xt7h445hf75v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h445hf75v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-10-09 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, October 09, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 09, 1967 1967 1967-10-09 2024 true xt7h445hf75v section xt7h445hf75v  

Q

 

‘Pack Of Lies,’ NSA Says 0f Fresh Charges

WASHINGTON (CPS—Officials of the National Stu-
dent Association and the Officeof Economic Opportunity
have denied that NSA dropped plans for an antiwar
march and a “Dump Johnson"

threatened to cut off NSA funds.

The charges were made in a copyrighted article in
the Friday issue of the South End, campus newspaper
at Wayne State University in Detroit. They were at-
tributed to a member of NSA's National Supervisory

Board (NSB).

Though the paper did not name its source, one
staff member said it was a girl who lived in New York
City. However, the only girl NSB member in New
York, Lynda Millspaugh, denies that she gave the South

End the story.

Officials of both NSA and OEO denied the charges.
Ed Schwartz, NSA president, angrily called thfi story

eflon because OEO

“a pack of lies" and Jim Williams of OEO's office
of public affairs issued a categorical denial that OEO
pressured NSA.

NSA has a $244,000 grant from CEO to mn its tut-
orial projects (NSA's total budget is about ssoomo).
It also just received a grant from VISTA to mn an-
other program.

Both Schwartz and CEO officials say that the VISTA
grant was held up for several weeks because OEO was
concerned about the political reaction of Congress,
which has been giving OEO's budget a rough going
over, and also has a number of NSA critics. But they
say it had no connection with the march and Dump
Johnson movement. CEO says it had a representative
at NSA's congress for a few days, but that she put no
pressure on NSA.

THE KENTUCKY

an R N E L

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

Monday, Qctfi, l967

University of Kentucky, Lexington

Vol. LIX, No. 30‘

 

N0 Umbrellas?

IFC To Study

 

K appaSigma’s
Night March

The case of the scantily clad
Kappa Sigmas has been referred
to the Interfratemity Council Ju-
dicial Board, IFC President Chris
Dobbyn said Sunday.

Dobbyn said the board would
”investigate" the incident.

Eleven Kappa Sigma pledges
were arrested by Fayette County
police Friday night as they were
hitchhiking—clad only in trench
coats—on Richmond Road at 4:15
am.

Nine of the pledges were ar-
rested promptly. Two who were
more elusive were tracked suc-
cessfully by a police lieutenant,
who discovered them walking to-
ward tovm.

One Was ‘Exposcd'
Police said one of the men
wore a raincoat that was tom
and ”exposed the lower half of

his body."

All Were eventually taken to
jail where they were released on
recognition bail.

Barry Ogilby, Kappa Sigma
president, declined comment on
the incident.

Arrested were Richard B. Bon-
ta, Luther D. Hatfield, Rein Pa-
abo, James W. Hogg, Jeffery P.
Cobb, Michael P. Milliken, Wil-
liam R. Hood, Frank E. Coggins,
Don W. Duff, Walter C. Cramer
and Daniel Vartabedian.

  
  

 

Tobacco Queen

Brenda Lois Layman, UK junior,
was named National Queen of To-
baccoland at closing ceremonies
of the week-long National To-
bacco Festival in Richmond, Va.,
Saturday. Miss Layman is the
current Miss Lexington and was
named Kentucky Burley Belle
during the first annual pageant
of the Kentucky Burley Festival
this summer.

N unn Speech

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)—The
Republican candidate for gover-
nor is planning a major policy
address on education when he
tours the University Tuesday.

The speech at Lexington will
highlight a week of campaigning
for Louie B. Nunn, whose visit
to the school is sponsored by UK
Young Kentuckians for Nunn, a
campaign organization.

The group's chairman, Ste-
phen Dreisler, said Nunn will
"discuss several major new pro-
grams designed to get Kentucky
off the bottom in education."

  

  

«Derby Wheelers
Near The F Hush

(a ..,,, .ww-.»m-.--.w “WM...”-

NoConspiracy
In Farm Buy, ,
;- Oswald says LBJ Asks Educators

The Associated‘f’ress

University President John Os-
wald denied Friday that there
was a conspiracy betWeen the
UK Research Foundation and
the Keeneland Association in the
Maine Chance Farm purchase.

