xt7ftt4fqt1s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ftt4fqt1s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660623  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, June 23, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 23, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7ftt4fqt1s section xt7ftt4fqt1s am IE KTE IL
Vol. LVII, No. 132

University of Kentucky
KY

LEXINGTON,

THURSDAY, JUNE 23,

16

Inside Today's Kernel

Four Pages

Centennial Theatre Production Reviewed:
Page Three

Graduate Program
Improvement Seen
Current One Inadequate
Say Kirwan, Doran

By JUDY CRISHAM
f
Kernel
Inadequate graduate programs at the University have been under
fire recently as the university status granted Eastern, Morehead,
Western, and Murray has spotlighted the major expansion of post
graduate education in the state.
"What they are saying is
"The difficulty lies in the fact
l'
ill
true," said Dr. A.D. Kirwan,
that the University has not exdean of UK's graduate school.
panded the doctoral program as "We haven't done
enough."
it should," Dr. Adron Doran,
"The graduate program never
president of Morehead State Unihas been given the emphasis it
versity, told the Kernel Wednesshould ve been given we've
day.
"The fault, however, is no emphasized undergraduate proin the past."
particular fault of the Univer- grams
According to Dr. Kirwan, 46
sity," he said, "but of a system
of higher education which did Ph.D.'s and 12 Ed.D.'s were
1965-6'not permit development at the granted in
"We ought to be giv ing a 100,"
master's level to feed the Unihe said.
Construction continues on the dormitory tower complex arc scheduled for use in housing
versity at the doctoral level."
the University
In 1954-5located between fraternity row, the Sports class women this fall.
Presidents of the other three
granted 48 doctoral degrees. In
of the
Dick Ware Photo
state universities agreed.
Center, and the Medical Center. Portions
1962-662 doctoral degrees were
given. This is a statewide increase of 40.9 percent as compared to a nationwide increase
of 63.9 percent and to a 107.8
"We don't know what the
"With all the scholarships saying the demands of summer percent increase in the South.
The State Board of Education
In 1961-6school programs have hampered
Kentucky ranked
demands will be in 1LS0."
available, internships, and inpassed a regulation Wednesday
32nd in doctoral productivity
But he said "the teaching creased federal support, I can see their ability to take additional
d
to require all
with 54 degrees while neighborprofession for the last 1C years a time w hen a teacher's fifth year college work.
teachers to complete a fifth year
seventh
has stated over and over again is underwritten," he said.
ing Indiana ranked
of college work within a
The Kernel learned
last with 553.
that a classroom teacher should
is a proposed regulaPending
period.
semester the University College
"Most of our people who
have five years' preparation to do tion on requirements of adminiThe new regulation, drawn up
of Education was considering an
accept leaves of absences to do
an effective job. Other states are strators, such as principals,
the Division of Teacher Certiby
extention of its teacher-educatiodoctoral study gu out of state,"
already doing it."
superintendents and supervisors.
fication, imposes the requirement
r
plan. This Dr. Doran said.
program to a
Simandle said the regulation
Five years of college is reon teachers certified after Sept. 1.
would mean the student would
He pointed out that of 10
will not apply to teachers who quired to begin work with the not enter the
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt's
College of Educay oung faculty members who w ere
have been or will be certified sixth-yea- r
Council on Public Higher Edubeing required within tion until he had graduated.
granted leaves to do doctoral
before Sept. 1.
a four-yea- r
period.
cation recommended the reguUpon completion of the fifth y ear study last year, only two came
curDetails of the fifth-yea- r
Under the new proposal, they he would receive his teacher certilation.
to UK.
