xt7qz60bzm03 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qz60bzm03/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640619  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 19, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 19, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7qz60bzm03 section xt7qz60bzm03 Board Appointed
For Publications

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Kentucky
University
of

Vol. LV, No. 115

KY., FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1964

LEXINGTON,

Eight Pages

12 Named By President

To Serve On First Board

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A'etc Commerce College

The new commerce building, on Limestone Street
at the start of the Administration Circle, is nearing

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Building

completion. It is scheduled to open this fall, The
College of Commerce is now located in White Hall.

Trustees Name Director
Of Prestonsburg Branch

A Missouri junior college
Dr. Henry A.
president,
Campbell, has been named
as the director of the Prestonsburg Community College.

became ofThe appointment
ficial last Friday when the Board
of Trustees accepted the recommendation of President John W.
Oswald to appoint Dr. Campbell
to the post. At the same time, the
Trustees authorized the sale of
$1 million
in bonds to finance
part of the construction of the
community colleges at Somerset
and Hopkinsvllle.
is
Dr. Campbell
Currently,
president of Crowder College in
Mo. He became president
Neosho,
at Crowders when the public
Junior college was founded a
year ago. Prior to that he was
the first director at the Alamo-gordColN. M., Community
lege. He held that post for six
years.
A native of Cosmos, Wash., Dr.
from the
Campbell graduated
University in 1949 and has two
doctoral degrees in education
from New Mexico State University and a Ph.D. from the University of Texas.
educator beThe
gun his teaching career in 1949
at Buckeye High School in Garrard County. He taught at Cumberland and Ben ham High
Schools in Harlan County from
1951 to 1955. He went to New
Mexico as a teacher in Alamo-gord- o
High School and became
director of the community col- -

HSU Activities
group of students from the
Baptist Student Union will spend
the day tomorrow at Natural
Bridge. Students interested In
taking a picnic lunch and spending the day at the park should
sign up at the center.
Vesper services will be held
from 6:30-- 7 p.m. Thursday at the
center. Don Leak will discuss
"Passive Resistance: A Means to
Integration."
A

lege there when it was established in 1957.
President Oswald said the initial enrollment at the Prestonsburg Community College may exceed 200. He said that Floyd
have alCounty businessmen
ready endowed 14 scholarships,
six of which have been awarded.
The Trustees approved sale of
the $1 million in bonds to finance
about half the construction cost
of the community colleges at
Somerset and Hopkinsvllle. Each
is scheduled to open in September, 1965.
The total cost of the buildings
is expected to be about $2 million. Federal funds will provide
about 40 percent of that, the
bonds about 50 percent, and other funds about 10 percent.
Final plans for the community
colleges are under study and bids
are expected to be let about July
1
with construction to start on
both buildings in August.
In his report to the Board,
President Oswald said that the
Elizabethtown Community College will also open In September
e
as scheduled. Ten
faculty members have been hired for
Four more apPrestonsburg.
pointments are scheduled.
45 locally
In Elizabethtown,
endowed scholarships are available. Dr. Oswald said that about
half of the top 10 or 12 graduates from the area's high schools
are plunning to enroll there.
Duxiussions of the community
college system and plans for the
University's next decade p:omp-te- d
a Kentucky lubor leader and
member of the Trustees, Sam
Ezelle, of Louisville, to ask for
the establishment of a community college there.
Mr. Ezelle told the Trustees:
"Louisville is where the greatest concentration
of population
and one fifth of the taxpayers
are located.
"The University of Louisville,
all in all, has done a good Job.
But a municipal college is Just
not as equipped as the state university is to do the Job."
Mr. Ezelle, who Is also executive secretary of the state AFL- -