Dr. Oswald, filing his second
deposition in the US. District
Court, added that the sole pur-
pose of the Maine Chance ac-
quisition was to meet the needs
of UK. _

He said that no person in—
fluenced him in making his
recommendations about the pur-
chase to the school's Board of
Trustees and the foundation's
Board of Directors.

Oswald's depositions were
filed in the $30 million antitrust
suit brought by California horse-
man Rex Ellsworth and Lexing-
ton veterinarian Dr. Arnold Pes-
sin.

In a deposition filed with the
court Tuesday. Dr. Oswald dealt
mostly with UK’S formal and in-
formal efforts to obtain the farm.

The suit alleges that UK and
Keeneland conspired to prevent
Mr. Ellsworth and Dr. Pessin
from. buying the 720-acre horse
farm.

The latest deposition indi-
cates that UK‘s decision to use
the Lexington real estate firm of
Swinebroad 8t Denton in obtain-
ing the farm may have stemmed
from Gov. Edward T. Breathitt's
recommendation.

Oswald also testified that Mr.
Breathitt and Robert Kerley, UK"
vice president for business af-
fairs, arranged a meeting so that
George Swinebroad could make
a presentation on Maine Chance.

No Verification Yet
So far no one who attended the NSB meeting at

which the decisions were allegedly made has corro-

berated the South End’s story, though the paper says
all NSB members were sworn to secrecy.

Miss Millspaugh told CPS that the subject of the
march ”wasn't even brought up."

Schwartz says no decisions were made at the meet-

‘Where I’m Bound, Where I’m Bound’

ing. “We discussed the possible implications of some of
the things we were doing such as the resolution on
Black Power," he said. “But there was no decision
to be less radical in order to avoid losing funds."

Continued on Page 8, Col. 1

 
  
   

It was a warm and sunny Saturday afternoon for the India Associa-

tion, as Indian graduate students, professors and Peace Corps train-

ees for India were gathered around an unidentified guitar-playing

trainee. The scene was part of a picnic sponsored by the India
Association at Boonesborough State Park.

 

To ‘EXtend Learning9

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP)—President Johnson threw out a
challenge to the world's educators Sunday night to try to make use
of modern communications to extend learning and to get world
leaders ”to convert man's tragic will to destroy into a determina-

tion to build."

The President pointed to the
”shocking facts" that in the 20th
Century, the richest age of his—
tory, four adults in 10 cannot
read and write and “most peo-
ple end their lives unable to
write ‘cat' or ‘dog.’ "

Speaking to an International
Conference on the World Crisis
in Education before some 200
delegates from 54 countries at
this restored colonial capital of
Virginia, the President saidthese
are facts that cry out ”shame
on this world. shame on its lead-
ers."

The President's remarks were
made in a prepared text.

Johnson said, as he has said
before that he hopes future his—
torians will call this period in
America ”the age of education"
for what the US. govemment
has done to increase its aid to
learning.

All Are ‘Developing'

But, he said, when it comes
to education "every nation, in-
cluding this one, is still a de-
veloping country. "

)The President placed three
challenges before the conference
which he initiated in a speech
at the East~West Center of Cul-
tural and Technological Ex-

change in Honolulu last Octo-
ber.

’How to use educational tel-
evision to accelerate basic edu-
cation for our children. make the
best teaching available to a max-
imum number of students.

)How to make the best schol-
ars and teachers in the world
available to all universities—
wherever they may be-through
satellite communication.

)And how we can use the
latest methods of microfilming
and communication to proyidc
those doing scholarship and re-
search everywhere the best li—
brary facilities that there are
anywhere.

The President suggested that
the United Nations launch an in-
temational education year-a—tar-
get time for reviewing goals and
planning new progress.

Triangle Sets Record

 

A Photo Finish

Triangle and Gamma Phi Beta won virtually dead-heat victories
in the annual Lambda Chi Alpha Pushcart Derby Saturday at Ad-

ministration Circle.

sponsored by. Pi Kappa Alpha.

Triangle won the fraternity
championship heat in a record
time of l:42:3, nosing out Delta
Tau Delta by seven-tenths of a
second. Gamma Phi Beta, using
Triangle’s pushcart, finished one
second ahead of Chi Omega in
sorority Competition.

Third and fourth places inthe
fraternity division were won by
Farmhouse and Sigma Phi Ep-
silon.