riculum arc yet to be worked out, would need a master's degree ficate and liis masters
Teachers' certificates are redegree. It
Change Predicted
he said, "but it will be largely with an additional 15 hours in would be
newed every 10 years and the
patterned after a similar
But all this will change, says
oriented toward subject matter college to start on the job. No
before the passonly requirement
program at Harvard.
Dr. Kirwan.
and academic work.
additional school is required.
age of the regulation was that
"We are moving as fast as anySimandle said many teachers
Simandle said many school
However, Education College
teachers complete four years in
officials said the program was in place in the country right now,"
are already taking extra college administrators have complained
the classroom.
he said, referring to the Academic
the early planning stages.
about the present requirement,
Sidney Simandle, director of work and getting their master's
Program's plans for graduate prodegrees.
teacher certification, said last
gram development and to the
One reason is that the miniweek "We're issuing certificates
newly established state univermum foundation pays teachers
today that make it possible to
.
sities who will share the burden
i
with more education bey ond the I
teach forever on a bachelor's
of producing master's
degree
bachelor's degree more money.
degree."
graduates.
Among tilings providing tor
Hike Anyone?
an improved graduate program,
Dr. Kirwan listed graduate
faculty members, a new budgtt
to promote research, teaching
assistants, money for faculty research, and graduate fellows as
indicative of progress.
"Many of the problems will
be solved if we can develop our
Student accessibility toactiv
ready for use as early as 1968 if
"
programs' at the master's level
at the proposed new stadium
things "proceed like
ami act as 'feeders' to the UniThe site selected for the prowill be one problem faced by its
versity's doctoral program," Dr.
posed stadium is 150 acres of
planners.
Doran said.
Hubert F. Kerley, UK vice the southernmost portion of the
Cooperative Program
of business affairs, said University's Coldstream Farm on
president
A cooperative program which
Newtown Pike between New
lie "recognized the problem", but
will be put into effect at Eastern
as y et no definite plans had been Circle Hoad and Interstates 61
and Morehead, and possibly at
made. He mentioned, however, and 75.
the other two universities, this
The land now occupied by
that plans must certainly include
fall, indicates further elTorts to
Stoll Field and McLean Stadium
provisions for bus parking.
improve graduate programs and
"We have not discussed if is slated in the Academic Program
1
for Fine Arts and architecture
productivity.
the students will pay (for trans"We are tremendously pleased
portation to the site) or if we buildings. To meet Academic Prowith the cooperative program,"
(the University) will pay," he gram scheduling, the first strucsaid Dr. Doran, adding that he
said. But he later added, "We ture for Fine Arts should be
believed all the newly established
increase student completed on that site within
don't want to
ill
"Jlf'
universities hail adopted it.
four y ears.
fees."
KtTiul Photo by Dick Ware
Under the cooperative proThe proposed stadium will
committee ut
The executive
gram, the candidate will obtain a
the Board of Trustees approved contain 50,000 seats, compared to
master's degree at one of the tour
initial plans for the building of the present stadium's 37,500. Cost Soaring temperatures is just one indication that summer is officially
state universities anil then conhere and only three days old. Miss Kentucky, Becky Snyder, a
the new stadium at last week's is estimated at $1 to $5 million,
tinue for another year at that inwhich dues nut include the cost University senior, proves there's more than one way to beat the
Board meeting.
monthly
summer's heat And what could be better than one ice cream
stitution with woik toward his
of surface parking for a minimum
Vice president Kerley estidoctorate.
cone if not two!!
mated that the stadium may be of 10,000 spaces.
Editor-in-Cliie-