CIO, said that the Louisville area
needs a University branch that
tuition.
will offer
He said the University of Louisville's tuition, which is substantially higher than UK's, is
prohibitive to many qualified students.
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt told
Mr. Ezelle that the Idea of a
community college in Louisville
had been discussed with University officials but that nothing
could be released about it now.
In other business, the Trustees :
1. Appointed Clay Maupin, director of accounting and budgetary control, as assistant treasurer.
2. Named Dr. Edsel T. Godbey
assistant dean of the community
college system effective July 1.
3. Increased room and board
charges in men's dorms $140 a
year, to $370. Coeds already pay
that amount. Men will now get
20 meals a week instead of the
present 10.
I'K's men's dorms lost $59,000
school year and
in the 1962-6- 3
went into the red again during
the past school year.
4. Leased an office building in
Prestonsburg to provide temporary office space for the community college staff already there.
The lease will run three months
at $100 a month.
5. Selected Huskins and Sells,
certified public accountants, as
the external auditor for all University accounts and the accounts of the Kentucky Research
Foundation, the Fund for the Advancement of Education and Research in the Kentucky Medical
Center, the Athletic Association,
and the Thomas Poe Cooper
Foundation.

Cosmopolitan

Club

The University's foreign students are Invited to an open
house from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday,
June 28, at the home of Herman
Kemball, 140 N. Upper. There
will be dancing and games. If
is needed, call
transportation

Student Publications Board
Appointment of a
was announced yesterday by President John V. Oswald.
The newly created board, which will have jurisdiction
over all student-editepublications, including the campus
newspaper, the Kentucky Kernel, and the University yearbook, the Kentuckian, is made up of six students, three
faculty members and three membcrs-at-large- .
The
members, each
apointed by President Oswald to
two-yea
term, are William J.
Hanna, city editor of The Lexington Leader; Robert L. Johnson, director of the UK Medical
Center's Division of State and
Local Services; and James Shropshire, Fayette County farmer and
business man who throughout the
1930's was graduate manager of
the University's student publications. Hanna and Shropshire are
UK alumni.
The board's three faculty members, appointed by Dr. Oswald
from a list of nominees recommended by the Faculty Council,
are Paul Oberst, professor of law;
Dr. Niel Plummer, director of
the School of Journalism; and
Dr. GifTord Blyton, professor of
speech.
Prof. Oberst was named to a
three-yeterm, Dr. Blyton will
serve two years, and Dr. Plummer
one year. All future faculty ap- -

SC

Board

Schedules
Film Series
BUNNY ANDERSON
Kernel Staff Writer
A film program sponsored
By

by the Student Center Board
is an integral part of the
board's plan for academic
and social improvement on
the UK campus.
For the first time in summer
school, the board Is sponsoring
a movie series. Five films are to
be shown each Saturday at 8
p.m. Admission is 50 cents. The
movies are "Boys' Night Out"
on June 20; "The Fountain head"
on June 27; "Cat On A Hot Tin
Roof" on July 11; "Madame
on July 18; and "The
Swan" on July 25
The program was begun last
spring under the leadership of
Carolyn Cramer. It was to arouse
interest among the students in
foreign films, countries, and the
directors' expression of drama.
In addition to presenting art
films, the Student Board showed contemporary films. According
to Miss Cramer, "We did real
well first semester . . . but second semester, our attendance was
small due to the social events
scheduled."
Miss Cramer continued, "Contrary to public opinion, the Student Center Board is financially
supported by the students' tuition
fees. We reveive approximately
$4,000 a year, from which $900 is
used to rent the films for presentation here."
Statistics made by Miss Cramer
of last year's attendance showed
more girls attended the 6:30 p.m.
showing and dates and more boys
were in greater attendance at the
9 p.m. showing.
This fall the films will be
shown twice, once in the fall and
again in the spring. The foreign
films will be shown once a month
on Saturday. Showtime will be
at 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. Discussion
groups will be at 8:30 p.m., during which the center of attention will concern
the film's
theme, Implication, and political
effect.

