xt7qft8djj03 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qft8djj03/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660126  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 26, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 26, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7qft8djj03 section xt7qft8djj03 Inside Today's Kernel
Blazer Hall wins WRH
plaque
highest scholarship: Poge Two.
Or. Guy Davenport
Poge Three.

tditor discusses
Poge Four.

reviews

tor

'Stylus':

'policies' end NSA:

'Batman':

Poge

Three.

IL

The third in a series of five stories
on Kentucky Village says atmosphere
has changed: Poge Fire.
Ball, Norton, and seniors take honors at banquet: Poge Six.

Vol. LVII, No. 68

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 19(if

Eight Pages

'Great Day,' Says Ohcrst

Rights Bill Passed
By Kentucky Senate
ByJOHNZEII

Kernel News Editor
Passage of the civil rights
bill has marked "a great day
for Kentucky," UK law professor
Paul Oberst, who helped draft
the measure, said today.
Prof. Oberst, vice chairman
of the state's Human Rights Commission, said the real significance
of the legislative action lies in
Kentucky's exercising leadership
in the "very sensitive area."
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt will
sign the bill Thursday morning
in a ceremony beneath the
Rotunda
statue of Abraham
Lincoln at the Capitol.
The Senate Thursday passed
after the lower
the bill 36-chamber voted 76-1-2
in favor
eight days ago.
Kentucky now is the first
state south of the Mason-Dixo- n
Line to have an effective civil
rights law.
The bill forbids discrimination of race, religion, color, or
national origin in public accomodations and in hiring practices.
Prof. Oberst, who said he will
proudly attend the signing ceremonies, emphasized the "broad
scale" of Kentucky's law.
It goes further than the federal civil rights act passed by
Congress last year, by covering
all public businesses not specif

ically excluded by the federal
law and all employers of eight
or more persons.
The Kentucky act also grants
the Human Rights Commission
broader hearing and investigatory powers.
Another UK professor active
in civil rights work, Dr. Cyrus
Johnson, sociology, said the
passage should "do a great deal
in improving the climate of
human relations in Kentucky."
Dr. Johnson is faculty adviser
to the Campus Committee on
Human Rights, a group so far
inactive this semester.
"The law will also provide a

Kernel Photo by Rick Bell

team," Gov. Edward T.
"People love
University and
Breathitt told a gathering last night at the annual football banquet
honoring the Wildcats. See story on page seven.

rv

three-memb-

er

Maija Avots, who was ill and out Article Two of Congress
could not attend the meeting, constitution relating the purpose
sent a message to the committee of the body "to serve as the
stating that she was opposed to official student body authority in
dropping NSA membership. She University affairs relating to the
student body as a whole, and to
requested that no amendments
be considered in her absence. perform such duties and responOscar Westerfield, committee
sibilities which it may assume as
chairman and author of the its functions in the government of
original bill advocating NSA the University."
The amendment referred to a
withdrawal, presented the
amendment
written by SC resolution passed last semester
which "reaffirmed the constitupresident Winston Miller altional limitations" in banning
though it was not officially considered in committee.
political discussion in Congress
Miller's amendment pointed
and to NSA participation in

MR. PAUL OBERST

national and international

as House Bill 2,

Debate centered around Republican charges that the

Change In NSA Proposal Reviewed

By FRANK BROWNING
Assistant Managing Editor
An amendment questioning
the constitutionality of Student
Congress membership in the
National Student
Association
superceded committee discussion
of proposed NSA withdrawal
Tuesday night.
With one of the
committee studying the SC bill
absent, no decision was made
as to whether the bill would be
referred favorably or unfavorably
at Congress meeting Thursday
night.

Designated

the measure was one of Gov.
Breathitt's major recommenda-

tions to the 1966 General Assembly.
A similar, but less inclusive,
bill died in committee in the 1964
Some blamed
Gov.
session.
Breathitt for the failure, but he
definitely had power to spare in
getting the bill maneuvered into
position for passage this year.
In. Wednesday's Senate session, the only opposing vote came
Brand
from
Sen.
George
No one offered an
ammendment, and no member
spoke against the bill.

