
"The basic fault lies In the student
body and the social pressures on students.

h

A

It

is considered 'uncool' to discuss philosophy while sitting In the Grille listening
to the Beatles."
It was agreed that there Is a stigma
attached to intellectual discussions among
the student body at the University. Suggestions for improving this included elimination of the social emphasis at freshman orientntion, attempts to make a student work harder in classes, and setting
up the honors program as an elite group.
Dr. William Carse, associate professor
of education, said, "Human behavior is
changed in light of models, and students
do not have an acceptable model."
II r. Ernest McDanlcl, professor of
education, said that the faculty has a
responsibility to help students find meaningful activities. At present, he said, "We
have a very rigid institution supplying the
needs of a dynamic group of students."
Also discussed was the role of an educational Institution.

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Centennial Committee
Submits Project List

The Student Centennial Committee has prepared a list
of tentative projects that have been submitted to the Cen
tennial office.
to be
6. A

J

LEXINGTON,

Limited University
accommodations for
stu.le.us have made a
ary change in policy
at this time.

housing
women
tempor-

feasible

The Dean of Women's Office
will permit women to live in
places other than University residences if and when they have
parental approval of the specific
on file in the
arrangements
dean's office, said Miss Doris
Beward, dean of women.
The University will still provide housing for women who request it, though It nicy mem
some crowding of conditions ar.d
the use of auxlh.ny living units.
S.noritiis will have tlie full
support of the Otike of the

i

KY

1

FRIDAY,

1,

1964

Eight Page

scholarship
arranged
by the Centennial Class and to
be the Centennial Scholarship.
7. Exhibits
in the fields of
physical and biological sciences
and in social sciences and
A
humanities.
of
publication
papers would be included in this
project.
According to Sandy Brock,
of the committee, the
detailed proposals will be made
to the president after a summer
planning meeting.
The summer meeting is scheduled for July 31 and Aug. 1 and 2.
Out of these proposals by the
student committee are expected
to cmie some of the major
Centennial events.

Dr. Oswald To Recommend
Closing University School

President John W. Oswald
told a special met ting of the
Executive Committee of the
Board of Trustees yesterday
that lie would recommend
closing University School at
the end of the current school
year.
President Oswald said that his
formal recommendation would be
made to the May meeting of the
Trustees but he felt it best that

Summer Kernel
Students Interested in working on the summer editions of
the Kernel will meet at 4 p.m.
Monday In Room 112 of the
Journalism Building. Staff positions will be open to students in all colleges of the
Vniversity and the Graduate
School. The Kernel will be published on Fridays from June 12
through July 24. Publication
will be by the offset process
instead of the present letterpress system.

Housing Applications Available;
Women May Live Off Campus
By BLITHE Rl'NSDORF
Assistant Campus Editor

I .N

Trustees To Decide In May

N

New officers of the Young Republicans Club are Carole McAllister,
vice president; left, Bill Arthur, president; Walt McGuhe, secretary;
Peyton Wells, treasurer.

The projects will be presented
to President John W. Oswald
after initial screening by the Centennial coordinator, Dr. J. W.
'terson.
le tentative proposals are:
A program for high school
.nlors including the already
planned AWS Leadership Conference for women and adding a
program for men.
2. An evaluation of student life
at the University.
3. An evaluation
by student
groups of faculty and classes.
4. A forum on political and
current affairs.
5. A colloquium for a selected
group of new freshmen.

social status," Dr. Zyzniewskl said.
Dr. Carse said that education han
become a commodity and that today all
education is preparation for a vocation.
Explaining the reason why students
do not emphasize intellectual pursuits. Dr.
Carse said, "Public schools serve to domesticate rather than educate. Peopla
naturally go outside the domesticating
factor."
The meeting Wednesday was the final
hearing for this year. The Faculty Committee of Student Achievement, headed
by Dr. J. W. Patterson, associate professor of English, will meet early this summer to formulate a report based on th
results of this hearing and the four hearings held last fall.
The report will be submitted to the)
Faculty Council sometime during the summer,
j