A highlight of the aftemoon
was the crowning of the 1967
Pushcart Derby Queen, Jennifer
Burcham and her court. Miss Bur-
cham, a senior French major,was
sponsored by Phi Kappa Tau
Fraternity. Shw is a member of
Chi Omega sorority.

In the Queen's Com were
Mary Wamstad, first attendent

Pam Coetz, second .attenden:
sponsored by Sigma Alpha Ep»
silon; Brenda O'Connell, third
attendent sponsored by Farm- ‘
house, and Cindy Keeling, fourth
attendent sponsored by Army R.-
O. T. C.

The 1967 Pushcart Derby Ugly
Man was Robert Bach sponsored
by Zeta Tau Alpha. The Ugly
Man was elected on the basis
of one cent a vote; the queen
was elected by popular vote of
students.

Proceeds from the Ugly Man
contest were presented to Mrs.
Naomi Ball for the American
Cancer Society, and to the Greg
Page Memorial Fund. A total of
3703.19 was collected through
Ugly Man voting.

 2—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct. 9, 1967

 

 

‘The Entertainer9 Revives Old Music Hall,
Returning To Lusty Days In Favorite Pubs

By C. MITCHELL DOUGLAS

“The Entertainer" by John
Osborne, which opens the UK
Department of Theatre Arts' for—
tieth season on October 11, re-
vives a tradition dating back
over one hundred years—that of
the English music hall.

The music hall tradition be-
gan in the pubs. The lustiness of
the performer’s style and his abil-
ity to hold the attention of his
audience can be traced to the
fact that he had to play to an
audience that was busy with
drinks and conversation. The au-
dience in the pub often joined
in the songs and this participa-
tion continued when the music
hall moved into the theatre. In-
teraction between audience and
performer became an important
part of the music hall tradition,
and the greatest music hallartists
have been those who have had
the personal warmth and the
lusty, gusty style that could make
the listeners want to be part of
the act. '

”The Entertainer" concerns a
family born of this music hall
tradition. Seventy-five—yearold
Billy Rice has once been a fa-
mous music hall performer. His
son, Archie, is a performer in the
music hall of the fifties. But
Archie is a song-and-dance man
on the downgrade. His jokes are
lamentable, his songs ridiculous
and his stage manners repugnant.
At home Archie's act continues.

He is the cheap clown who barely
thinks of responsibility and dives
for the bottle for a reliefhe doesn’t
understand.

The bottle also serves to com-
fort Archie’s gin-ridden wife,
Phoebe. Phoebe worries about
her son, captured during the Suez
crisis, and fears that Archie will
leave her for another woman.
Caught up in this frustration
and turmoil are Archie's son,
Frank, and his daughter, Jean.

As a drama about music hall
people, the play is written in
the music hall style of thirteen
“turns" or scenes. When Archie
Rice is not seen at home, he is

appearing before the music hall
curtain in a series of musical
numbers.

Playing Archie Rice, the role
originally created by Laurence
Olivier, is Bill Nave. His wife,
Phoebe, will be played by Bekki
Jo Schneider. The grand old mu-
sic hall ”pro," Billy Rice, is
played by Gene Arkle, with Bryan
Harrison as Frank and Elizabeth
Hoagland as Jean. Also in the
cast are Howard Enoch as Brother
Bill, Larry Auld as Graham Dodd,
and Jane Burch as Gorgeous
Gladys.

Wallace N. Briggs directs
“The Entertainer” while Charles

    

Gene Arkle (left) and Bryan Harrison rehearse a musical number
from “The Entertainer" with traditional straw hats which

te back

to music hall days. The plays runs Oct. 11-15. All seats are reserved.

UnorthodoxStyle Comedian

Levenson Performs Tonight

Sam Levenson, known for his
unorthodox style of comedy, is
performing at 8 p.m. tonight in
Memorial Coliseum.

Levenson, a stoclq' man with
a youthful smile, will push back
his wire-rimmed glasses and
laugh at his own jokes, but aud-
iences laugh with him.

The formervteacher started out
by providing entertainment at
parties. He enjoyed entertaining
people so much that he took jobs
as a comedian after school hours.
When he started making more
money with his second job, he
decided to quit teaching and
launch a career as a comedian.

Today, he is one of America's
favorite humorists and lecturers.

He broke from traditional
comedians and invented his own
style. This didn't pay off immed-
iately, but after he first appeared
on the “Ed Sullivan Show" he
was accepted as a comedian and
became a nationally known per-
sonality.