1,

Annual Football Banquet
this
its athletic

considerable amount of positive
encouragement to minority group
people in the state to develop
to their capacities," he said.
Dr. Johnson said he feels the
overwhelming support the legislature gave the bill indicates
the feeling that the bill is "the
right thing to do."
Last semester, some members
of the campus committee contributed to encouraging the
bill's passage, he said. The group
also brought in speakers who supported the bill.

polit-

ical discussion in Congress and
to NSA participation in national
and international political affairs.
He concluded the amendment
by stating "the involvement of
the United States National
Student Association in international and national political
affairs is inconsistent with the
purpose of the University of
Kentucky Student Congress."
"The issue is not centered
around NSA services, but whether
Continued On Pare 8

measure had been watered down.
countered
with
Democrats
claims that their opponents had
tried to ride the bill as a vehicle of political advantage.
The bill does have some exceptions. Barber and beauty
shops and rooming houses with
not more than five rooms are
excluded from coverage. So are
businesses with fewer than eight
employes.
House Majority Leader, John
Brown (D Lexington) trying
to persuade representatives to
pass the act, said passage was
ultimately inevitable, and "since
it is so, why should Kentucky
be
and
dragged
fighting
screaming into the age in which
we live,"
Y.

--

Students Get Part- Time Work
Office Of School Relations Placed 574

By ANN SCHNEIDER

Kernel Staff Writer
Last semester, 574 students found part time employment with the help of the student employment service
of the Office of School Relations.
M. C. Foushee, director of the student employment
service, said that 416 students were placed in jobs under
the Regular Work Program, and that 158 students were
placed in jobs under the College Work-Stud- y
Program.
The Regular Work Program handles both
jobs in the Lexington and Fayette
jobs, and
County area. The salaries of students under this program are paid by University budgeted funds.
The College Work Study Program involves students
whose families can't contribute significantly to the cost
of higher education. The salaries of these students are
paid with funds made available under the Economic
Opportunity Act of 1964.
Of the 416 students who were helped to find jobs
under the regular work program, 182 men and 137 women

were placed in jobs on the campus, according to Mr.
Foushee. Seventy men and 27 women were placed in
jobs in Lexington or Fayette County.
Under the College Work-Stud- y
Program, 30 men and
13 women were placed in jobs on the Lexington campus,
and 66 men and 49 women were placed in jobs within
the community colleges.
There were 662 students who applied to the student
VX
employment service for help in finding a job during the
fall semester, and 574, or about 86 percent, found jobs.
Mr. Foushee said this reflected the overall percentage
of success in finding jobs, which he estimated at being
75 to 80 percent.
According to Mr. Foushee, employers were usually
looking for replacements for students who had graduated,
changed schools, or taken a heavier work load.
The major difficulties Mr. Foushee found in placing
students were that students schedule didn't allow enough Tonni Swoj. a sophomore from Oak Ridge, Tenn., was
time for work, specific qualifications needs, or the student one of 574 students who found part-timemployment
last summer.
was too selective about the type of job he wanted.

* JTRH Scholarship Plaque Aicarded To Blazer
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 26, 1966

Return To Viclorlanism?

'Stylus' Relates Sadness
By DR. GUY DAVENrORT
Special To The Kernel
It lias been fashionable for
some years now
among under

a few cautiously

gray, but the persistent tone remains weary and depressed.
Were no epigrams submitted?
Nothing tart, salty, alive? No
comedy, no parody, no tomfoolery?
Even
the pictures (two
paintings, two drawings) emerge
from brooding minds. Stuart
Robertson's oil portrait of bis
wife has, as its style shows,
something of Chaim Soutinc's
wit and charm, and a great deal
of Soutinc's bitterness.
It is perhaps significant that
the first page of the magazine
is concerned with an execution
chamber and the last with a
ghost, both summoned with a
great sigh of futility.
In the mathematical center of
the issue, we find the phrase:
"... the wolf s cry, or mother lost,
reaching toward some winter."
In Delacroix's Journal we can
find the entry: "I felt as bad
this morning as if I were young

