xt7vq814qv2m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vq814qv2m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660614  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 14, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 14, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7vq814qv2m section xt7vq814qv2m Inside Today's Kernel
Replacement tor Dean Kirwon during
his lecture tour obrood not yet announced: Poge Two.

IS
University

Vol. LVII, No. 131

been

What't
summary:

of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, JUNE

Editor

Eight Pages p9

14, 1966

Poge

discusses

o

happening?

news

Three.

graduate

programs:

Four- -

1966-6boikctboll
nounced: Poge Six.

schedule

transfer:

Junior College

UK

signs
Poge Six.

on

'Broadwoy in Lexington?":
Page Seven.

A Review:

To Work With Peace Corps

UK Gets
...

India Project

Follows Cancellation Of Turkey Program

one for India was at least partially a matter
of coincidence, Gadbois said. He said the
Peace Corps was looking for a training
ground for its India project, and the University's wish to participate happened to
jive.
Roth Gadbois and Dr. Willis Griffith,
acting director of the project before Gadbois
took over, have spent time in India.

By FRANK BROWNING
Plans have been approved for the University to build a Peace Corps training
project to India replacing an earlieronewith
Turkey which was cancelled by the Turkish
government.
Dr. George Gadbois, project head formerly
with the East-WeCenter in Hawaii, said
he expected the project to be "step one in
a long term relationship with the Peace
st

The first of three groups of volunteers
will come to the UK campus June 25 to
The project is designed to train Corps begin a
training program until
volunteers primarily in food production, agriwhen the volunteers will spend
culture, and community development in three two weeks in field study elsewhere in the
or four north Indian states.
state. There will be 90 volunteers in the
A key part of the project, Gadbois pointed
first group and 40 in each of the other
out, is an evaluation by University personnel two groups.
of the Corps training program and field work.
The first, or advance group will return
As with the earlier scheduled Turkey
dethis one may play a part in revising to their respective colleges to complete
project,
gree work and come back to UK next sumthe whole Peace Corps approach.
mer to finish their training before going to
Announcement that the Turkey project India.
had been cancelled came late in May after
Second and third groups both identical
the Turkish government told Corps officials in training will come to campus Sept. 1
it did not need the prearranged quota of and Nov. 1 for eight week periods. They
volunteers who were to work primarily in then will go to India to get four weeks
community development.
training at the site where they will be doing
Replacement of the initial project by the their work.

Corps."

540-ho-

mid-Augu- st

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-

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-

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pica

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About 50 college graduates
registered Monday for the National Teacher Corps at the University as part of a federal program
to prepare teachers for work in
deprived areas.
UK received a grant in May
to act as a base for the NTC,
which enrolls recent college graduates in a two-yeprogram to
teach in city slums and rural area
schools.
The project is an arm of President Johnson's $3.5 million "war
on poverty."
Corps men will take courses
this summer and teach in various
slum areas this fall while going
to school. The second year follows
a similar pattern. Upon completion of the program the student
will receive his masters degree.
Preparatory work this summer
w ill include training in the sociology of poverty and the teaching
of the disadvantaged, according
to Dr. Harry L. Robinson, director of the UK program.
"Corpsnien w ill attend classes
all day five days a week," Dr.
Lyman Cinger, dean of the Col- -

1

f

.

-

f

"

'

rrv

lege of Education, said. "Next
fall they will come back to the
campus alxMit twice a week for

classes."

Many of the students will be
sent to Louisville and rural mountain areas for training. However,
Dr. Ginger said most of them
would remain in Lexington to
teach in urban schools.
Those who are assigned to
Appalachia for field work will
live at Rerea. Rerea and UK are
combining efforts in the program.
A corpsman-teache- r
will coordinate the work of four inexperienced corpsmen. Supervising
teachers must have their masters
degree and be enrolled in
advanced study, according to Dr.
Robinson.
Students will spend half their
in schools,
time as teacher-aide- s
employed as beginning teachers
with a comparable salary. The
salary is to be paid by the particular school district, Dr. Robinson
said.
The National Teacher Corps
is a new program, defined by
officials as "the placing of

1

- "3

y

day-to-da-

i

1

r.-

-

1

v

I

i

-"

Registration

...