j-ywWk-

6.

Going Up?

x

upper-comple-

3,

Teachers Must Have 5th College Year
newly-certifie-

n

five-yea-

e

Problem: Accessibility
Of Students To Stadium
clock-work.-

y

,

i

j

I

Summer's Here At Last!

* Improvement?
Although
four

t he

emergence of the

state colleges as universities

has been hailed as a major step
toward improving higher education
in Kentucky, recent comments indicate the action will result in numerous problems; perhaps the largest
of which will be the financing of
five state universities.
Already, presidents of the former
colleges are anticipating financial
status comparable with that of the
University, which after 100 years is
just beginning to show significant
progress in developing a nationally-recognizeacademic program.
d

With the adoption last year of
the academic program, which is
now being implemented, the University is making significant strides
toward that goal. And the record
$84.1 million budget appropriated
by the state legislature is the means

by which these strides have been
made.
But a battle of the budget seems
inevitable as the four new state universities are looking ahead to what
the 1968 legislature holds in store in
terms of appropriations. The four
received a total of approximately
$17 million from the 1966 legislature, but are now shouting for
"equitable" appropriations.

Each of the presidents admits,
on the other hand, that graduate
programs at the University are not
adequate. Yet as Dr. A.D. Kirwan,
dean of the graduate school, has
pointed out, "We are moving as
fast right now as any place in the
country." He attributes this progress to the academic program. The
success of the long range academic
program, in turn, is dependent upon
the budget. Thus, if money needed
for the successful fulfillment of the
academic plan is systematically
meted out to the four new state
universities, the academic
hopes for a distinguished
graduate program cannot conceivably be carried out.
plan-inclu- ding

4$K

JK

III

We would certainly not argue
with Dr. Adron Doran, president of
Morehead State University, that a

freshman at Morehead "should
have as much money behind him"
as a freshman at the University of
Kentucky, but we cannot agree that
such an end should be attained by
means that would sacrifice the University's soundly progressing program.
Ideally, Dr. Doran is correct,
but if the ideal means skimping on
the appropriations for the University, then it is no longer ideal. We
do not believe that Kentucky should
jeopardize its chances of havingone
progressive, distinguished institution of higher learning in exchange
for a certainty of having five merely
mediocre ones.

Journalist's Rights
Freedom of the press is clearly chanan is interfering with justice
protected in the Bill of Rights of the by refusing to name the students
U.S. Constitution and in all the who favored easing restrictions on
state constitutions. However, one of the use of marijuana.
the fundamental aspects of this
If the student editor is held in
liberty is not adequately defined. contempt of court, it will be a major
Only 12 states have extended to setback for journalistic freedom.
Before a newspaper can perform its
reporters the right to protect confidential sources.
proper function in society, it must
A University of Oregon coed will
have the same privileges of proface trial Monday because she has tecting sources which common law
refused to break the confidence of gives to attorneys and clergymen.
sources she used for a news story.
One of the basic functions of a
Annette Buchanan, managing edinewspaper is to serve as a watchof the campus newspaper, The dog for all aspects of society, intor
Oregon Daily Emerald, may be held cluding investigations of such
in contempt of court for standing by things as honesty in government,
fundamental journalistic ethics.
the crime rate, morals and evils of
The question of whether or not a society. This function, which is excourt should be able to order a retremely important to the public,
is not cannot be performed if the courts
porter to reveal his sources
new. The present controv ersy steins interfere with the right of reporters
from an article written by Miss to protect news sources.
Buchanan on the use of marijuana.
Courts not only will be interCircuit Judge Edward Levy fering with justice by denying reOregoai
has said the reporter must rev eal the porters this privilege, but they will
names of five students interviewed be violating constitutional guaranfor the story.
tees of freedom of the press and
freedom of speech.
Levy believes Miss Bu
Judge