pointees will serve two years on
the board.
Student members, selected by
President Oswald from a panel of
12
recommended by a special
committee, are Stephen Palmer
and Sallie List, both of Lexington; James Svara, JefTersontown;
Howell Brady, Mayficld; Warren
and Ellen
Pope, Catlettsburg;
Chaffee, Hinsdale, 111. Each will
serve a
term, subject
to reappointment.
The student nominations came
from a committee which included the piesident of Student Congress, the president of the Association of Women Students,
the
of the Kernel, the editor of the Kentuckian, the dean of men, and
the dean of women.
Also slated to serve as
members of
the publications board are the
Kentuckian editor and the Kerf.
nel
A chairman
and a secretary
are to be elected by the board
members.
Student
at the
publications
University previously have been
under direction of the School of
of a
Journalism. Establishment
publications board was authorized by the UK Board of Trustees, at Piesident Oswald's request, in April.
Such a board, he said, would
make student publications more
representative of the entire campus and would provide a basis for
University-wid- e
guidance.
Beginning September 1, the
board will assume responsibility
for developing and enforcing both
editorial and financial policies
of all student publications. In
addition, it will appoint editors
and advisors for the Kernel and
Kentuckian and, In consultation
with the student editors, will appoint the staffs of both publications.
The student editorial staffs will
continue to operate all publications, subject to the policies established
by the
board.

Summer Registration
Figures Incomplete

Enrollment for summer classes
at UK this year may well surpass
last year's total of 3,571 students.
With only partial calculations
completed in the office of the
Dean of Admissoins, the number
of legular summer students has
reached a total of 3,114. This
summer does not include those
people who are on the campus for
seminars and short courses which
last only one or two weeks.
A spokesman in the Dean of
Admission's Office said that this
year's enrollment will ". . . increase over last year's with addition of short couises luter in
the summer."
A breakdown by colleges of the
2,744 students who registered on
6
June
gives the following
table: College of Agriculture, 94;
Arts and Sciences, 798; Commerce, 175; Education, 569; Engineering, 186; Graduate School,
821; Law, 62; Pharmacy, 12; and
the College of Nursing, 27.
The partial lesults from this
year's enrollment in the Colleges of Education, irts and Sciences, and Graduate School, point
to a substantial gain over lust
year. The total enrollment for
these three colleges last year, including short courses, was: Education, 746; Arts and Sciences,
838; and Graduate School, 1414.

* University Has Need
For An Auditorium
It is surprising, with its building
activity, that the University has so far
avoided building a special concert
hall in which to hold the numerous
cultural programs, such as the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture
Series, the Little Kentucky Derby concerts, and the Blazer Lecture Series.
One constantly hears complaints
from all corners that attendance at
the cultural programs is lacking, but
the times are few that the problem
is hit on the head. That problem is
that the University hasn't provided a
place to hold the programs.
The largeness of the Coliseum,
coupled with inadequate placement of
microphones and loudspeakers, leaves
much of the program inaudible. Conditions are only worsened by the inappropriate seating arrangements of
the Coliseum. There are no backs on
the seats on the left concourse in the
building, which makes comfort a near
impossibility.
And, finally, the Coliseum does not

have the lighting facilities to complement the performance. In providing
the lights on the confor
courses are left burning during the
entirety of the program, which is both
annoying and distracting to those trying to watch the performance.
The Coliseum was designed for
basketball games, not concerts. Instead of providing new buildings for
this and that department to expand,
the University should provide a building for the use of all departments. An
auditorium seating 7,000-10,00- 0
persons not only would be the answer
to the problems which plague the
various cultural programs, but also
would provide a place for graduation
ceremonies.
The University is continually
growing and expanding, but it is sorely lacking a facility which would
bring the student body together, stimulate unity, and provide a place to
hold concerts and other University
functions.