Always The Same

Registration is just one of those things it must be done even if
(at top) the babysitter couldn't make it. And it's always the same:
figuring out schedules, (above), frequenting card stations, and
filling . . . and filling . . . and filling . . . out forms. But it does
have its good point, at right) "You mean it's over!!"
'
V.', Photos by Dick Ware
.

7l'

Grand

A

OV

TODAY IS FLAG
God bless our country's
Tliat floats o'er land
Cod bless each waving

Flag9
DAY
emblem
and sea;

star and
stripe,
And the men who kept it free-M- en
who, 'mid smoke of battle,
And murderous shot and shell,
Held high the gleaming colors
Of the flag they loved so well.
Anonymous

Graduates Prepare For Work In Slums, Rural Schools

Ml

?

Although the advance group will live in
Cooperstown this summer, the other two
have not been placed, Gadbois said.
The cost of the India project which
Gadbois estimated would be larger than
the Turkey one will be footed by the Peace
Corps.
Cadsworth said that at any given period
there would be from 20 to 25 University
faculty involved iti the project. There will be
two faculty members who will go to India
this fall. An additional 23 people will be
brought to campus and occasional experts
or specialists will be called in from time to
time, he said.
The actual training program is made up
of six integrated study areas: technical skills,
language, cross cultural studies (including
such things as anthropology, art, religion,
history of both India and America), physical
education and recreation, physical and mental health, and a miscellaneous category.
Special emphasis will be placed on development of technical skills whereby the
volunteer most directly affects people in
y
their
living.
Most instruction will use a seminar
ratio
technique where the teacher-studeis about six to one.

TEACHER CORPS

It

f'-

t

.

ii

ti

-

VL

-

i

i

n.

an

mi.

teachers in
schools across the
nation to provide the extra heads
and hands to help make the
classroom come alive to youngsters lacking the ordinary learning experiences of childhood."
The College of Education began negotiations for an NTC
program here last winter. Dr.
Robinson drew up the guidelines
for a similar program, but altered
them to fit the NTC qualifications when Congress passed the
bill.
The University's easy access
to the Appalachian area makes
it an ideal location for such a
program, Dr. Robinson said.
specially-traine-

d

Over 3,500
Register
For Classes
Over 3,500 registered in the
first two days of registration for
the Summer semestvr, according
to the Registrar's office.
Late registration continues
through Thursday.
Earl counts show that 1,().")S
have enrolled in the college ol
Arts and Sciences, ti'M in Education, 105 in Agriculture, 132
in Engineering,
and 213 in
Commerce.
Craduate School tigures show
1.1S0 have enrolled. The remaining students are enrolled in the
Colleges of Nursing and Architecture, according to the Registrar's office.
Students who have not paid
their fees on or before Friday,
June 24, will be declared delinquent to the Registrar.
A $5 late payment fee attaches
to all fees which remain unpaid
at 4 p.m. today.

* I
I,

16

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tucvlay, June If.

2

Dr. Kirwan To Lecture Abroad,
Replacement Not Yet Appointed
r..- -

,f

a.!.;,.: dsar.

Ar.

ri

K;r.ir,.

A.

t:e Cr2

!

D

t.

K;ran

teen

ca.ierc

--

Dr.

t

i

A

0 a1 i s otfk.

Dr.

Hc received the UK Alumni
rccarch award in
fevr
hi
hook, "John J.
Crittenden: The Stmcsle for iho
tnion." The book won tfe
Sdno Award a the jear's best
chime on Southern history.

AtiociJtion'

ilti

:

:e

;,! have

fr:m

;nl

Dr. kiruan will
the
acadtrr,;.: ear kctunr.c
: r.
r. African
civ
it the
Ur.ver:t t f Vierr.a.

the UK
nt

17

the

r

:

Ks

Sv J.

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rr;:e.f
travd

t;rv. Dr.
'iir.r,i f r
De; -- rtnxr t i a
t.--

the U.S. St-- 'e
Fi.;r;r:cht Lecture:.