1XA
University of Kentucky
MAY

Vol. LV, No. 113

W

tft

"We don't exist to take the children
their parents' hands or to give them

tttn t s.Xr

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off

Dean of Women In enabling them
to reach maximum capacity In
their houses.
The temporary change to the
accompossibility of
modations for women is solely dependent on the number of students requiring housing. At this
time the number ot incoming student applications already received shows enough of an increase
to make such a move not only
feasible, but necessary.
The new proposed dormitory
complex, expected to be completed In several years, will make
the need for women to live In
town housing unnecessary in the
future.
or filinqt regular
The dates
University liou.stn
uppli.utims
h.'.ve also been announced by the
Dean of Women's Office.

Regular

housing

applications

muil be filed regardless of

wheth-

er a student plans to live in residence or not. On these applications there will be a place to indicate what the student's housing plans are for the fall.
The applications will be available Monday and will be accepted by the Office of the Dean of
Women beginning May 15. The
deadline for students who are
now living in campus housing
to establish priority over new
students is June 1.
All applications must be submitted by August 1. No housing
application for t lie Women's
Halls for the fall semester
will be accepted after this date.
The completed
housing requests may be sent to Miss Lyons
in thi) Dean of Women's OU.ce.

the Board and the parents and
students of the school be informed of his feelings now.
In his statement to the Board,
the president said, "The University increasingly has had to evaluate all phases of its total operation in terms of their
to programs of excellence." Dr. Oswald pointed out
that the University School kindergarten closed in 1&61 and that
the elementary grades were discontinued in 1962.
The school now contains only
the four high school grades and
are enrolled this
171 students
semester. Of these, 28 are graduating seniors and 32 are in tlv.
Junior class.
Dr. Oswald said he had studied
all phases of the operation of the
school and his thought all along
has been to "close or double" the
school. The enrollment of the
school is too small for the school
to offer either a quality program
for its own student body or for
education students enrolled in the
I'niversity, he explained.
"We must ask. 'What business
is the University in?'," Dr. Oswald said. He said that his continued belief is that the school
is no longer in "the mainline
function of the University."
He pointed out that the money
and spare used for the school are
needed for "matters that are absolutely more germane" to the
overall University program.
Dr. Oswald said he was willing
to meet with parents of this
year's University High Junior
class to discuss the possibilities
of operating a program for those
students that will be seniors next
year. He set 7:30 next Tuesday
night as a time when he would
meet with all Interested parents
to
tbout his recommendation
close the school.
In announcing his decision, the
president said that the school
costs the I'niversity $192,000 a
year to operate and that the
I'niversity realizes (15.390 a year
In tuition. Currently tuition is $55
a semester.
Dr. Oswald said that the figures showed the state was required to spend $1,040 per student each e.ir to keep the University School open.
In pointing out the Investment tied up in the University

High building, the president men
tioned "Splinter Hall" (the Social Sciences Building) and said
that "some of our most dlstln-- .
gulshed professors are over there"
when the University had a building worth $800,000 tied up for tha
University School.
Dr. Ellis Hartford, professor oC
education who will become Dean
for the Community Colleges July
1, said that the University school
could not even provide the facilities for students to do their ob
servation in the school.

Penny Night
Collects $373
The recent Penny-a-Miute Night, sonsored by tha
Associated Women's Students,
collec ted S373.(iO. The figure
were announced by Assistant
Pean of Women Mary Ann
Harris.
Holmes Hall was the leading
dorm
$'.0.OO.
by
contributing
Miss Harris also added that tli9
amount received was lower than
it had been in the two previous
semesters
of
Night." Last semester, nearly $503
was raised.
For the first time, another or
ganlzation will be the recipianfi
of part of the money. One-hawill go to the Little Kentucky
Derby for a scholarship carrying
the name of AWS. The remainder of the money will then go tj
AWS.
Night was
planned and coordinated by tha
AWS House of Representatives.
Women's hours were extended til!
2 a.m. with the coed paying a
penny a minute for each sixty
seconds past 1 a.m.
f
jevismmim.at,.XMr:.:vrrjVMm'i:'imfm