Ttir't

a eKan'i wi

mlflht flat him to

u, w'r not careful'
0ntSw3Swi
A Timely Solution
if

work with

Maybe the advancements of the
modern world have been carried
just a bit too far. Or perhaps it is
that the University, eager to be
among the vanguard, has jumped
the gun in installing through its
halls the modern invention known
as the clock.
These apparatus certainly must
toward
some
have
potential
dividing the day into measurable
units (known among the select as
minutes and hours). But there still
seem to be just a few too many
bugs with them.
Indeed at times they seem
strikingly similar to a fickle woman:
at times they coo and whisper
delaying their seductive hands just
long enough to stop the bell and
let you make it through Prof. Snarf s
gaping classroom door. But at other
times, the clock bells scream
through the halls 15 minutes late
like a raging hussy out of schedule.
All the pointers seem to indicate
then that Alma Mater may have
rushed into this thing too quickly
before the devices were really perfected.
What then would be a seemly
substitute for the embryonic automatics? Our research bureau
scanned long and hard, and the
best idea seems to come yes
from our English Middle Ages
buddies back in the 14th century.
The system was all cooked up by
a fainting young maiden of winsome expression known as Godiva
Lady Godiva to be exact.
Seems she too had a problem
with constancy. When her bright
knight was off fighting for honor
and garter belts, he often got a

bit carried away and neglected
seeing her regularly.
She only had to act once. She
merely gallopped through her hometown, stitchless, shouting, "I'm
waiting! You're late!" And 'fore
she unbuckled her steed, there was
her knight.
A slight variation to save our
schedule conscious student body
might be to hire one Godiva a day
from Sorority Row to ride stitchless
through the halls on her Honda
making similar cries just at class
change time.
Surely she would catch more
of Snarf's eye than these fickle
new clocks, and perhaps she could
even use her wilely ways to persuade Snarf to release his restless
charges on time.
Ah, but we dream
--

....

Letter To The Editor

Reader Applauds
Knapp's Revieiv

To The Editor:
Laurels go to Bill Knapp for
his excellent review of "Stop the
World . ." in the Kernel, June 11,
1966. This exemplifies the best in
analysis, not just telling the plot
.

and listing the characters, which
seems to be the standard drama
criticism in the Lexington area. I
hope this type of critique will
prevail throughout the Centennial
Theatre productions this summer.
ROBIN CRAVISS
Graduate Student
Special Education

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
Univehsity of Kentucky

KSTABLISIIKI)

1801

THURSDAY,

Judy Chisham,

JUNK 23, 1900

Editor-ln-Ch-

Published at the University of Kentucky's Lexington campus five times each week during the school
year except during holiday and exam Qctiods. Published weekly during the summer term.
Entered at the post offine at Lexington, Kentucky, as second class matter
rnder the act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription rates: yearly, by mail $7.00; per copy, from files $0.10.
Kernel editorial and business phone, summer term 2319.

* THE KENTUCKY KEKNEL, Thursday, June

l!Mrfi- -:l

2:1,

Wookciul's Host Hot: Hijr llaml For Little Lady'

Long Bay's Journey' Bad Play Well Done

By BILL KNAPr
Kernel Feature Writer
There is a bad play well done at tlie C.uinol Theatre this
weekend. Well done or no the play's the thing and "Long Day's
Journey into Night", a slice out of tin private family life of playwright Kugcne O'Neill, is sudsy. Color it soap opera.
Though every member of the
It would have been a blessing,
east perforins with the grace,
sad to say, if some of
power, and animal magnetism of had been absorbed by the footseasoned professionals, the play
lights!
remains an unentertaining, uneventful disappointment.
Characters
communicate
now ii. the conventional masque
will had been
If O'Neill's
dialogue we all use. Then they
respected the play would not
e utterance to those unspoken,
have been staged until 1978, giv
which are
impolite thoughts
though it is doubtful the mellowgenerally unvoiced save in anger.
would have helped it.
ing
They apologize for their outThe mechanics of the producbursts, and start over again.
tion are technically admirable.
For little reason the dialogue
Superb direction, fine stagecraft,
blends polite solicitous
a marvelous set, and quality proconversation with what is
fessional lighting succeed in the
olten thought but ne'er expressed
of any stage production-getti- ng
task
the dialogue across the (apologies to A. Pope).
footlights.
Essentially the actors dramatheir success in tize both their words and their
Paradoxically
getting the dialogue across the thoughts. Meaningless conflicts
and awkward tensions arise from
footlights a zenith of professionthe clash of dramatized thoughts
is the "damned
al stagemanship
on the stage. Neither conflict
spot", "the rub", and the undoing of a play which never nor tension is resolved and they
gets off of the seat on the water-close- t. gurgitate.
"Long Day's Journey into
inter-famil-