The Central Kentucky Con-

cert-Lecture Series who spon-
sor Levenson will offer Van

Clibom Oct. 16.
UK students are admitted to
all programs of the series with

lD's.

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station. University of Kentucky, Lex-
ingtor, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Mailed live times weekly during 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.

4

 

SAM LEVENSON

 

 

J. Board
Application

The application for positions on
the University Judicial Board has
been extended through Wednes-
day, Oct. II, 1967. Those persons
desiring to make application may
obtain forms at the Dean of Stu-
dent Affairs, Room 206 Adminis-
tration Building, the Student Cen-
ter, Information Desk, Graduate
School Office, and the Medical
School-Student Services Office. —
Graduate and Professional Stu-
dents are especially urged to make
application.

 

 

 

    

 

NOW SHOWING!
cowueu P

pm SIDNEY '
POITIER

.n JAMES CLAVELLS ”CDUC' SN 0‘

“TO SIB, WITH
lo 9! G

TECHNICOLOR‘

 

 

 

 

 

 

     
  

mlihmuuln“

llllll

l
NOW SHOWING!

psi. _
' Oi; . ' .~

A...—
(5'2)

 

:l

     

 

 

 

 

i
in

C

NOW 5

m Emmi
% DUNAWAY

BONNIE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“whm‘fllflm'lilll’ whulum )mufl‘v"-

“WHOM Ml sen-m All!

 

 

 

 

 

     
   
   

1'2» 'SIRLO’I‘N “STEAK

Oloked Potato
'French loll
'Chel's Salad .7 . ‘

 

Crimsley designs the setting
which recreates the sleazy glam—
or of a music hall stage and the
dowdy cheerlessness of the Rice
Home. Mr. Joseph Flauto is cos—
tumer for the production. Ann
Huddleston supervises the music
hall orchestra.

The play will mn October
ll, 12, 13, 14 and 15, in the
UK' Fine Arts Building, Guigs.
nol Theatre. Tickets are $2.00
and $1.00 for students.

    
 

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

Studio

222,South Limestone
PHONE 252-6672
Portraits of Quality

and Composits
MADE TO PLEASE YOU!

 

 

 

For a de ightful, relaxing, carefree
pleasant evening, or when parents
came to Lexington, visit the Imperial House,
Lexington's most elegant motel where gourmet
foods, \vines, and fine service prevail. Entertain-
ment and dancing nightly for your pleasure. Our
rooms are spacious, elegantly appointed and
supremely comfortable.

Imperial House Of Lxxinzton.

WALLER AVENUE st HARRODSIURG ROAD

 

and guests

 
 
 
   
 
 
   
    
 
 

STANLEY DEMOS. Manager

Ky

 

MONDAY ——-

THURSDAY -—

FRIDAY —

Perkins Pancake House
i‘iiNNm SPECIALS

‘: 9 p.m.
Chicken, Fiench Fries, Cole Slaw—$1.39

All you can eat.
All the Pancakes you can eat—75c

Fried Fish, French Fries, Cole Slaw—$1.29

All you can eat.

OPEN 6 u.m.~9 p.m.—SUN. thru. THURS.

Across from

 

 

 

Reservations 258-9000, ext. 2929

 

FR|.-SAT. till 2:30 am. UK Med Center
:-

The University of Kentucky

Department of Theatre Arts

Opens its 40th Season with
THE EN'l‘ER'l‘AINER

' By John Osborne
THE GUIGNOL THEATRE—Oct

ll-lS, 8:30 p.m.
Adults $2.00; Students $l.00

 

 

9.
~

52819171313 as» J

 

Jerry Ellinger.

WE HAVE HAD ENOUGH OF
THE BLUE-WHITE

 

years to refer to a diamond without body color. How-
ever, it is applied frequently, but incorrectly, to stones

”BLUE-WHlTE—A term that has been used for many ‘

that have a distinct yellow tint. Federal Trade Commis-

J sion rulings state that it is unfair trade practice to apply
the term to any stone having body color other than

. blue or bluish. A similar American Gem Society ruling .
prohibits the use of the term by its members. Flagrant

misuse has made the term meaningless.” (l)

mond of so fine a cut that it strongly displays the spectral
fire of both the blue and violet portions of the rainbow.