ISDFA Loans
Students who applied for National lefrnse Education Act
loans are asked to stop by the
Student Loan Oilier, in the
bjsenic nt of I'razee Hall, to
I'ontiim their loans before the
end of the emeler.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Triday, May 1, 19GI

Spring 'Stylus' Shows Talent
Hy LAWRENCE F. YORK
The spring issue of "Stylus"
emrrged to displny the best of
,
the spi'iih "rip nf
poetry
and artistic talent at the University.
The art work In the magazine
is a mixed grab bag. The first two
sketches In the book are failures,
but the charcoal by Jane Emrath
titlrd "Untitled" shows good division of space and careful Integration of powerful forms. The
still life by Richard Hammer is
an Interesting treatment of a
prosaic subject, sensitively
handled.
"Rosenthal," by Charles E.
Holmes, shows promise but needs
polish. Mr. Holmes reveals Insights in the fiction mode, but his
technique needs developing.
"Mr. Mumbubl it's Funeral" by
Louise Lewter Jmt misses being
The story, though
entertaining.
clever, does not contain enough
substance or character development to make it convincing.

"Tiger, Tiger In the Yard" by
Thomas Ilean Is more convincing,
perhaps because of the technique
which reproduces In a seetninu.
accurate fashion. The mood, tone
and flavor of fear all come across
In what Is probably the best piece
of short fiction In the magazine.
The most arrbltlous, mystifying and frustrating story is the
last, "An End for Evans Morrow" by O. Scott Nunley. His
story Is strong in Imagery, rhythm and movement. The narra

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The magazine Is graced with an
Int. resting selection of poetry,
most of which displays tint technique, and a sureness with words
which is both pleasant and promising.
An excellent Issue, suggestive
of a growing strength In the
creative areas of the University.

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* THE KENTUCKY
'Kasho-Mo-

Social

By

NANCY LOIGHRIDGE

OK Lougtiridge, tlicy said,
this is your grand finale but
make it short there isn't miuh
spaie. What do you say when
"omeone tells you this. Well,
J 1) aven't
quite come up with
the answer but the next foity
lines or so should tell the
story.

Q

First I'd like to tell all those
ho saw lit to get pinned, engaged, or married during the
past week that due to the inauguration of President Owald
the space normally devoted to
this event went to the big news
of the moment. If you still want
notice of pour romantic mistakes
printed, turn them in again next
fall.
It's extremely hard to write a
column of this type week in week
out and produce three other
pages. I want to take this opportunity to thank all those who
cooperated with me. As for the
thin skinned few who took great
pride In being nasty, may I say
that without you and the year
would have been a flop.
There is nothing more rewardnote
ing than an anonymous
telling you that the writer doesn't
like to read your articles and
then find your column enclosed
and carefully changed.
As chronicler of the social life
of the campus I've seen the year
bring a new way of life to the old
SUB, two Homecoming queens
take the royal spotlight at once,
the black weekend of the assassination, fraternity rush, rush,
and rush and the sorority side of
the same game.
We leave with the blare of
Centennial celebration going full
swing, undergraduate women
to live in town next year,
new classrooms going up, parking garages proposed, plans to
get the clocks running by 1999,
to
Plinter Hall destined
and
stand for eternity.
ler.ve those
What a heritage to
who follow! Continued mud and
ooze, parking problems, faculty
seventeen
time
zones,
bells,
speeding trucks, all the hangouts,
much of
and gab sessions aren't
a legacy considering all the time
and energy (?) we've devoted to
college life.
So with a sigh of relief Social
Sidelights will retire to the morgue of the Kernel and await next
year's edition of and a new editor. Now it's your turn to utter a
sigh of relief.

