xt7brv0cz821 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7brv0cz821/data/mets.xml Kentucky Kentucky Press Association Kentucky Press Service University of Kentucky. School of Journalism 1969 Call Number: PN4700.K37 Issues not published 1935 Aug - 1937 Oct, 1937 Jul - 1937 Aug, 1939 Oct - Dec, 1940 Jan - Mar, 1951 Aug - 1956 Sep. Includes Supplementary Material:  2005/2006, Kentucky High School Journalism Association contest 2004-2005, Advertising excellence in Kentucky newspapers 2003-2005, Excellence in Kentucky newspapers newsletters  English Lexington, KY.: School of Journalism, University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Press Press -- Kentucky -- Periodicals The Kentucky Press, January 1969 Vol.35 No.1 text The Kentucky Press, January 1969 Vol.35 No.1 1969 2019 true xt7brv0cz821 section xt7brv0cz821 'ik >
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 PAGE 2, THE KENTUCKY PRESS, JANUARY 1969 f - ~ ’ ~ . , . . * 7. . . " : “a”
————-————-——-———-———-—————-———‘—————- r
’ " "- ' « O ’ ' , he?" : '1»
. THE KENTUCKY, PRESS I The PreSIdent 5 Column . . - ' - Jac as.
‘ Official Publication _ . ht
Kentucky Press Association, lnc.. ' - - , . .. garage... “‘th \ ..;l
203 W. 2nd. St. ' By George M. Wilson learned that Lou (Mrs. Boone) was , N t "arty,” L... .5, .
. Lexington. KY- 40507 Happiness to a weekly newspaper not there. ‘ ‘ » .. O .i.’;j;';..» {he :f
V. fPSrtinltne‘thhy ; ! publisher‘is a modern new build— Ben is a member of the KPA » ‘ ’ . [3%
°'°°° - a t 5W5- "0- i ing, good equipment and plenty of Executive Committee from his 4th - “Dee‘s... { '.
Ajt-viztfir‘figfilljly-‘E’gfizr l business. . .and Ben Boone III is district. He is president of the By A' J' V|Eh;.;.<;..ly
Florida Garrisori A'ést Editor [ a happy man! Western Kentucky Press Associa- The 100th Winter WL..:‘-.zqzi.;_i‘ "‘3 ..
Membg, ' . | When I visited Ben, who publish— tion, after having served as sec— the Kentucky Press Association is, i“; ‘
Kentucky Chamber of Commerce ' es the TODD COUNTY STANDARD retary for several years. over. From all that we can gathq; 151;! - '
" Newspaper Association Managers at Elkton, it was the last day of ' er, it was a huge“ success; Ate ;.:;v-§
Interaction! Newspuper Promotion Assn: the month. The bookkeeper was Many who attended the mid—win- .tendance was good, the food was} ?'_'_i;j‘$‘ ‘_ g
Kemez"°;:::."f::o22:3: he busy getting out the month's state- ter convention of KPA Were pleased good, and we had some new-1 .’
- y . _ ’ ' merits, the back shop was busywith with the outstanding program ar- activities this year. We also tried-1'4} - _» :
I George M-WllsonlhreS'dth i job printing and Ben was gather.» ranged by Don Towles and his to.» have some real meat in the Eli-jg... ‘
- James T- Norrls,Jr-.IVlce PfeSIdent I ing up the loose ends of a mur— committee. “Best I have ever program. . .something that you. » '
N- J- Schansbergl Chalrman (At Large); 1 der trail story which was about to attended”, was the comment heard could take home with you. Who,- h
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ' go to the jury. on all sides. It was truly a work- for instance,‘~will ever forget Hughgxw'g. fif- " »
Districtl - Bill Nelson I ing convention and that seems to Mulligan’s talk? , , -- he. .
32:23.2, - atheism. shine. “‘6 JO” 09“.? be the ““91 °f were“ “we ‘ . , ‘ ”4 -'
. . ' 1 a ter Se“ 1'18 - members want. ‘ - - t '3
8:3:ng - (8:7:yta:norliiecillalnld rections from the service Still-'10“ Howard Ogles has left a record No: the: thitcgflgeggighsi:nhzfiztjfigjm>43: 1‘.