Traditionally blue-white has meant a colorless diam- ‘

We are not referring to a flourescent blue diamond, as

Rerently, perhaps due to incorrect judgment, the term

‘ one of every five diommids is flourescent blue.

’bluc-white' has become practically meaningless. When

you are interested in a

diamond,

you should see l

someone who has a professional knowledge of them.

‘ ' Fine Jewelry Since 1883

       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Advertising published herein is in- _ , V' .
tended to help the reader buy. Any ‘ \
false or misleading advertising should N. .-. .. . . r U fltpt
be reported to The Editors. ‘ -- g <” ‘0 ............
SUBSCRIPTION RATES " . I Immmdgm um
Yearly. by mail —- $9.27 ‘ mi durum
Per copy. from files — 3.10 l w
KERNEL TELEPHONES ST: A K n 0 us 127 West Main St.
Editor. Manazing Editor ......... 2321 Lexmqton Ky .
“Answcomlhtiaizifodrb‘REDom ------ 1310 Across from A&P I Phone 2994710 U) (The Diamond Dllmonal'y' 1“ Ed" 1960' Gemological
:‘e’wsmnesk .é...‘ ................. 3441 Institute of America, p. 19).
V0 3 n8. “8 neu. __ ' '
Circulation .................... ms MWQRfiE‘fE'EEfl’ffljiff'f'ee'jgl'" “"d 3”“ 5'°"°" R°°d - “‘7‘ a.-. - I
‘. “- ;.M,vn‘ {1% ‘-

 

 

  

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct. ‘9, 1967—3

 

 

CLASSIFIED

 

 

To place a classified phone UK
extension 2819 or stop in at the of-
ilee, 111 Journalism, from 8 to noon,
1 to 5. Monday through Friday.

Rates are $1.25 for 20 words. $8 for
three consecutive insertion of some
all or $8.75 per week. Deadline is 11
a.m. day prior to publication.

No advertisement may cite roee. re-
ligion or national origin as a quali-
fication for renting rooms or for em-
ployment.

 

WANTED

 

HELP WANTED—Male or female stu-
dent to demonstrate new product in
this area. Pick your own hours. Earn
from $50-$75 per week. Call 278-2309.
Ray Beatty. 18$20t

 

HELP WANTED

 

NEED 2 WAITRESSES and Pizza
Cook. Evening work. Apply 24]
Southland Drive. 405t

 

FOB BALI

 

FOR SALE—2 matching wing chairs.

 

BABY SITTING

 

,

CHILD CARE daily in my home.
Versailles Road. Call 252-0953 any

time. 902t

 

PERSONAL

 

LANCES Junior Men's Honorary is
now accepting applications for mem~
bership. Applicants must have a 2.50
overall and a Junior classification.
Mail applications to Charley Reason,
2085 Fontaine Road. Apt. 6. by Oct.
12. ' 407t

 

LOUIE NUNN will speak at so.

Ballroom Oct. 10, 8 p.m. Refresh-
ments. Hear the Education Platform.
Vote the Nunn Team. 603t

FREE KITTENS 12) to good homes.
Mrs. Van Horne. King Library or 131
Goodrich Ave. After 5 p.m. 901t

 

 

CAMPUS NEWS BRIEFS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MISCELLANE OUB

 

MEMBERSHIP to YWCA can be ob-
tained in Room 204 of Student 291%;

Dr. Charles E. Snow, 57, pro-
fessor of anatomy and physical
anthropology at UK, died Thurs-
day of an apparent heart attack.

UK officials said Dr. Snow
had been visiting relatives in
Madison, Wis., when he became
ill. A Harvard graduate, he had
been at UK since 1942.

0 O 0

Alpha Epsilon Delta, pre-med
honorary, is now accepting ap-
plications. Applicants must have
completed three semesters and
have a 3.0 standing. Applications
are available in Dr. N. J. Pis-
acano's Bradley Hall office.

9 O O

A Russian Club organization-

al meeting will be held at 7 p.m.
Oct. 9 in Room 245 of the Stu-
dent Center.

The purpose of the Club, Dr.
Mischa Fayer, head of the Rus-
sian Department, said is to pro-
vide ”additional opportunity for
learning" and to introduce Rus-

sian customs.
O 0 0

Books for 25 cents? Yes.