graduate writers to equate sensitivity with sullen reproach. The
quieter the voice, the deeper the
meaning. Poetry, as they conceive of it, is bleak,
wistful, terribly cautious. The dragged foot,
the brown study, the puzzling
phrase, and all is set for the
composition of a poem.
Most of the 19 poems in the
current "Stylus," UK's undergraduate
literary
magazine,
move, if they move at all, with
whimsical sadness, as if the authors were under hypnosis or
making passes with a wand,
hoping for magic.
Except for Joe Nickcll's tidy
and sharp translation of a
Chaplincsque little piece of
Rimbaud's, the large part of
these poems seems to be
whispered by a patient in a high
fever.

guarded gestures. What arc they afraid of?
Why do they stick so com fort ably
to an institutionalized style?
And the real trouble seems
to lie in the most amazing
narrowness of subject matter ever
to appear in American poetry
since the
scribbling of the incumbency of Chester A. Arthur.
Curiously, what lies disguised
behind these poems is a
Victorianism, a bitter-sweValentinc-and-gravc-ya-

ss

that

seems to restrict and hide
meaning more than it exposes it.
To speak of craftsmanship
only, we must note that this
issue of Stylus keeps to a high
standard. The diction of the
poems is spare and clean (too
spare! too clean!); there is an
admirable taste for good words,
and a fairly vigorous sense of
form everywhere.
The magazine is well printed,
well designed. The talent here is
growing, it need not be said,
and all beginnings are perilous.

The neat competence behind
these poems, pictures, and prose
is the first hint of the reluctance
of their makers to risk more than

Car-bonel-

is

and private. Such a mode has
served many a poet well, but it

again."

There
are
of
moments
macabre elation in Calaor
elegy, and an occasional
line in which the gloom is less

rd

Movie Capsule

'Nanny' Typifies Davis
By STEVEN LAZAR

Kernel Staff Writer
"The Nanny," which has just concluded its run
at the Ashland Theater, is a typical Bette Davis
suspense show.
Using all the devices of a modern day
Miss Davis dramatizes the psychological
ramifications of the traumatic experience of bearing
an illegimate child.
The results of her experience fester and cause
Miss Davis to assume a peculiar role that of an
old spinster who has devoted her life to bringing
up another person's family while completely
neglecting her own.
The fact that "Nanny," the character Miss
Davis portrays, has been in the family for three
generations gives her the status and opportunity
terror-myster-

y,

to wield terror while remaining aloof from
suspicion.
The plot of the story revolves around one of
Nanny's wards, played by William Dix. The
Dix is cast as a youngster who knows
that his nanny was indirectly responsible for
the death of his sister, played by Pamela Franklin.
He is frustrated by the fact that although he has
witnessed the death he is unable to convince
anyone else of Nanny's part in it.
Adding fear to frustration, Dix realizes that
if he docs not convince somebody that dear old
Nanny is not the most stable of governesses,
he may soon join his sister.
d
In all, "The Nanny" offers a
version of the psychological suspense movie dear
to the heart of every Bette Davis fan.
well-adapte-

String Quartet To Perform
The University of Kentucky
String Quartet will present a
concert Thursday, February 3,
at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall.
The public is invited to attend
concert.
the admission-fre- e

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

Members of the Quartet are:
Edwin Grzesnikowski,
violin;
Barbara Grzesnikowski, viola;
Kenneth Wright, violin, and
Gordon Kinney, cello
will play
The
Quartet
Mozart's "Quartet in D, K575";
Shostakovich's "Quartet No. 1,
Beethoven's
and
49",
Op.
"Quartet in E Flat, Op. 74."