Is Sterling Cinema

n'

DAVID V. IIAWPE
Kernel Managing Editor
By

Emerging from the fusion of ridicule artistry and savage
is most obviously an
theme, Akira Kurosawa's "Rasho-Monaffirmation of faith in humanity.
Less blatant is the film's revealing Juxtaposition of two characters who represent opposing elements In the nature of man. It Is
this respect that "Rasho-Mon- "
scores a quiet triumph.
in

g
is set in Kyoto,
This
Japanese pseudo-fantas- y
years ago, and the action is centered upon a
crime: the seduction of a merchant's wife, followed by the
death of the merchant himself.
The film opens with a priest, a woodcutter, and a villager sitting in Kyoto's main gate. They are contemplating the crime as rain
is falling in torrents upon the gate, whirh is in luins.
The crime is reiterated by the bandit (who is to be convicted
for it i, by the merchant's wife, by the merchant (through a medium),
and by a witness. Each of the four proposes a different account of
the crime, and it is through this device that we are exposed to the
dishonesty of man. It is this espousal of a tragic flaw that must be
overcome, in order to achieve the affirmation of faith.
Probably the most poignant expression in th film occurs at
its climax, and the climax is withheld until the Closing moments.
The villager, cradling a baby (the symbol of rebirth of faith) in
his arms, walks into the sunlight. The rain has ceased at last. The
villager's face reflects the Joy of renewed faith in humanity.
Beyond this major theme, Kurosawa's attention is devoted to
The bandit, representative of man's primitive elecharacterization.
ment, is portrayed with savage clarity. The merchant' wife, who
symbolizes, obviously, the demise of purity and innocence, is given
the most outstanding performance in the film. Machiko Kyo is the
Japanese counterpart to Italy's Giulietta Masina.
In truth, the production is sterling in its entirety. The photography is superb, and the imagery and symbolistic elements are
(though very subtle at times).

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* Professor Discusses Engineering Education
To The Editor:
techOver the past
nology has progressed by leaps and
bounds, while the study of man has
advanced very slowly. There are some
who see a threat in this unbalance,
as if the hands of a living organism
had evolved to such a degree that they
were taking over the functions of the
heart and mind.

Possibly there is reason for alarm,
seem to be unfor the
able to wisely put to use the things
which engineers have developed. May-ib- e
the engineers should be slowed
down in their evolvement, and diverted into these other areas to make
positive contributions, so that these
ether disciplines would not be embarrassed by an
gap. As
a typical example, the decision to
hange our tax structure so that industry would be induced to automate,
at an increasing rate, was made not
by the engineers who develop the
but by a group of Harvard
lawyers and economists. At the same
time, they also decided that the small
faim must go, and the farmers forced
into town where those already in town
were being displaced by the new machines. The most consequential decision, however, to employ a product
of technology, was made by a man
with a major in artillery and a minor

in haberdashery. (I am not a Republican).
In the background of all of these
people there was likely no dearth of
courses in the humanities.

The studies of religion, ethics,
philosophy, psychology and the rest
are about as old as man, but technology is comparatively new. Why
does it go on apace, leaving the rest
so far behind? Possibly, the engineer
progresses because he is building
things, expressing his positive creative
instincts, while the other worker is
attracted to a field where he engages
himself largely with finding expression for his neurotic trends. Such a
condition is not universal, by any
means; there is a great deal of overlap.
If the engineer has a characteristic personality quirk, then it is certainly a compulsive flair for criticism
of himself, his work, his fellow worker, and everything else upon which
he can cast a jaundiced eye. Some observers agree t at this trait is very
nicely balanced, and justly so, by the
engineer's extreme sensitivity to criticism from others. Glaring evidence of
both traits is presently available in the
amid roars of
agonizing
pain and anguish, which has been in
progtess for several years in the field
ol engineering education. And in lair-nes- s
to ourselves as engineers, we

mmmmmmmMmmm

Bntnrd

The Kentucky Kernel
of
University

Kentucky

at the port office it Lexington, Kentucky ai lecond clan matter tinder the Act of Much 8, 1879.
Publikhed tour time
week dtirinp the
fchool year except during holiday and uamj.
school year; 10 centi a copy from file.
Subscription ratti: S7