Lectures Should End
At The Bell, Not Later
The bell that ends each class
period is probably the most frustrating part of any class period.
Too many professors hold their
classes past the bell. They should
realize that whenever they hold their
students they are taking their time
to get to the next class.
If a student is forced to cross the
campus to get to his next class, he will
need all of the 10 minutes that he is
stairs and long
given.
distances make it necessary to give the
student 10 minutes.
Many professors require that their
students be on time for every class
period, yet many of these professors
are the same ones that keep their
classes past the bell.
The teacher's own tardiness is
often responsible for the class going
overtime. Students should not be kept
because their teacher is late for class.
Poor planning by the instructor is
often a reason for the extended class
period. Many of them are kept late

because the instructor could not plan
his lecture to the allotted time, yet
the students have to pay for this inadequacy.
Students usually do not hear anything that is said after the bell has
rung, and the instructor is just wasting his breath.
When a student is forced to enter
a class late he disturbs the lecturer
and the other students in the class.
This is out of line with courtesy to
professors and students.
Students should also show respect
to the professor by not shutting or
slamming their books, or putting on
their coats before he is through lecturing.
This probably would not happen
if the students knew that they were
going to be dismissed on time.
We would like to suggest that it
be mandatory for professors to end
their classes with the ringing of the
bell. They should finish their sentence, and end the lecture there.

Oswald Presents Look At Next Decade
By BILL GRANT
With the presentation of a
academic prospectus at last Friday's Board of Trustees meeting, the
University begins a look at the first
decade of its second century.
docuStressing that the
ment was not a blueprint with decisions already made but only "analysis and prospects," President John
W. Oswald presented the trustees with
the program as the first step toward
its possible implementation.
By unanimous vote the trustees
accepted the program and it now becomes an item for general campus-wid- e
discussion. Dr. Oswald will officially present it to the faculty in
September.
Entitled "Beginning a Second
Ontury: the University of Kentucky
Academic Program: Analysis and
Prospects," the plan would launch the
University's second century by overturning or overhauling many of the
programs that marked its first century.
Implementation of the program
will begin in the full with study by
the faculty. Each facet of the plan is
expected to be discussed, and polished, by the faculty, and anion, hopefully, will begin during the University's Centennial Year, 1905.
The plan grew out of discussion
on the department level in each college of the University. Formulation of
the final plan was made after "extensive consultation" with the new
Academic Advisory Council, the president said.
Academic AdThe newly-forme- d
visory Council is composed of nine
members of the faculty and administration including the Executive Vice
President, Dr. A. I). Albright, and
the Vice President for the Medical
Center, Dr. William Willurd.
Basically, the program:
1. Projects enrollment
from last
gear's 10,110 to 23,500 in 1975, with
18,000 on the Lexington campus and
5,500 in the ((immunity colleges.
2. Sees the Lexington campus primarily as an upper division (junior
and senior) and graduate campus. It
sees approximately 10 pen cut of the
fjcshincn and sophomores studying

on the main campus compared with
70 percent now.
3. Thereby increases the role of
the community colleges as a "feeder"
techsystem and source of two-yea- r
nical programs. In addition, the University will consider an overseas campus.
4. Proposes a reorganization
of
some of the professional colleges and
woidd split the College of Arts and
Sciences, by far the University's largest, into three colleges: sciences, fine
arts, and letters.
5. Proposes to construct 23 new
buildings by 1968 at a cost of
$1 1,227,250 to handle record demands
for classrooms, dormitories, and laboratories.
6. Pushes the Lexington campus
and its faculty further into research
making it imperative that the faculty
excell in research and publication as
well as in the classroom.
Linked with these suggested programs and the reorganization of some
ol the professional and undergraduate colleges, is the strong urging for
the establishment of the University
College as the lone lower division college.

The college would offer the same
broad two-yea- r
course to all undergraduates during their first two years
at the University. They would enter
the professional schools during their
junior year. The college would be at
least a partial answer to the complaints that some professional schools
"train" but don't "educate" students.
The University feels that this
change would allow the professional
schools to function better. It would
give all underclassmen a broader basic
education in the liberal arts and sciences before they enter scientific or
technical fields.
If the program goes through unchanged, hardly an aspect of the University's current academic structure
would be left intact.
The report forsees much higher
cjualific ation for faculty members and,
in line with that, recommends more
indiKCincnts in the way of fringe
benefits and higher salaries to get
better people.
It proposes to develop "an excellent laculty through a positive pol