!

t

A

Report-to-the-Natio- n

group made an official visit to
the University campus today.
The group told the story of
modern
Club work and scheduled other such reports for Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky.
4--

Four of the 11 delegates
nationselected to represent
ally are visiting Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky this week.
4--

Joe Day, Kentucky's delegate
irom Hopkins l,ounty, was a
member of the group who re- ported here.
During their visit to UK, they
breakfasted with Lexington business and civic leaders, were
luncheon guests of President
Oswald, made an afternoon visit
with Kentucky Commissioner of

IM 'kl

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I 711

Full ill

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MV.V

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"

Rehearsal continues on "Long Day's Journey into
Night" which opened Friday at the Centennial

e
theatre in
Night" is
the rancidly realistic tradition;
hep theatre lit for those sophisti-call- y
jaded on the best, more
conventional, and most entertaining legitimate theatre offerings.
To those who see everything
on Broadway it is probably a
diverting, "different" offering.
O'Neill's dialogue is a vomit
Agriculture, and made several of conflictingly described symradio and TV appearances.
bols. He asks clever sophistries
like "what is life all about?", but
suggests no answers, offers no
directional clues concerning the
location of the answers, moots
every question raised, and begs
still other basic questions.
for the
All announcements
The play abstracts nothing
Kernel Bulletin Board must be
universal. It could have been a
and turned
typed, double-spacescene taken from any family situainto Room 113C of the Journalism
tion anywhere of no interest to
Building no later than Monday
anyone save the community
before t he Thursday date of publigossip. Suspiciously the fact that
cation. All late announcements
it is an autobiographical play of
will be held for the following a
playw right seems
week.
to be its only justification for
being produced.
All Freshmen and new transfer
students who intend to enroll in
Blamesmanship is the spindly
the University for the Fall stuff holding the play together.
Semester may participate in the Accusation vacillates from: your
Summer Orientation Program. If fault; no
cry body's till
you have not already done so,
the critic says the fault is
please notify the Orientation
Office, Room 107 Student Center, O'Neill's.
effect
of this
The total
if you wish to attend Summer
audience participation,
Orientation.
slice-of-lif-

Report Made Here

4-H'- ers

I

""

Bulletin Board
d,

""'

"

mm'

I

Theatre and is scheduled for this weekend.
Photo by Dick Ware

supply your own endtheatre is a reing,
sounding so what?
Kudos to Centennial Theatre
lor having done it well. Pity they
did it at all.
Hetter entertainment fare by
far is available at a local theatre
in the form of a sure academy
award nominee "A Big Hand for
the Little Lady."
Drag or stag, at half the price
of the Cuignol play the movie
offers: a beginning, a middle
and a finish; a denouement; a
climax; several reversals of fortune; suspense; humorous entertainment; and virtuoso performances by some outstanding
thespians.
Henry Fonda, Joanne Wood
s,

sliec-of-Iil-

"

'c

ward, Jason Hobards, and Charles
Bickford, with several of the best
character actors in Hollywood,
sparkle in a color coined) which
unfolds so quickly you can not
believe it runs 93 minutes, in
direct contrast to "Long Day's
Journey into Night" which has
a third act that goes on forever,
heaped with symbolic sound and
fury, signifying nothing (no
apologies to whoever said that).
It is encouraging that the play
was well done. Hopefully it forecasts superb theatre yet to come
this summer, for the people at
Cuignol are first class, seasoned
professionals. Truthfully, however, the best entertainment in
town this weekend is the movie

"Big Hand
--3

mi

spzzxzv

for

the Little Lady."

rrrrrx

fill-in-

CLASSIFIED
Now have eyes twice thei r size !