The English Department is
selling books from its old lend-
ing library for 25 cents each.
The books are being sold because
the low price, variety and num-
ber of paperback books sold today
make the library obsolete. Most

books are either damaged or out
ofprint.
O O O

Twenty students in the Uni-
versity College of Dentistry par-
ticipated in dental research pro-
jects this summer under fellow-
ships granted by the U.S. Public
Health Service.

Fourth-year students partici-
pating in the program were Smith
R. Armstrong and Lawrence
Nash. Third-year students were
Roger Stambaugh, Edward L.
Morris, Charles Bennett, Virgil
Price, Richard Heming, James
Wilson, Richard Stone, Ronald
Babb, Cary Borchers and Rick
Waldbart.

1 lounge chair. 1 9x12 oval braided
rug, 1 3x5 oval braided rug. all good

ter.
condition. Call 255.1297 after 5:30 p.m. ' '
285d
1966 BRIDGESTONE 175. accessories, ’ . ' ’
including helment. $400 or best of- ‘

 

fer. Apt. 16, 2232 Dinsmore Dr. After
305t

FOR SALE—1966 Corvette, silver blue
color. 427 cu. in. engine. Keystone
mag wheels. good buy. Call 277-1562.

305t

3 p.m.

 

  
   
     
     

 

FOR SALE—Golf clubs. brand new.
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.
Call 278-6320. 20tf.

iii-ii

02‘
O/QDLLLLIJJUL

mammal/imam
Foa SALE—Dresse3_ sun. .John MW ’ . / -,

er. Ladybug. Villagerl, like new. /
prices low. Size 13-14. Call ext.
8423. 505t

MUST SELL—Tape recorder. Sony
model 260; Roberts. over and under
shotgun. 12 ga. vent rib. Call late
278-3433. 505i

 

JAMES BOND'S second car for sale
by only other owner. 1965 MOB
roadster British racing. green. Wire
wheels. radio. heater, PPK compart-
ment and 007 license. One small bul-
let crease in trunk. Miss Moneypenny
not included. ‘Call 006 at 266-6040
after 6 p.m. 405i.

SHOP MONDAYS
9:00 to 9:00

 

 

    

 

FOB BINT

 

FOR RENT~5-room apt. furnished
or unfurnished. Suitable for l. 2 or 3

serious students. 268-5437. 305t

 

FOR RENT—Onc-room efficiency for
2 men. $80. 347 Linden Walk. Phone
266-6146. 40tf

FOR RENT —— Furnished apartment.
Bedroom. kitchen. private shower
bath. Electric refrigerator. Will ac-

 

 

 

 

 

commodate two. Apply 280 S. Lime- ‘9'”: finned. \
stone. 6021 3 3 ‘l “i Wags _. ,. I.
. . » master" -'
LOST . ~. /’ ' .1, 1-":"4
. . Mitigation":
. TENOR GUITAR taken from AZD if”. . :m‘iiym.
parking lot Monday night urgently {if .I .~I “tot,
needed! It you have it or know , «II “.2
where it is contact AZD house. Re— "gé 31hr.“ .;
ward. 603t x i .u ' .“”'
' ”We! ant
.3 (can‘t .1,” I
ms'rnuc'rion ~' it 55*: 2!] cl um
f:~"‘i¢¢ltlau
TEACHER for German and French -‘:::*‘ “TI-villi
with foreign background. Excellent g, ’ . i «It!!!
for conversation as well as beginners. “of: 3.: 9 'QG811
Call 266-2370. evenings. 603t pkflgfi 3 g“.
i g“ a : . if a; i‘

 

TYPING

 

 

 

4‘.‘ ., , ,
L 1":5 6‘ s". i
WILL DO TYPING in my home. Call 8‘ g c ”.4‘ a" .,. g ‘. ,
277-7868. 605t ‘ {$3, "\"r‘s‘t’
. e, a i.‘ 5 kg.‘
4‘ .r'l. Q . , .
Q. s .
BABY ammo ., ts.',;‘\1¢:.§‘ :4. ..
"Q T) o 3J- "‘I
BABY SlTTER—Reliable sitters need- i'..*.l’.¢ f ‘1‘}; ‘s {-3.
ed for children. Convalescent and as , ”5‘ :1» ‘5 . ‘y ‘3". ‘v ‘4 G r.
companion. Minimum age 18. 92 cents \ ‘- <’ i“ ‘R‘. 8“ ‘ ‘s g t g. ‘99..
per hour plus transportation. For O.’ Q ‘ 0 \ 0 {It ov.‘ {r t ‘0 9
interview apply 1057 s. Broadway. "ht J) Ala. As 15.x;
I

3.