icy of recruitment and retention" and
specifically recommends setting a fac-

ulty salary goal in the upper range
of salaries for "comparable" institutions (Missouri, Illinois, Purdue, Indiana, Ohio State, West Virginia,
VPI, North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Tennessee.)
The teaching load, under the
plan, would not exceed nine hours.
The academic environment of the
faculty would be stressed in an effort
to encourage scholarly productivity
and faculty-studen- t
rapport.
In areas where research is not
carried on freshman English, music,
or the arts, perhaps the University
would establish the position of lecturer now already used by many colleges. This would allow the professorial ranks to become an indication
of both the teaching and research
ability of a faculty member.
The report says a lecturer would
be "an excellent teacher who is not
expected to carry on research and
who is rewarded solely for his teaching performance."
Generally, however, "the University must insist that the majority of
its professional staff are actively and
continuously engaged in research and
publication, otherwise the proper
emphasis on research will not have
been achieved."
The report had this comment on
the proper approach to research:
"Current intellectual or social
fashion alone should not direct the
development of the University's research program.
"University research must respond to the needs of its larger community, but then it must be aloof
from them. It faces constantly the
challenge to examine ideas no matter

what their current popularity or feasibility."
The report also suggested that the
College of Agriculture and Home
Economics reevaluate its statewide
role in terms of the changing makeup of Kentucky's population.
The College of Pharmacy, the report suggests, should be moved into
the Medical Center instead of remaining apart. "At present," the report went on, "lack of coordination
prevails between the two where collaboration seems logical and desirable."
Student life came in for an evaluation of its own in the report. Stating
the "University's main goal for the
student is intellectual development,"
the report called for an orientation
program that would, in "the first confrontation between the student and
the University," insure that the potential does not see the University as a
place of "fraternal frivolity, a marriage bureau, or an athletic contest,
but that it is primarily a community
of scholars dedicated to intellectual
enlightenment and development."
The report stresses the importance
of a students' campus residence as a
place for an "academic atmosphere"
to develop. Adecjuatc residence halls
and study areas within them, plus a
better screening to place students near
others with like ideas and interests
is suggested.
"The University must endeavor to
make ideas a more welcome element
of the campus atmosphere," the reports says.
Only the "simultaneous impact
which the student will receive from
improved classroom and campus activity" will bring about the new breed
of student the report envisions.

The Kentucky Kernel
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Tom Kinnie, Circulation Mamgvr

Kernel Staff
Melinda Manning, Sandha Bhock, Kenneth Cheen, Hal
Kemp, Rohemt Lee, Len Comb

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, June

19, 1964

-- S

Leak To Head Team Pre Civil War Era, Africa
In Peru This Summer Subjects Of Recent Books
--

Donald Leak, director of the University YMCA, will head
f 12 American college students who this summer will
help build a community center and school in Lima, Peru.
a group

The project is sponsored by the
National Council of the YMCA
and the organization's Ohio-WeVirginia area council.
Original plans called for the
Americans to work this summer
in Cusco, Peru, center of an Inca
but recent
Indian settlement,
peasant revolts in that area resulted in a reassignment.
Fifteen Peruvian university
will work with the
students
Americans in Lima. Leak said
the project there will serve as a
guide for Peruvian students after
the U. S. volunteers depart.
A carved text in stone the
first item ever commissioned for
the Interior of the University Library has been received from
the British artist, Ralph Beyer.
The Latin inscription translates into English as "the peace
of God which passes all understanding."
Beyer designed inscriptions
the new Coventry
throughout
Cathedral In England.
The Roman letters of the
work were carved
in a stone known as blue Horn-toquarried in Oxfordshire and
frequently used by the famous
sculptor, Henry Moore.