SEWING
ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts and
coats for women. MILDRED COHEN
253 E. Maxwell. Phone
tf

needs
PUBLISHER
EDUCATIONAL
a permanent representative for Ken-

tucky. Salary and expense

allow-

ance. Send resume and photograph
to Harlow Publishing Corporation,
attn. Sales Manager, P.O. Box 1008,
14J2t
Norman, Oklahoma 73009.

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-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, June 23,

19fi

Wrvk In Review

State, UK Plan Research Park

Hoard of
Tin' I'niwrsity
Trust its approved tin- allotment
ol 190 acres of Spindletop Farm
land to the State Department ol
Commerce for the joint development of a research park.
The land, which was dedicated to the Department for the
-

ears, adjoins 130 acres
hcloninu to Spindletop
Hcsearch, Inc.
The development of the research park, according to Dr.
John Oswald, will supplant
Spindletop Research's proposed
research park.
next 10
of land

781 NDEA Loans Okayed;
so far
approved for
University
Defense Education Act loans totaling $109,173, for the 1966-6- 7
academic year, it was reported by Ordie Davis, assistant administrator of the Office of Student Financial Aid.
Mr. Davis said loans have been approved for 781 students and
that an increase in the number of loans might be expected if Congress approves new funds for NDEA before the present session
adjourns.
The 7S1 loans approved so far totals somewhat less than the
$562, 975 granted last year in approximately a thousand loans, Mr.
Davis pointed out. However, the totals could increase if Congress
approves new NDEA funds.
NDEA is a cooperativ e plan under w hich the federal gov ernment
grants 90 per cent of the amount of the loans, and the Univ ersity
provides 10 per cent. The University, in addition, pays the cost of
maintaining a campus office and staff for the loan program.
No tabulation of loans according to classification has been
made for the coming year, but Mr. Davis said figures for the 1964-6- 5
year would be representative. These figures showed freshmen
received 2A4 loans, sophomores 162, juniors 217, seniors 220, and
graduate students 118. Of these, about 25 per cent were
students who make up about 25 per cent of the total enrollment.

Graduate traineeships valued
at $2,400 each have been awarded
to eight University students
under a program sponsored by the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
Recipients are Daniel M.
Hartell, Eexington; Ronald M.
Cosby, I larrodsburg, and I lerbert
D. Rice, Florence, all of whom
will study physics; Thomas J.
Cheatham, Jr., Rradfordsville;
Henry H. Potoczny, Philadelphia,
Pa. , and CeliaC. Tiffany, Muncie,
Ind., all studentsof mathematics;
Dan Ece Finley, Middlesboro,
mechanical
and
engineering,
Peggy Sue Gott, Williamson, W.
Va., physiology-Eacof the grants is for the
1966-6- 7
academic year. Winners
may receive up to $1,000 in additional funds if they have two or
more dependents.

UK.

The Universilv fielded an experimental team in the sport last
vear under coach Wvnn Paul.
The new varsity program will
be the first of its kind in the
Southeastern Conference or the
Southern United States.
The University received notice
last week that its College of
Dentistry had been accredited
by the Council on Dental Education of the American Dental Association.
With the accreditation of the
College of Dentistry, all formal
programs in the Medical Center
are officially accredited.

STARTS 1:30 ADM.

n

members, will undeitake two-yea- r
pilot instructional programs,
w hich w ill be aimed at musicianship education in depth for all
music students.
The programs will explore
ways of providing them with a
broad perspective of their field
by helping them relate various
musical
composidisciplines
tion, pedagogy, history, performance, and theory in order to
gain competence to deal with
music as it exists and as it is
created today. In addition, the
programs will evaluate effectiveness of music teaching on all
levels.

PROVINE

McDOWALL

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ALSO

Joe Moses is his

name...