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ii.rr-.:-

ArKc. V.:;h.

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dean for the

-

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-

y

I

19G6-:- T

xrar has not been
to Dr. Kirwan.

iv.-i:r-,f

Ccnszrtuni f:r

Inter-Universi-

Political Research.

Richard Cooper Appointed
To UK Board Of Trustees

WELCOME!

The brother c" U.S. S:i. Jahn Sherman Coojr
to the University Board of Trustees by
Edward T. Breathitt.
Richard Cooper, a Republican and Somerset b isincssman,
serxe until Dec. 31. 1S. He is past president of the Al
Association.
He succeeds O. L. McElroy, Eminence, a Democrat.

Summer Students!
Aim. 90c

TONIGHT

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Ceivare

About The Kernel

Subsequent summer Kernels
will be published weekly on
Thursdays, editor Judy Grisham
announced today.
Offices for the summer Kernel
w ill be in Room 113 of the Journalism Building. Telephone w ill
H!

"grfe&a

ALSO
1st

DRIVE-I-

No. 2

0 Pfias

Motorists entering the University campus from the Rose Street
entrance must beware of pitfalls especially ones like these. According to Mr. E. B.Farris of Maintenance and Operations, a pow er
line is being laid. Construction is scheduled for completion before
fall classes begin.

8:30

HIS NEWEST! HIS BIGGEST!
KVCc

WED., THURS.,
No.

will
imni

FIRST AREA SHOWING
m

V

was
Gov.

(R.-Ky- .)

apixinted reveii:I

Dme Out Highway 27 To Set
The Best in Mcries!

EH

:r.

i:xi Cira.ii

ess-

Re.r.ti Dr. Kirwan received
the alurr.rj award fcr excellence
:r. teachir.. He was nominated
f:r the hon.r b numbers of UK
ch:itK- - and leadership so- CUt.f
He ir.A Mrs. Kirwan will be
in A r;a frm

Dr. Ulmer Elected To Term
On Consortium Council
Dr. S. Sjdr.ex tlrr.t-r- . chairman of the l"r.ieTv;t
of Politic
Scierc. hi
been elected to a tw yei.r term
on the executivf council of the

r

RUN!
10:12

Q

Jg

Jl

A,X4
i
NO

jT7

-

...

Editor's office hours
will be from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
daily. Applications from students
for staff writer's positions will
also be taken at these times in
Room 113 in the Journalism
Building.
be ext. 2319.

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J

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, June

I

I,

Highlights Of Happenings
While We Were Away

NEWS SUMMARY:
Six Kraduate fellowships,
totaling $12,600, have been awarded
the University by the UK Research Foundation. Kach of the
fellowships is for the 19f6-()-7 aeadeinic year.
Winners are Sister Mary Ann
NlcConn Covington; John C. awarded Dr.
Stephen F. Dachi,
Hothwell, Hellevue; Louis (J. chairman and associate professor
Arnold
Fan Claire,
Wis.;
0f the Department of Oral
L. Michener, Lexington;
agnosis and Oral Medicine, to
be used for a month-lonvisiting-lecture- r
tour to Keuador.

C

'h

g

Dr. Dachi is expected to deliver approximately 70 lectures
during his July tour.

03
f

Alumni Awards Given
Four UK professors received
awards given by UK alumni for
topflight teaching and research.

y

Dr. Albert D. Kirvvan, professor of history and dean of the
Graduate School, was the winner
of this year's teaching award.
It is the second Alumni Association award won by Dr. Kirwan.
Three years ago he received the
Association's research award.

DR. STEPHEN DACHI
George R. Rice, Campbellsville;
and Richard A. Bachand, Putnam, Conn.
Dachi Receives Grant
A Fulbright grant has been

i

s

Research awards were presented to Dr. Edmund D.
chairman of the Department of Medicine; Dr. Thomas

o,

Alcorn Retires
Col. and Mrs. James P. Alcorn, center, admire a
set of julep cups and tray presented to them by
the U.S. Army ROTC contingent at the University
of Kentucky. Col. Alcorn, who has spent 27 years
in the service, retired to become an assistant to
B. Stroup, professor of English;
and Dr. Andrew J. Hiatt, associate professor of agronomy.