8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Friday. Call 252-8224. 305t

 

 

’l/ p / I

l

misses and'juniors
Jumpers ’n
Skimmers . . .

$10 ~

 

   

Brassy, Blue [/-
’n Bold Switchabouts

Bold-as-brass plaids and solids in fine textured
wool worsteds for all your active hours. Blue/
brass/white plaids, brass solids; sizes 8 to 16.
REG. $20 Plaid BOY JACKET. Flop pockets, boll buttons $13

 

 

 

 

0%

‘_

 

REG. $12 No-waist A-Iine SKIRT. Solid brass only . .......... s 7
SPECIAL' REG. $20 Brussy buttoned ’A’ JUMPER-SHIFT .............. . $13 0 f regular
. REG. $12 Wool/fur blend Turtle SWEATER. Blue or Brass $ 7 . '
REG. $15 No-woist Stovepipe PANTS, be It ripped ...... $10 prices. regularly $12 to $14

   
 
  
    

 

SAVE $2.00

| k' F 11 ’67
Bernat's Forward 00 mg a

from a very famous maker! shopings in rich wool tweeds,

SKI SWEATER ”FREE checks and twills . . . finely
- - RIDE & SHOP” -
In Scandia for $ DOWNTOWN tailored for campus or car.
F M w "PARK & SHOP" eerl Add your best sweaters
or en 0" omen PARTICIPANT and shirts for double-duty!

Choose block, brown, grey,
novy, red or green," sizes 6 to

15 and 5 to 13,

$14.50

BEARD’S
Knitting Studio

1020 Eostlond Shopping Center
Facing Industry Rood

Tailored ‘She’ Shirts
regularly $5 to $10

Carefree Docron® polyester/cotton long or roll-
sleeve styles. Prints, stripes, solids; button-down,
convertible or Bermuda collars. Sizes 6 to 18.

 

Special Consideration Given For Your
Student Charge Accounts

   
 
 

-nannnnnngngmnnnunnnnunl_

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
     

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The South’s Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY or KENTUCKY

 
    

ESTABLISHED 1894

MONDAY, OCT. 9, 196".

 

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

 

 
    

William F. Knapp, In, Editor-In-Chief

 

 

    
     
      
 
     
     
      
 
     
       
      

Editor’s Note: This editorial ap-
pears in the current issue of Sports
Illustrated magazine, apublication
of the Life-Time Corporation. It is
presented here as illustrative ofna-
tional reaction to the University’s

In a disputed purchase, the Uni—
versity of Kentucky has been
awarded the late Elizabeth Arden
Graham’s Maine Chance Farm,720
acres of rich lands that lie just
outside of Lexington in the very
heart of the rolling Bluegrass coun—

--~e~ try. The university also owns 2,100
acres adjacent to Maine Chance—
lands that are standing more or
less idle, with pigs instead of thor-
oughbreds as tenants. Someday,
says the University, it might use
its new property to contain an
equine research institute. But these
plans are distant, and their value
to Fayette County—which gets not
a cent of land taxes from school
property—and to the entire Ken-
tucky horse-breeding industry are
tentative and somewhat random.

These conclusions are relatively
even more evident since Rex Ells-
worth, the California breeder and
owner, heads a syndicate that also
wants to buy the property—and use
it. Not only would Ellsworth bring
his 700 head of horses from Cali-
fornia, but he also plans to invest

 
   
   
  
   
   
    
   
   
    
 
 
  
   
    
  
    
    
    
   
   
   
   
    
  
   
    
 
   
 
   
    
    
  
   
  
   
  
   
        
  
  
  
  
   

While the University has demon-
strated a remarkably permissive
attitude toward student painting
on the wall. some over-enthusiastic
student sign painters abused their
painting privileges when they
slopped signs on the sidewalks
of the University.

Lambda Chi Derby is unduly
marred by the lingering presence
of signs promoting candidates for
queen permanently etched on Uni-
versity property.

The trivia painted on the side—

~;..

HtTE

’.

walks will take a year or more
to wear off. Ordinary paint remov—
er is useless against paint on con-
crete. Sanding will be tried by the
University, but with little hope
for success.