$1

PANAVISION

Reined
UNITED

"v.JrlmouM

thru

ARTISTS

PLUS

Pratntt

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E0JISPRES1EY

The Institutes arean extension
of the program started in 1959
with Ford Foundation aid, and
now being carried out with continuing aid from the Foundation
as the MENC Contemporary
Music Project.
Since its inception, the Project
has already placed 70 composers
in public school systems throughout the United States for a
minimum of one-yeresidence,
and has supported 16 teacher
workshops and six pilot projects.

and SAT. ONLY

FRI.

I&radise- Hawaiian Style
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Rtise

COLUMBIA P1CTUWS

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MAYO

Panmnnnt

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SUNDAY,

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MONDAY,

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SHOWING!

BIG WIDE SCREEN

WILLIAM

BENDIX

TECHNICOLOR TECNNISCOPE'

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HEROES DF
TEL.

LON

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VIRGINIA
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ASHLEY

CRODDY McDOWALL

::.:::..

EXCLUSIVE SHOWING!
UNCUT! INTACT! CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES

ALSO
Frank SINATRA & Dean MARTIN

- WEDNESDAY -

r

"robin" and

the

Excitement

7

hoods"

(Color and Scope)

clinps
to him

mam

like a

dame!

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HELD OVER

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ENGAGEMENTS!

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TECHNICOLOR"

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Exclusive! First Run!
MUM presents

FIRST TIME

A

PRICES!

Yd

Warner Bros!
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fhwtw

LOREIV

NEWMAN

.

&

Final Week!

" personally endorse this as superior entertainment . . . Virtuoso performances will bring you
gales of laughter!"
Bob

Perkins,

Management

'A BIG HAND

For The
LITTLE LADY'

A

IIIIt if

II
II

CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION

ennm

AT POPULAR

super
action
show
of shows!

.Mill

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HELD OVER!

STARTS
FRIDAY!

DIRECT FROM ITS
RESERVED SEAT

WAIT
DlSNEYS

1st AREA SHOWING

Music Department Membership
In Contemporary Music Institute
The University Department
of Music has been chosen as a
member-institutioin one of five
Institutes for Music in Contemporary Education now being established by grants from the
Contemporary Music Project of
the Music Educators National
Conference.
UK will participate in the
Southern Institute, which has
at Florida State
headquarters
University and will focus on
music education.
Head of the UK program is
Hernard Fitzgerald, who served
as director of the Contemporary
Music Project during its first
two years of organization while
on a leave from the University,
and was mainly responsible for
the development of the projects
now being established.
Other participating schools in
the Southern Institute include
East Carolina College, George
Pea body College, the University
of Georgia, and selected public
schools in Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, and Tennessee.
The grants for the five regional
institutes, which total $330,000,
are designed to strengthen the
teaching of music in public
schools and colleges.
In the fall of 1966, the institutes with the cooperation of
their university and public school

SATURDAY

through

$2, t()0 Atnmlvtl
l or Gratl Trtiinvvships

University Athletic Director
Hemic A. Shivcly announced
recently that the University's
Athletics Hoard had approved
water polo as a varsity sport at

Davis Anticipates Increase
students
have been
National

TONIGHT

The College of Dentistry graduated its first class in May.

Col. Howard C. Paikcr will
become chairman of the Univerof
Military
sity Department
Science on July 1, it was announced jointly by the Department of the Army and UK President John W. Oswald recently.
Parker succeeds Col. James P.
Alcorn who retired from the
serv ice June 1 to become a special
assistant to President Oswald.

j

WTU
XV

MVEIV

ALSO PLAYING

"THE

s

WAR LOUD"
Charlton

ODHtfiriLQ the 0DQDBM3
AKI6Q.I - BARBARA WERLE

m:mm mm

GEORGE Montgomery ty
in TECHNICOLOR and PANAVISION

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CLAUDE DAUPHIN
CtDL RAKKtR and
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Richard

HESTON
BOONE

PLUS

JACK NICKLAUS
GOLF SHOW
Feature starts at 8:30

*