2,129

The

O

(:

Graduate

University

graduated

candidates at its

2,129 degree

f

May commencement exercises.
The class, larger by 330 than
last year's record class, included
480 recipients of graduate degrees and 1,649 candidates for
undergraduate degrees.

Math Professor To Retire

Winners of the Sullivan Medallions, which are announced
at the exercises, were Mrs. Sarah
B. Holmes, who retired as dean
of women at the University in
1957, Willis K. Bright, Jr., a
social work major from Lexington, and Sallic List, a history
major from Lexington.

Prof. Marion C. Brown, seated, who has been associated with the
University Department of Mathematics since 1923, will retircjunc 30.
Two of his colleagues, Dr. W. C. Roystcr, right, chairman of the
department, and Dr. J. C. Eaves, are shown presenting him a
watch, which is a gift of the department. Professor Brown is a
native of Lawrcnceburg.

The medallions go each year
to a man and a woman student
and to a
who best
exemplify "such characteristics
of heart, mind and conduct as

" personally endorse this as

su-

perior entertainment . . . Virtu-os- o
performances will bring you
gales of laughter!"
Bob

Perkins,

non-stude-

THIS IS THE GREAT ONE

Starts Tomorrow!

n

To New Post
UK President John W. Oswald. Making the presentation on behalf of the ROTC staff at a dinner
at the Campbell House were Maj. and Mrs. Robert
J. Lester. Col. Alcorn has been head of the Department of Military Science at UK since 1963.

Alumni President Elected

evince a spirit ot love for and
helpfulness to others."
Professor Is Delegate
Prof. Joseph L. Massie, chairman of the Department of Business Administration, will be an
official delegate next month to
a conference on "Education for
International Business" in Switzerland. Delegates from 15 countries will attend.

L

Big Wheels

buy their
clothes at
The
University
Shop . .
So do

Louisville

insuranceman

McKay Reed, Jr., was elected
of the University
president
Alumni Association at its annual
business meeting in May. Other
officers are James B. Allen, Winchester, vice president; Mrs. Joe
Morris, Lexington, treasurer; and
Miss Helen G. King, director of
alumni affairs, secretary.

m

t

www

P1
win

little whe is.

?

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OHIO U.
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The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, s
Kentucky, 40506. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Linda Gassaway,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, became the Record In lttoO, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1919.

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* Quality, Not Quantity
With the establishment of four
new state universities conies these
institutions' plans for their own
graduate programs. Hut with these
plans should also come an objective
scrutiny of just how the state's
existing graduate programs arc
ranked nationally.
A recent report by the American
Council on Education, "An Assessment of Quality in Graduate Education," provides just such a scrutiny, but the results, alas, are far
less than encouraging.
academic fields in
Twenty-nin- e
five general areas humanities, social sciences, biological sciences,
physical sciences, and engineeringwere studied. More than 4,000
scholars in 106 universities were
asked to judge departments in their
specialities on the basis of the
caliber of the faculty and to say
where they would choose to do
their own Ph.D. work if they were
to seek the degree again.
Departments were ranked in
six
distinguished,
categories:
strong, good, adequate plus, marginal to adequate, and insufficient,
though the final two rankings were
omitted from the printed report.
The University is mentioned
only twice in the report: the history
department and the bacteriology
microbiology department both received the adequate plus rating.
These results leave nothing to
the imagination and little to the
University's pride in its current
graduate programs. Furthermore,

the report reached several general
conclusions worth noting for

Ken-tuckian- s:

1.

There is a close relationship

between faculty salaries ami quality
of graduate faculty.
2. Institutions that are strong
in all areas invariably have major
national research libraries.
no "distin3. There were
guished" graduate departments
found in Southeastern, Rocky
Mountain, or Northwestern universities.
Thus, economically speaking, it
would be unrealistic to spread thin
the funds available for graduate
programs. Funds as should all
efforts should be concent ratetl on
building a nationally competitive
graduate program on the UK campus.
Neither we nor the report is
saying that there are no exceptional students or faculty in other
graduate departments in the University, but we must admit the
graduate programs themselves do
not measure up to impressive national standards.