DODSON
WATCH SHOP
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110 N.. UPPER ST.
6
Phone

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257 N. Lime

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YARNS and ALL KNITTING ACCESSORIES
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Batmobile
is
with Batrays,
and other
for any eventuality imaginable.
The Bat Cave (entered via
n
is loaded with Bat
computers.
It must not be thought,
however, that because he keeps
all this gadgetry, Batman is
The

s,

Bat-pole- s)

crime-detectio-

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252-758-

By RON IIERRON
Kernel Staff Wriler
Seldom does a TV series arouse a large audience of University
students. When a dormitory lounge overflows with televiewers,
you can usually bet there's a ball game or a news special on the
screen. "Batman" is the sell-onow.
Only a week after its premier, another
Ian
Bond.
James
this ABC series has won over a
Fleming's hero lives loosely,
mass of new trivia-loverhalf
and
of whom still think "camp" is a recklessly, is immorally.
Batman
a Puritan. We
place for boy scouts.
picked up this detail in the first
8 p.m.
Running from 7:30 to
episode, when he walked into a
Wednesday and Thursday, the discotheque and trod over to the
show stars Adam West as the bar.
drink?
Does
Batman
masked marvel himself, and Burt
"Orange juice on the rocks," was
Ward as Robin, the boy wonder.
his order. Who could have
A new story begins every Weddoubted?
nesday with a conclusion the
Nor is Batman the lover that
next night.
007 is. We saw potential romance
By 7:25
Thursday night, die in the first story, when his
campus lounges were filled. Not discotheque partner fell into the
a trash can or table was left Bat Cave nuclear reactor.
vacant. A massive cheer arose
The Thursday episode has
flashed onto
as the
each time ended in a bizarre
the screen five minutes later.
battle between the dynamic duo
Most of the fans had watched
and the forces of evil. Umbrellas
24 hours earlier when Bruce
used Thursday
had were the weapons
Wayne (Batman's alter-ego- )
night. "Biff, Zap, Bam, Blam,"
fallen captive to the Penguin,
are flashed onto the screen in
They had seen comic fashion. On color TV,
they
Wayne strapped to a conveyor
out in purple,
ride into a supposedly come
belt for a one-wa- y
green, and yellow.
roaring furnace.
"Will Bruce escape?" the
TYPEWRITERS
narrator had asked as the episode
FOR RENT
ended. Bruce and his fans found
DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,
the answer Thursday night. Just
Inc.
as the flames began lapping at
UNDERWOOD
ELECTRIC, IBM,
his toes, he cast a propane lighter
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the hero from his bonds.
freeing
This was, of course, an
emergency move, since Batman
was not in uniform

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It's A Bird, A Plane--;- ,
No, It's Batman!f

WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY

use the

Central Kentucky's

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combo plays rock
and roll, folk music. . . . Will
play for sororities, fraternities,
formal dances.
Contact

The

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5518 O Jcanien Dr.

Louisville, Ky.

* i

ss n
i

Page

* i

ss n
i

Page

* 6--

TIIE

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 2f,

19G6

TANKERS SWIM TONIGHT

At Graduate Level

UK Has Nation's First

Sports Medicine Program
By GARY YUNT
Kernel Sports Writer
In the Kast Wing of Memorial
Coliseum are the research laboratories and office of Dr. Ernst
Jokl, who is responsible for UK
being the first university in the
United States to include sports
medicine in its graduate curriculum.

Dr. Jokl was the first U.S.
physician to hold specialized
qualifications in the subject.
Since joining the UK faculty,
he has written eight books on
sports medicine. Recently, he
presided at a UNESCO-sponsore- d
research seminar in Switzerland
on "Exercise At Altitude", attended by the world's leading experts in the field.
Among the problems discussed were training schedules
for athletes preparing themselves
for the Olympic Games at Mexico
City in 196S, as well as a number
of clinical and pathological issues
confronting physicians charged
with the care of athletes from the
various nationalities.
The problems raised by the
allocation of the 1968 Games to
Mexico City are of a physiological nature. "The city is 7,300
feet above sea level and atmos

pheric pressure there is but three-fourtof what it is here in
Lexington. Thus, there will be a
modification of the athletes' performances," Jokl said.
"The lessened air resistance in
Mexico City will facilitate all
track races up to one minute
of duration. Unless unexpected
climatic interferences such as
rain, wind or excessive heat and
cold will be present, we can
anticipate excellent performances
in the 100, 100 and
d
runs; the 110 and
hurdles;
and mile
and, the
400-met-

440-yar-

400-met-

relays."