Dr. William A. Wlthington, associate professor of jeography at
the University, will spend three
months this summer in the Republic of Indonesia, where he will
teach and conduct research.
He will be a visiting lecturer at
the Institute of Agricultural Sciences in Bogor and at the Institute of Technology in Bandung,
where UK operates educational
support programs under contract

with the Agency for International
Development.
During much of his stay in
Indonesia, the UK geographer
will do field work on the island
of Sumatra. The work is financed
by the UK Research Fund Committee as a part of the new UK
Summer Research Fellowship
will
program. Dr. Withington
visit a number of urban centers
in Sumatra to study land use and
development.
Robert E. Shaver, dean of the
University College of Engineering, has been elected president
of the Southeastern Section of
the American Society for Engineering Education.
Long active in affairs of the
Society's southeastern
section,
which embraces 10 states. Dean
Shaver is a past chairman of its
administrative unit.
Also elected to a
term
of office in the section was
James F. Thorpe, associate professor in the UK Department of
Mechanical Engineering. He is
serving as secretary of the research unit.
Dr. Howard Hopkins, professor
of pharmacy at the University of
Kentucky, has been named to the
awards committee of the American Institute of the History of
Pharmacy.
Main purpose of the committee.
Dr. Hopkins said, is to select an
annual winner of the Edward
Kremers Award and the George
Urdar.g Medal, two of the top
awards presented by a national
group for distinguished work in
pharmaceutical history.

Film Series Planned
By Religious Advisors
The Religious Advisors Staff
the University will sponsor
a summer film series from June
23 through July 21.
Tuesday's film, first in the
Inseries, will be "The
cident" starring Dana Andrews.
Films will be shown at the
Student Center Theatre from
pm. Admission will be 25
cents.
There will be five feature films
in the series. After each film persons in the audience who desire
will adjourn to a discussion of
the film led by students or
of

ME

spokesman for the series
said, "We invite everyone to
come see these films as art forms
in which the writer or the director is seeking to say something
to us about life: its meaning,
purpose, values, problems and
cures. There is more in these
films than Just entertainment,
although we trust that this will
be an enjoyable time in the week
for us all."
Other dates and films include
"On The Waterfront," June 30;
"Question 7," July 7; "A Raisin
In The Sun," July 14; and "All
The Kings Men," July 21.
A

PAY

E3VDCH

The University Tress has
recently published two hooks
by UK professors. The first
of these deals with the
War era while the other
deals with the African continent and the Republic of
South Africa.

Historical
outbreak of the American Civil
War in Santa Fe instead of
Charleston, and in 1;!50 Instead
of 1861 are among the topics
in a new book,
investigated
"Prologue to Conflict," Just published by the University Press.
The author is Dr. Ilolman
Hamilton, associate professor of
history at UK.
In the book, Dr. Hamilton analyzes the Compromise of 1850
and presents several aspects of
the troubled era which until now
had not been fully developed by
historians.
He relates not only the, significant roles played in the Compromise by Clay, Calhoun and
Webster, but also those taken
by such men as Thomas Hart
Benton, Howell Cobb, Henry S.
Foote and William Wilson Corcoran.
Dr. Hamilton also points out
that speculators in Texas securities had an important part In
the Compromise, their lobbying
activities in Washington beinf
particularly effective.
The UK historian, a former
Guggenheim Fellow, is the author of a
biography
of Zachary Taylor. He also has
written "White House Images and
Realities" and is
of
"The Democratic Experience."
"The City of God and the City
of Man in Africa," by Edgar H.
Brookes and Amry Vandenbosch,
has also been published by the
University Press.

Service Work
In
doing
Anyone interested
community service work with the
YWCA this summer is asked to
call Ext. 2358 or drop by Room
202A of the Student Center at
their earliest convenience.

Brookes is professor emeritus
of history and political science at
the University of Natal and a
former member of the senate of
the Union of South Africa.
Dr. Vandenbosch Is director of
the Patterson School of Diplomacy and Internatoinal Commerce
at UK.
Brookes is a.i associate of author Alan Paton in the South
Africa Liberal Party, which advocates creation of a democratic,
multi-racination in South

Views expressed in the book
by Professor Brookes conflict
with those which prevail in his
homeland.
Dr. Vandenbosch, author of a
number of works on international
affairs, was a recent visitor to
South Africa.
In the book, the UK professor
examines political developments
of the continent and of the Republic of South Africa. His comments provide bacicground and
an American orientation to the
essays of Brookes.