A

V

Haynie, Louisville

Courier-Journ-

al

T

"

fP?

"But This Still Hasn't Healed If s Where
They Removed My Consensus."

now is not the

Consequently,
time to create graduate program
competition statewide. Instead, the
Commission on Higher Education
should endeavor to establish a
quality graduate program on UK's
campus and not bow to demands
for "instant" programs made by
administrators and alumni of the
new universities.

And
Bigger that Better
It is more and more
will

urgent
the United States think out caree
fully both its
plans and
e
its
goals in higher education. There is nothing on earth
that remotely approaches the American university and college program, which today enrolls some
5,000,000 students. Even so, this
vast system is only at the jump-of-f
point for the boom in higher
education which is expected during
the decades just ahead.
long-rang-

long-rang-

Weak Opposition

challenges
someday be successfully met.
Our times urgently demand well
educated men and women. Not
only are they the main wellsprings
of the marvelous advances being
made in the 20th century, but it
is also clear that without education few can hope to cope with
the complexities of modern life.
For many the key to success will
come through college or university
education.
But not for all. Nor may it be
right for all college and university
education to follow the paths already laid down. For the greatest
need is not merely education as
a goal in itself. It is, rather, an
education tailored more and more
sharply to the infinite variety of
men's individual capacities, interests and aims.
It is right that all who have
the wish and the capacity to benefit from higher education be permitted to do so. To deprive them
of that opportunity would be to
rob the world of needed talent
and to create hurtful disappointments. But, important as it is to
expand educational facilities, it
may be even more important to
make sure that this education is
what the individual young man
and woman needs. We are still
better at building buildings than
at building curricula.
The Christian Science Monitor

It is somewhat ironic that the Some officials apparently oppose
most controversial part of the prothe document because they are
new constitution for Kenafraid their jobs will be eliminated.
posed
Symptomatic of what America
Local offices should not be
tucky relates to local government
faces and of what it may seek to
provisions. Opponents of the docustrictly provided for in the constido is the weekend announcement
ment contend sections governing tution. Kentucky's present constituare dangerous and tion is the best example of how from the State University of New
municipalities
would seriously affect local units. an office can continue to exist York. This institution is drafting
The new constitution, however, because it is a constitutional office plans enabling it to pledge some
would help municipalities and even though there is no need for it. form of higher education to every
would leave cities powerless. If the
single high school graduate in the
The proposed constitution prodocument is approved by Kentucky vides that all elective offices of state by 1974. Already teaching
e
students
voters in November, cities and local units will continue to exist nearly 108,000
counties will have the power to do until changed by general law. The in its many schools, the university
things they have been unable to do General Assembly is not going to looks for this number to double
in the past.
abolish local offices as long as they in eight short years. In many other
The new cliarter would allow are needed to perform the services states similarly inundating inlocal units to perform any function of government. But these offices and creases are expected.
or service not denied by law, the their duties should be outlined by
for higher educaThis
Constitution or their own charter. law and not by constitutional pro- tion and hunger
the determination to supThis is quite an improvement over vision.
ply it are among the most enthe present constitution, which proThe local government section
of our day. It
vides in detail for municipal governwould greatly improve debt and couraging signs
is the surest token that the world
ment and for local gov ernment debt tax laws for municipalities. The
is ready for a great new
and tax limits.
General Assembly would have the forward at all levels and inleap
all
A provision which seems to be
power to fix debt and tax limits. fields. No nutter what the problem
causing trouble would iermit the Presently, these limits are fixed
facing mankind, the demand for
General Assembly to alter or disby a document which was written education is in earnest that these
solve local government officials.
in 1801 and is long since outdated.
No one seems to object to granting
The Kernel welcomes letters from readers
to comment on any topic. Ilecaiuc of the General Assembly power in
wishing
fcpiice limitation, letters should be limited to 200
this area.
vtord. We reserve the ntfht to edit letters recti
Longer manuscript will be accepted at
the editor's discretion.
Local government provisions in
The South's Outstanding College Daily
The letters submitted should be signed as
follows: "for students, name, college and class and the
University of Kentucky
proposed constitution are not
local telephone number; for faculty members,
ESTABLISHED 189,
name, department and academic rank; for perfect and 'will not insure
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1966
aiumni, name, hometown and class; for Universtaff members, name, department and posisity
of improved governmental
Judy CiusiiAKf,
tion; tor other readers, name, hometown and
hometown telephone number. Unsigned letters
services on the local level. Hut Published at the University of Kentucky's Lexington campus five times each week during the school
cannot be considered for publications. All letters
should oe typewritten and double spaced.
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Letters should be addressed to: the Editor, the new charter offers a great imEntered at the post office at Lexington. Kentucky, as second class matter
the Kentucky Kernel. Journalism Building, Uniunder the act of March 3, 1879.
they may be left in the provement over the present one,
versity of Kentucky, orU3-Subscription rates: yearly, by mall $7.00; per copy, from files $0.10.
of the Journalism
editor' office, Hoom
Kernel editorial and business phone, summer term 2319.
even on the local level.
Building.
full-tim-