Jokl added that although it
for world records
to be broken at Olympic Games
in track and field events for men,
it is likely that several records
will be forthcoming in Mexico
City in the short events.
Contrarily, the effect of the
altitude and pressure will show
up as an inhibiting factor in performances of endurance.
In the 5,000-metrace, the
Olympic winner in Mexico City
will be about 50 seconds slower
than his best times at sea level;
in the 10,000-metrace, the difference will amount to 2Vi
minutes; and, in the marathon to
more than a half an hour."
is exceptional

er

er

Kentucky's undefeated swimming team enters its Southeastern
schedule
Conference
tonight
against Alabama's Crimson Tide
in the Memorial Coliseum Pool.
This meet will show us how
far along we are in the development of a contending Southeastern Conference swimming
team," Kentucky coach Wynn
Paul said. "We won't really know
how good we are until we see
how we do against Alabama."
The Wildcat s carry a 0 record
into the meet, but all four
victories came against small-schoopposition. Alabama has
a 1 record that includes a 6
victory over Florida, a
swimming power in the SEC.
Kentucky has beaten LouisUnion and
ville, Morehead,
Berea, all with comparative ease.
But Paul says his team has faced
nobody in Alabama's class.
"They have two men (frce-stylDoug Long and mcdleyist
Leventi Batizy) who are near
NCAA cut-otimes," Paul says.
"And the rest of their squad has
talent and depth."
Kentucky's hopes will center
on Richard Wade, who has won
the individual medley and the
d
freestyle in three of
Kentucky's four meets; freestyle
sprinter Fred Zirkel; and the freestyle relay team (Wade, Zirkel,
Steve
Hellman
and Chris
Morgan), which set a new school
4--

ol

5--

49-4-

d
relay
record for the
against Union College.
"Alabama is probably the best
team in the SEC, right along
with Georgia (which Kentucky
meets Feb. 11),' Paul says. "If
we can make a representative
conshowing against them we'll
sider ourselves ready for Uic remainder of the schedule."
The Wildcat swimmers were
relatively unsuccessful in SEC
competition last season.
hardSince, however, the
Paul has done much to
working
improve the swimming situation
here including the formation of
the first water polo team in the
SEC.
400-yar-

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interview time and place.
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The Collegiate
U Clothes Line
By

Chuck
Jacks
CLOTHES FOR THE
COLLEGE MAN
SPORT SHIRTS
There's a
model for every customer. Teens
and college men will be getting
their favored Henleys In many
new versions. Traditional customers will be seeing bold new
et
prints and a revival of the
pullover. And the
gent will get a sensible successor to the shirt-Ja- c,
the
shirt that can do
double duty by coordinating neatly with his swim trunks.
Prints will make Spring sport
shirt news. Paisley and foulard
patterns are big, bright and come
in rich colors. The very bold
"Jam" or Pareu prints are often
shown . . . and the colors are
exuberantly bold. . . . There are
snappy revivals of polka dots as
well as competition stripes. In
all, lots of bold new pattern excitement.
Henleys are shown with
fronts,
laced -- up plackets, zippers and more. Favorite fabrics
are oxfords, denims, plaid and
patch madras and more. Paisleys
and the new "jam" prints are
also in the big shirt of '66. The
shirts are usually in
contrast-colo- r
panel treatments
or
fabrics. They're
a few inches longer than shirt-jac- s
and an inch or so shorter
than standard shirts, with body
shaping, side vents and fancy collars.
Polyester - cotton "pre - cured"
permanent press shirts now appear in every current color . . .
with designer touches (embroideries, fancy pockets, etc.) . . . and
in a great array of styles.
The newest addition to the
sport shirt scene is the
mesh weave. Plaid lenos are very
handsome and should have new
traditional appeal. Combinations
of mesh with solid fabrics are
also found.
The bigrest model of the season is the Henley
in many,
many variations. Second is the
crew-nec- k
(or riner neck), updated for Spring in a "racing"
model with a wide stripe that
circles the neck and then extends
across each shoulder. New, too,
for Spring is the nautical knit
with a
replacing
the placket. There's growing interest, too, in the mock-turtl- e
neck and in boatnecks.
And the
is in for strong
promotion.
Many models have a sporty,
"salty" air that should be good
for the younger customers
a
group that was not partial to
knits a few seasons ago. Generally, the young men will be
buying velours, Henleys and mesh
knits that range from tiny to
honeycomb sizes. To these you
can add cotton jerseys in bold
surfer stripes
usually paired
with a swim trunk and sweatshirt and terry fabrics.
long-plack-