And while we can all live with

purchase of Maine Chance Farm.‘

Comment On Maine Chance

$3.5 million more in improvements
that would immediately benefit the
community and the horsemen. One
plan, for instance, calls for a year—
round public training track.

He also wants to conduct yearl—
ing sales. Nearby Keeneland at
present has a state monopoly on
such sales, and has so staunchly
supported the University’s purchase
that it has been named a co—de-
fendant in a $30 million restraint-
of-trade suit that Ellsworth filed
last week. “is group originally bid
$1,942.000—$58,000 less than the
University's offer—but Ellsworth
maintains that he had an under—
standing with the executors that he
could raise his bidifit weretopped.
The option was never honored.
Curiously, the attorney for the bank
handling the transaction and for
the Keeneland and Breeder Sales
Co. is the same man. Ellsworth
has now raised his bidto $2,058,000

but has received no response.

The University avers it will hold
on to its new acquisition. When-
ever the ”proposed equine research
institute" is at last placed on the
marvelous fallow lands, it might
be appropriate for the initial re-
search project to examine the de-
cline of the Kentucky horse in—
dustry.

Sports Illustrated

Student I rresponsibility

a few signs painted on the side-
walks the daiiger is that students
have demonstrated a penchant for
painting University property other
than a temporary wall. If the pres—
ent trend continues signs will be—
gin to appear on the brick build-
ings of the University. Such graffiti
will necessitate sand—blasting, and
when this point is reached it is
assured the University will react
in an authoritarian manner.

Apparently the distinction be-

-a" r ‘ -. .-

 

tween the malicious, willful de—
struction of public property, and
great good fun painted on a tem-
porary wooden structure which is
unharmed thereby, is a distinction
which is over the heads of some
University students.

 

  

 
 
   
 

LOW-’57 HERE” ch
1H5 was, 1/1 “3670.. 905’?

 

“Welcome To The Club”

 

 

 

Letters To The Editor:

 

Groves Defends ‘No Power’Comment

lt surprised me to see that l was
worthy of prime space on the same edi-
torial page that is [finally devoted to
people such as University President Os-
wald, Charlie Bradshaw. Adolph Rupp.
and the President ofthe United States. i
certainly enjoyed the well developed car-
toon. although I don't imagine Miss Mc-
Cloy, the person interviewing me. wastoo
pleased with the manly appearance Mr.
Thompson gave her.

The basis for two columns of wild
exaggerated statements was a two seii~
teiice misquotation taken out of context.
attributed to me. Now that you havespeiit
so much of your saluable time defining
what l meant by power. let me briefly
reiterate what l told Miss .\lc(7loy ”We
want the individual residence halls to
maintain their autonomy. while we work
in an advisory and coordinating capa-
city.” The council doesn't need power
for power's sake.

While I consider this editorial an em-
barassing personal affront, if it had ap-
peared three weeks earlier perhaps it would
have been about President Groves rather
than Vice President Groves, for as you
will know anyone attacked by The Kernel
becomes a hero to ninety-eight percent
of its readers (the other two percent are
on The Kemel staff).

As for my quote, perhaps it would
be better applied to The Kernel itself:

”It's good if the students can handle
it—if they realize it's not for power but
for responsibility and leadership."

Ann Calhoun Groves
Vice President of Complex 6

To The Editor Of The Kernel:

We would like to thank you for your
very kind support in the past and once
again ask you to please help us reach
those Americans who wish to send Christ—
finas cards to out gallant men in Vietnam.

Those fine young Americans who will
spend Christmas in the sniper infested
swamps of Smith Vietnam do not set
US. policy. They get lonely. they sweat,
they bleed and many will die, for you
and for me. Seasons Greetings from a
fellow American will lighten the burden
they bear for America and the free world.

Vietnam Mail Call has forwarded
friendly letters and greeting cards to our
gallant men in Vietnam from hundreds
oftliousaiids of freedom loving Americans
since july 27, 1965. We are now in the
1%? Christmas card drive. We will mail
Christmas cards to twenty-seven hospitals,
ten USO's, to all major units and to ships

at sea as well as to individuals this
Christmas season.

Please start mailing Christmas cards
now for our program. Post Office will tell
you when to mail to friends and relat-
ives in Vietnam. Pl