ASK YOUR FRIENDS
WHO THE STUDENTS'
DRUG STORE IS . . .

NAVE
Across The Street

Complete Automotive
Phone
"24-Ho-

252-712-

Service

7

Emergency Rood Service"

TAYLOR TIRE CO.
400

E.

VINE ST.

LEXINGTON,

HOME OF THE COLLEGE

FOLKS

ADAAAS
683 S. Broadway
PRIVATE

Phone

ROOMS FOR PARTIES

254-437-

3

REASONABLE

PRICES

"High Fidelity Music for Your Dining Pleasure"
Mr. and Mrs. John Iiiims, Prepristws

Vz

IFF

ON ALL

MONDAY thru FRIDAY
No Added

Cost--!

LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING
Phone

252-762-

9

Discount
15
265 Euclid Ave.
Cash & Carry
Next to Coliseum
1966 Horrodsburg Road
880 East High Street

KY.

Paperbacks
University Book Store
Student Center

* 4 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, June

University
To

Operate

Book Store
The University will return to
the bookstore business July 1
for the first time in 33 years.
James Morris, who holds the
lease for the University Book
Store, has asked to be relieved
of that lease. He plans to retire.
Robert F. Kerley, vice president for business affairs and
said the University
treasurer,
will begin to operate the book
store on its own after the present lease expires on June 30.
Vice President Keiley said that
Bill Eblen, at present an employe In the book store, will become manager of the store.
Mr. Morris began operating the
book store under a lease from the
University January, 1931. He has
held a lease for the store ever
since. Prior to that, the University had pin the store itself.

Music Department
Gives Student Recital
For Master's Degree

The University Music Department will present in recital Celia
in the
Butler,
Laboratory Theatre in the Pine
Arts Building at 8 p.m. tomorrow.
The recital is given in partial
fulfillment of the degree of Master of Music in Voice. It will consist solely of German lieder by
Schumann,
Brahms,
Schubert,
and Strauss. She will be accompanied by Ann Huddleston, staff
accompanist and instructor of
voice and piano.
Miss Butler, a student of Phyllis Jenness, assistant professor
of voice, has appeared in lead
roles In Vaughn Williams' "Riders to the Sea," Gilbert and Sullivan's "Mikado," Puccini's "Sister Angelica," and Stravinsky's
"Mavra."

19, 1964

Entertainment Available

If

You Will Only Look

the softball and baseball games at Castlewood and
Woodland parks. They are league games and provide Inexpensive entertainment..
For those who are participants rather than
spectators, there are excellent golfing facilities
available at the Picadome, located near the Campbell House Inn. The course is open to the public.
There are also numerous miniature golf courses
around the city. The Par Three Golf Club, across
the road Iiom the Picadome, is open to the
public also.
The I'niversity tennis courts on Rose Street
offer physical recreation facilities. Other public
courts are located at Woodland and Castlewood
parks.

Papers In Classroom

LOST

FOR SALI

From Carrel No. 141.
LOST
Margaret I. King Library, a
red term paper binder containing several tabbed chapters of
thesis. Finder please return to
Circulation Desk, King Library.

FOR SALE MGA 1600 Roadster
wire wheels, new paint, red, excellent mechanical condition
12Jtf
$795. Phone

briefcase
LOST Reddish-brow- n
in Student Union cloak loom;
contains doctoral notes, glasses;
if
initials D. L. E. engraved;
found, call David Evans,
19JU
in MUlersburg, Ky.
MISCiLLANIOUS

ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 215 E. Maxwell. Phone
12J7t
LARRY'S TENNIS SERVICE
Expert overnight, machine
Rackets for sale. Wilson, Davis, Dunlop. Literal
Trade-in19Jlt

FOR SALE Brand new Honda
motorcycle. 190 miles on
under
it (250 mile break-in- )
warranty. Just bought; forced to
sell now! $300. Call
It
SALE 1959 Great Lakes
trailer, has washer and
excellent condition. See at 115 A. Street, Suburban Tiailer Court. Phon