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button--

You emit

out off me

eace

...

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ck

but what a place to start

Fashionably
Speaking,

The Peace Corps can't offer you a career.
You serve only two years. But in the
Peace Corps, you'll learn more about yourself
than you could learn anywhere else. More
about what you can do. More about what you
can give and what you can take.
There are over 300 different job categories in
the Peace Corps. There's always something
to do. So if you want to start doing something
important
join the Peace Corps. You can get
more information by writing: the Peace Corps,
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CHUCK

123
For Young Men
123 W. MAIN ST.

ad

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 20,

19AA-

-7

Ball, Norton, Seniors Take Honors At Banquet
By HENRY ROSENTHAL

Kernel Sports Editor
Sam Ball, Hick Norton, and
the seniors captured most of the
honors at last night's annual
Football Banquet honoring the
Wildcats, 1965 version.
Hall received the
certificate given by the Associated Press, the Sporting News
the
Plaque,
I Iarcourt-Seal- e
Award to the outstanding senior, and was named
alternate captain by the letter-me-

n.

Quarterback

Rick Norton got

the AP
Certificate,
the Sporting News Plaque, the

Kentucky Central Trophy given
to the most valuable player, and
was named captain of the Wild-

cats.
The Sam Huey Scholarship
award donated by the
Association to the senior with

Duke, UK Still

the highest scholastic average

for

four years and given in memory
of Alumnus Sam Huey went to
end John Andrighetti.
Gerry Murphy was the recipient of the Kiwanis 110 Percenter Award donated by the
Kiwanis Clubs of Lexington for
individual effort beyond the call
of duty.
All seniors received watches
donated by the UK Al umni Association.
Freshman John Harris received the Jayccc's Freshman
Leadership Award given to a
freshman player on the basis of
leadership.
Coach
Charlie
Bradshaw
praised the effort and contributions that the seniors made and
said that the underclassmen had
a fine example to follow.
"We're looking forward to
putting a complete floor under

One-Tw- o

In Press Rating Polls
Duke and Kentucky, both idle
last week remain the number one
and two teams respectively in the
nation. According to the polls
of both major wire services, Associated Press and United Press

International.
The Wildcats were able to
narrow the gap in one poll, but
lost ground in the other. Trailing
the Blue Devils by 22 in the UPI
poll, UK cut it in half. Duke
pulled away by four more votes
in the AP.
Duke polled 397 votes to 390
for UK in the AP rankings while
2
in the
the scoring went
UPI's coaches' ratings.
Kentucky and number six
Texas Western are the only
undefeated major college teams in
America. Duke has lost once, an
early season game to South
Carolina.
This is the seventh consecutive week that Duke has held
the number one spot in both polls.
The Blue Devils earned the top
spot via two wins in a row over
nation champions
defending
UCLA while the Californians

were touring on the east coast.
Since then, UCLA has lost
four games.

