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still strong support for the capital projects, especially for the
Commonwealth Library project, and the library facility will remain the top
priority of the University. He asked everyone to keep working to benefit
higher education and the University of Kentucky.

       F.    MskiLaLCenter Presentation

       President Wethington noted that a recommendation for a new
Chancellor for the Chandler Medical Center was on the agenda and said it
was appropriate that Chancellor Peter Bosomworth make a presentation on
the current status and the future directions of the Chandler Medical
Center prior to turning over the reins to his successor.

       Chancellor Bosomworth said it was a pleasure to address the Board,
and he looked forward to a very smooth transition in terms of leadership
in the Medical. Center. Through a series of slides, he provided a brief
history of the Medical Center. He discussed the Medical Center's mission,
vision and values, trends and accomplishments and the impact of health
care reform which will confront the Medical Center. In conclusion, he
pointed out that much has been accomplished at the Medical Center;
however, there is still much left to be done. He then entertained
questions from the members of the Board.

       President Wethington expressed appreciation to Chancellor
Bosomworth for bringing the Board up-to-date on the Chandler Medical
Center.

       G.    Resolution Honoring Dr. John Wesley Hatch

       Judge Wilhoit read the following resolution honoring Dr. John
Wesley Hatch and recommended its adoption:

       WHEREAS, in the spring of 1948, John Wesley Hatch, then not yet
       twenty, had completed his sophomore year at the "Kentucky State
       College for Negroes," now known as Kentucky State University. His
       dream was to become a lawyer and practice in Kentucky.
       Unfortunately the "Day Law" forbade any educational institution in
       the Commonwealth of Kentucky to teach black and white students on
       the same campus under penalty of heavy fines, and

       WHEREAS, John Wesley Hatch nonetheless applied for admission to the
       College of Law of the University of Kentucky. The Board of
       Trustees, after consultation with President Herman Donovan and Dean
       Elvis Stahr, decided to circumvent the "Day Law" by admitting John
       Wesley Hatch to the University of Kentucky College of Law while
       providing for his legal education by the faculty of the College of
       Law on the campus of Kentucky State, and

       WHEREAS, in the Fall Semester of 1948 John Wesley Hatch was taught
       by five members of the University's regular law faculty who
       shuttled daily between a class of ninety first-year students in
       Lexington and a solo class of one in Frankfort. In the Spring
       Semester of that year an alternate solution was devised, and a
       faculty of six practicing lawyers were employed to teach John
       Wesley Hatch, still solo, in Frankfort, and