The Kentucky Kernel

vt--

Ken-tuckia-

ns

Editor-in-Chi-

A

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tmwlay, June It, lo-- 5

Music Department Workshops Undcrwf

High school student musicians and teachers arrived on
campus Sunday to henin training in keyboard and chorus workshops sjxmsored by the Department of Music.

n
Sixteen student pianists
classes Monday in a three-wee- k
institute designed to give
them a head start on preparation
for professional careers in music.
The students, who were
he-Ka-

chosen for the institute h audition, will receive instruction in
ni'isic theory and literature and
private lessons from members of
the University music faculty.
(Masses began Monday also

choral workshop
for a
for music teachers and students.
two-wee-

k

Dr. Donald Craig, director of
choral activities at the University of Wisconsin, is the director
of the workshop.

The two woikshnps are two
of a series of sis that w ill be
jicld on campus this summer.
WANT ACTION? . . .
USE THE KERNEL WANT ADS

msi

;E'""7
Miss Connie Ann Mullins, University of Kentucky

KENTUCKY COLLEGE QUEEN

Congratulations, Connie. The results are in and
you've just won the statewide competition for the right
to represent Kentucky in the National College
Queen Pageant. We're really proud of you . . . and
we wish you the hest of luck at the National Finals in
New York City this month. We're also proud to he
one of the sponsors of this contest and have the
opportunity of offering as First Prize to this
year's winner a new 1967
Plymouth Sport Fury Convertible.
d l imw

T

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IfiTi

twwwvwwo

Your Local Plymouth Dealer,
PLYMOUTH

division

CHRYSLER
MOTORS CORPORATION

""
I

* fi--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, June H,

TIIE

Wildcat's Announce
Basketball Schedule
University atliMic director
Hemic A. Sliivcly announced reschedule for
cently a
Kentucky's defending Southeastern Conference basketball
champions next season.
26-ga-

Shively said coach Adolph
Hupp will guide his Wildcats
through 18 SKG names, the University Invitational Tournament
tilts
and six other
in the 1966-6- 7
campaign.
who

won national
honors for steering the Cats 27-- 2 record this
past season, said, "Next year's
schedule may be the finest in
our history. The Southeastern
Conference should be tougher
than ever, and our
schedule is one of the
best we have had."
Hupp,

coach-of-the-ye-

Kentucky will return three
starters, all of whom were mentioned on various
squads last season, and a number of capable reserves in 1966-6The returning regulars are Pat
Riley, Louie Dampier and Thad
Jaracz, and former reserves Cliff
Herger, Steve Clevenger, HobTal-Icn- t,
Tommy Porter, Gary Gamble and Jim LeMaster will fight
for the other two spots.
Other than Virginia, Kenfoes will
tucky's
be Illinois, Northwestern, North
Carolina, Cornell, Notre Dame,
and the field for the UK IT, which
includes Oregon State, Penn
State and Kansas State.