Sub Endicott, Editor in Chief
David Hawpe, Managing Editor
Cabl Modecki, Campus Editor

should stress the fac t that a thorough
of this kind has never yet
been approached on such a scale in
with
any other discipline associated
conuniversity life. We are proud to
group.
sider ourselves a
While the engineer's energy is being diverted so that others might
catch up, we hope that
will be induced to study a bit of technology-enough,
at least, so that they
can make intelligent use of the many
instruments and measuring techniques
which have already been developed
for them by the engineers.
The threat of technology is largely fictional; we are probably alive today only because engineers in this
country have been successful in maintaining a balance of power; and a decision to slow down in this area will
be met with great favor in some parts
of the world. But we are just now
beginning here in Kentucky to enter
an area of great danger to us all.
Please consider a situation which is
just now shaping up.
A great lady died this past month;
and she died of a disorder which she
felt would finally destroy the entire
human race, and most other forms of
life as well, unless something is done
to reverse present trends. In chapter
15 of Silent Spring, Rachel Carson
had this to say:
"Amid the general acclaim for
chemicals as the piincipal method of
insect control, minority repoits have
occasionally been filed by those lew
entomologists who have not lost sight
ol the fact that they aie neither chemists nor engineers, but biologists."
In this quotation we find a great
deal ol comloi t. But we must not lose

sight of the fact that the reseat ch
grant carries the power to perveit,
and that our great leap forward may
result in a greater leap backward, if
the University center ever allows itsc 11
to become even partially dependent on
the research grants for its existence
and its growth. Our fiscal existence
should remain with the legislaturgJ
Kentucky.
Vj
To return now to the narrow enIn a class in psychology,
gineer.
at a university which 1 hesitate to
identify, the class was conducted by
an instructorwith a doctorate in psychology. On a test he asked for a definition of the term "resistance." An EE
student in his class defined the term as
a psychological mechanism which prevented the voluntary recall of certain
painful memories. "Not true," said
the teacher. "We have no such teim
in psychology. This word is related
to the opposition which a circuit offers to the flow of electric current."
The student, being an understanding
sort, forgave the instructor, for he
learned that he was an experiment. d
psychologist, and was therefore nioie
interested in shocking rats than in
studying people.
There is narrowness all over. . . .
And the
engineer, nanow
like the rest, may be on the veigc of
becoming too selfiitical, and tinning backward long before his best
contributions aie complete. We hae
not vet eliminated jjoverty and the
danger of war; in fact, we are
even to supply pure water as
last as otheis muck it up.
Mxriin C. Krimm
Assistant Professor
Electiical Engineering

...

SUMMER OPPORTUNITY!
Students can earn in excess of $150.00 per week while working for scholarships, awards and prizes such as:
This year Colliers vacation earnings program offers college students more
prizes and awards than ever before!

j

PAID VACATION IN EUROPE
O FIFTEEN $1,000.00 CASH SCHOLARSHIPS
O VALUABLE MERCHANDISE XvARDS
O

ALL-EXPEN-

SE

Students accepted for summer work will haye an opportunity to work in the area
of their choice in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.
Cincinnati, O.
Hamilton, O.
Corbin, Ky.
Columbus, O.
Lexington, Ky.
Middlcsboro, Ky.
Louisville, Ky.
Dayton, O.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Oxford, O.
Covington, Ky.
Richmond, Ind.
Portsmouth, O.
French Lick, Ind.
Ashland, Ky.
Qualified previous employes will have an opportunity for management positions.
All who are interested fill in lines below and mail
promptly to:
NAME
SCHOOL ADDRESS
DATE AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW
DATE YOU CAN BEGIN EMPLOYMENT
AREA YOU PREFER TO WORK

MR. W. T. DULEY, Disf. Mgr.
Suite 1428, Enquirer Bldg.
Cincinnati 2, Ohio

* THE KENTUCKY

TiMay, May 1,

KERNEL,

19CI- -3

TONIGHT

COLLEGE NIGHT

The Collegiate

SUMMER SCHOOL

Our Doors Are Open to College Students Only!