the program," Hradshaw said.
"We arc eternally grateful for
all that you (the seniors) have
given us," the UK head coach
said.
Cov.
stressed

Edward

T. Breathitt
importance of
athletics at the University.
"People love this University and
its athletic teams," Breathitt
said.
"When it comes to support
of this University everyone is behind you. Recruiting on the same
table were Happy Chandler and
I," Breathitt remarked.
"Your program paid a fine
tribute to Charlie Bradshaw by
the very fine contract they offered," Breathitt said. "I think
we have great days ahead of
us here."
University President Dr. John
W. Oswald said, "We owe much
to you (the seniors). We want
to thank you for your participation and also to thank Charlie
Bradshaw and his staff. I want
to indicate my continuing support of the football program and
other faccits of athletics here at
the University."
Bradshaw awarded letters to
36 members of the Kentucky varsity squad. Members of the

the

F(Dffd

which compiled a 4
record and was ranked
17th in the nation in the final
United Press International Poll
of Coaches, who received their
letters were:
John Andrighetti, Sam Ball,
Torn Bechercr, Rodger Bird, Tom
Chapala, Terry Clark, Doug
Davis, Rick Kcstner, Howard
i,
Keyes, Jim Komara, Tony
Jim
Miles,
Cerry
Murphy, Rick Norton, John
Schornick, Ed Stanko, Talbot t
Todd, Rich Tucci, and head
manager Giles Smith III.
Junior Icttcrmcn were Frank
Don Danko, Jerry
Antonini,
Davis, Mike McCraw, Rich
Machcl, Basil Mullins, Dan
squad,

won-Io-

Spanish, Jim Swart, Roger Wal.,
Bob
Windsor
and
Calvin
Withrow.
Sophomores receiving letters
included Terry Beadles, Kerry
Curling, Homer Coins, Dwight
Little, Ronnie Roberts, and Doug
Van Meter.
Twenty-seve- n
other members
of the team were recognized as
Wildcat squadmen, and 3." freshmen received numerals at the
banquet.

6--

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TAYLOR TOE CO.
400

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team

UPI Poll
Points

1. Duke (26) (14-1- )
2. Kentucky (9) (13-0- )

3. Providence

(12-1- )

4. Vanderbilt (14-2- )
5. St. Joseph's (13-3- )
6. Texas Western (12-0- )
7. Loyola (III.) (12-1- )
8. Bradley (14-3- )
9. Kansas (14-3- )
10. Cincinnati (13-2- )

333
322
212
185
152
117
100
81
79
55

Shively Elected
To NCAA Post
The National Collegiate Athletic Association has announced
that Bernie A. Shively, athletic
director of the University has
been elected to the NCAA's executive committee for a one-yeterm.
Shively's term with the committee will be effective through
next January, at which time he
will be eligible for reappointment.
He replaces Herb Dorricott of
Western State.
The executive committee,
which is composed of 10 members,
is empowered to transact the
business and administer the
affairs of the NCAA and carry
out the policies of the NCAA
council. The committee adopts
the NCAA budget and has the
authority to employ, on the approval of the council, the
executive director of the NCAA
and other persons necessary for
the operation of the NCAA.
Shively is presently serving
in his last year as chairman of
the NCAA's basketball tournament committee. He has been
athletic director at UK since 1937.
ar

dlversitv

The college graduate's initial exposure to the
world of business is often less than exhilarating.
The reason? A great many companies require the
recent graduate to serve a long-terapprenticeship in a role that offers little or no opportunity
to demonstrate personal capabilities. That is not
'
V M"0
if-the way at Ford Motor Company. Our College
Graduate Program brings you into contact with
many phases of business, encourages
and helps you and us determine where your
Moore
Larry
greatest potential lies. An important benefit of the
B.M.E., Univ. of Kantaa
Program is getting to know and work with some
of the most capable people in industry. One of many young men who
believes he has gained tremendously from this exposure and experience is
Larry Moore, a Product Design engineer.
After receivi