The Wildcats open the season
at home against Virginia Dec. 3.
Along the road they will play
15 home games and 11 away from
Lexington.

"The new
series with all the other schools
in the conference begins next
season," Shively noted, "and
this should make our league
schedule particularly grueling.
With an even stronger schedule
than we had last year outside
the conference, I think we arc
in for an exciting, hard-fougseason of basketball."
home-and-ho-

7.

UK's 1966-6liasketlxall Schedule
7

Dec. 3
Dec. 5
Dec. 10
Dec. 13
Dec. 17
Dec. 22.

Virginia at Lexington
Illinois at Lexington
N'thwestern at Evanston
N. Carolina at Lexington

Florida at Lexington
U.K.I.T. at Lexington
Penn State, Kansas State,
Oregon State, Kentucky)
Dec. 28 Cornell at Lexington
Dec. 31 Notre Dame at Louisville
Jan. 5 Vanderbilt at Lexington
Jan. 14 Florida at Gainesville
Jan. li Georgia at Athens
Jan. 21 Auburn at Lexington
Jan. 23 Tennessee at Lexington
Jan. 28 Louisiana State at Lex.
Jan. 30 Mississippi at Lexington
Feb. 4 Louisiana St. at Baton R.
Feb.
Mississippi at Oxford
Feb. 11 Mississippi St. at Lex.
Feb. 1J Tennessee at Knoxviile
Feb. It Mississippi St. at Starks-vlll- e
Feb. 20 Georgia at Lexington
25 Alabama
Tuscaloosa
rb. 27 Auburn at atAuburn
Feb.
March 4 Vanderbilt at Nashville
March 6 Alabama at Lexington
23

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cfFict hh

fc'Pitf liritfit
nau:
ur

Arthur Laib III, a
d
junior college basketball player has signed a Southeastern Conference grant-in-ai- d
with UK, Coach Adolph Rupp
has announced.
Laib, the 11th signce for Kentucky this spring, played at Gulf
Coast Junior College, Panama
City, Fla.
"Art is a fine
pivot
prospect," Rupp said. "He is
transferring from one of the top
junior-colleg- e
conferences in the
country. We're naturally tremendously pleased to have him sign
with us."
Laib averaged 13.6 points and
12.3 rebounds for Gulf Coast as
a freshman last season.
He will not be eligible for
the Kentucky varsity next season.
However, beginning in the 1967-6- 8
season he will have three
years of varsity eligibility.
The tallest man Rupp and
his staff have signed this spring,
Laib will join four other signecs
in the "big man" catagory
6
Mort Fraley, Lexington; 6
Randy Pool, Oak Ridge, Tenn.;
6
Travis Butler, Huntsvillc,
Clint Wheeler,
Ala.; and
Ashland.
"The addition of Laib to our
other outstanding prospects gives
us the biggest incoming squad,
in point of physical size, we
have ever had," Rupp said. "I
think the boys that we have
recruited this season will give
us a balanced, talented group
of sophomores in 1967-G8-

&

6--

UK's Kron

j

Joins Hawks
basketball

i

UK Coed Is Mountain Luural Queen
Governor Edward T. Breathitt crowns th 1966 Mountain Laurel
Queen Miss Janie Olmstead of New Castle, a student at the University, while the 1965 queen, Miss Pam Casper from Ursuline
College in Louisville, looks on. The crowning ceremonies came
during the annual Mountain Laurel Festival held at Pine Mountain
State Park near Pinevillc.

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left-han- d

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AAV

star,
Kentucky
guard,
Tommy Kron, a
has signed a contract with the
St. Louis Hawks.
Kron played both forward and
guard for the Wildcats in their
bid for the NCAA National Championship last year. He was drafted
by the Hawks in the third round
of the National Basketball Association draft.
Kron averaged 10.7 points a
game for the 'Cats his senior
year.
He was expected to attend the
Hawks' rookie camp which began
this month.

3UT X

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