Clothes Line

Twist to Charlie Bishop's Band at

DAffLAND

You may take university courses
near your home at . . .

on the Old Frankfort Pike

8:30-12:3- 0

THE NORTHERN

Overslept . . . Late . . .
test returned
flunked . . . turned down
for a date . . . pop quiz .

...

lost theme

COVINGTON,

11 a.m. 1 a.m.
919 S. Lime
--

er

fcy

Jeckt

CENTER

U of Ky.

THE ASHLAND

COMMUNITY COLLEGE
U. of Ky.

REGULATION SUMMER
Good-byMr. U. of K., but before you go, let me brief you on
a (pw of the casual clothes you
will see and wear this summer.
i this
One of the big
season is a "hell who cares"
knit pullover shirt. This ona
is of French type design and has
a modified crewneck collar without side vents. The colors are
heat-reand navy, and bottle green
and white. Of course it has a
horizontal stripe pattern. You can
pair it, square it or wear it with
just about anything including your
B.V.D.'s
and I'll bet a knit you
will be glad you included this one
in your summer wardrobe.

ASHLAND,

...

.

y

June 5
Classwork starts June 8

y Registration

Write to the director for a listing of classes to:
Room 103, Frozee Hall on the campus.

Friday

Yoa may tika ? hour of University credit at
college to apply en your dtgiae.

3Ieet Mike, Miles, Ron

aithtr community

smart and popular this year
the conventional American knit
shirt which may be striped, solid
or quartered. It comes in a variety
of colors and weaves according to
your preferences, and has the
standard fly front. This one is
here to stay know, because it ii
truly American.
Still

252-921- 2

is

KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER
SERVICE
Olivetti Portable Typewriter
Carbons
gibbon
end Of'iceiuppliet
--

SALES

There is big activity in walk
shorts this season and I believe
most of it is due to the unexpected
nice weather across the nation.
The styles are of belt loop typo
and tamed for town and country
wear. Solid colors have taken the
lead here, with checked or striped
types f.i'ling a wee bit behind in
sales. There is a wonderful world
of color to choose from, and the
price is so down to eaith ond regular, you ore bound to select two or
more for your sporting pleasure.

SERVICE

AND' RENTALS
Phone

7

!)ft??F

CLOTHES FOR THE
COLLEGE MAN

Schu 's

Happy Hour

sum-m-

..

telephone call
relax at

3-- 5

COMMUNITY

this

387 Rote St.

bottle green of
seems to dominate men's sport coat wear th's
season.
These combinations tend
to show up in everything from
starvation to appetite. But what
think is really tough is the black
and white sports coats with just a
pinch of red. This boJ glen pl.iid
nd wool and
is made of dacron
has the three buttor front and flap
As Un ctension to this
pockets.
jacket, you will bo
r
linhte it in a wide
able to
range of soli i color trousers. A
perfect rascal tr any occasion, all
summer long.

and
Burgundy
every description

7
U-HA- UL

.

for smart movers

Across town or across the
U.S.A., you'll save When
you take household goods
with you in an orange
nd white
Trailer.
Kent it here, leave it
there, wherever you go, .s
and enjoy U Haul's
j?.
low, low rates!

V

J
in

I would
like to take this opportunity to congratulate all the seniors and wish you the very best of
luck in the future.
Angelucci's
wishes to thank you for your patronage over the past four years.

Hitch furnlihtd
Cargo lnsurant

Guaranteed

free Moving

rres

We are looking forward to the
returning in September. Upon returning, we will
be ready to serve you with the
warmth and hospitality Kentuck-ian- s
have known since 1913.

Booftfel

Lei's say lor a minulo, (his is you.
r

AI Vndi

o (roll.
oil kind of movas

FISTER SHELL
SERVICE
715 N. Broadway
Phone:

WE

RESERVE

TRAILORS

VI

zlccnd
Once you wear the gold bars of a
lieutenant in the United States Air Force,
what's in store for you?
Well, you may fly an aircraft en