District6 - Al Dix where I filled up the gas tank, in as president during the past year . we ave 0 S , S a: ,;
. Districn - Coma" Gob'e the corner of the public square. It which will be hard-to follow. He fume We W°n ‘ let Y0“ “reel the» -‘
333:3 : xgaé-ugggfmd is; an attractive fireproof build- has done an outstanding job for all , past comeletelyr however, as we 11 if: :73;
District10- soringerHoskins ing. The front offices, with their of us in the association. 1 will be featuring congemiOhTHhEcégfieg‘ifgfiz l
' At Large - Bob Carter paneled walls and tiled floors, are need a lot of help from all of you and a few speec es 11 ~ ‘?;%;ar;} .j~
' At Large ' D°”a'd T°W'e5 spacious and well arranged. ' if I am to come even near to his TUCKY PRESS during the hemfewe'élfihéf
At Large - Tom Buckner Ben had redesigned his front page example months. In fact, we had so manywe-“ :~
I that week and it was as airy and . 5 , . 300d pictures that I hate to wasteflk ,i-‘i'ei
attractive as‘ the Standard plant. If any member has "a suggestion them by hht showmg them to you;
Column rules hadbeen dropped and as to what they want the KPA - U , - a
O ”1 f 1, P plenty of white space made it easy to accomplish during this year, As hsaid’ we he“; tzhioihiixitfiel‘ihe-t
n e l'OI'I age on the eye. Pictures were sharp or acriticism to offer, write to on t e uture,a£ . t' 31;;
- , _ enough to catch the eye of the most me at Irvington, 40146. It is your to start is by ma .ngreserva Ihhsg_;;";_ ._
‘ George M- Wilson pre51des as critical reader. association and it should be con— for the Circulation Division Offs
the new President Of the Kentucky My only disappointment in the ducted the way the majority ‘of you KPA meeting at Lake Cumberland'.'§—;;?;§.,f;g ‘
Press Association, at the closing visit to the Standard came whenI want it to be ' State Park, Apr-11 .11 8" 12.- If 3
luncheon 0f the KPA Centennial ' _ you’ve ever attended oneof these-3;:jgij. yr
convention. Seated t0 hIS right i ; meetings. 1'5: cefrtainhthat go“ Cam‘sg.‘ ,-
are Al J. Schansber , chairman, ' vouch for e act t at t ey are’lfirfirfl, , .?
of the Executive Commgittee, Eliza- W . . a worthwhile undertaking. The pro-
heth Spalding, board memberfrom * grams are full Of the kinds-Lof.;ff.3§f3..;
the third district, W.E, CIUtcher, . , . o . information which cirlr help( SOIYe3314g§i§ir ;
of the ninth district, and Corban A d d b g 9 your circulation pro ems news’é-y ,_~
GOble 0f the seventh district. n en on a e Inn In paper), be they mail or carrier..;— .. _ .1 ‘
. , » Coming up next is the “reelyé'f-‘13q »' .» 135:.
' - - ’ ~ ~ bi shew.”- We are fortunate'to.;1=‘.-_.j- ‘
The great trans1tion. has come to pres1dent Will not retard any of; beg able to have the only Web Off-1 ;,
, pass and today an entirely new set these advances in our welfare. . . , ; . .,
GUEST EDITORIAL of officials are in charge of our - Lyndon B. Johnson gave up the set Seminar, Inc. offset ngrkslhOR,1.-j‘4ev
government in Washington.lt came office of President on Mondayat ‘ mthe South this year, ta e place'l-g.li:;;gi
to full fulfillment on Monday with high noon and for the first time right here in Kentucky.;Theip1&ce.;1...},rs ‘
Where is U '- Ose? usual fanfare and color that such in nearly two score years became- is Erankfort and the time; s ay. "rife.
p p ‘ inaugurals bring each four years. .a private citizen. He goes to his 17 8‘ 18.-_ j . 4:... _, ,,:h ;,_'
. “We-m», . ‘ No incident of‘any sort occured to beloved L..B.J. Ranch in Texas ' ‘ ‘ ” '- ‘ . .» ’
hAS a new offlce’ we hear a grea; -mar the occasion. Richard Nixon for a well-earned rest where no, , Web Offset Seminar, Inc.is anon-‘ . 32‘?- e
9331, about the taSk before hhh 9, took the usual oath of office as ' more must he beburdened with all‘ PI‘Ofit group, composed 0f various - " E?
bringing .the country toglether..1 President of the United States and » the apparent dangers that ac- newspaper - and related product L
Jhdgmeht 13 heme w‘thhe d “hh with hand placed Upon selected pas— company the President of the equipment companieS. who have.
people can see how he performs. sages of the Holy Bible and Chief United States. No more will he have been given the-time by their bosseskgtfgm, f'iijrgg.
Perhaps 1‘ hhght be we m t e Justice Earl Warren administering to be watched by guardS, but can to travel around the country sevfifz‘gg; ‘
coming months for the people to the oath, Richard Nixon swore to now go and come wherever and eral times a‘year to show news21‘jrjI-gem' .1 - -
100k Inward ah‘l lhdge theme “35' - “Preserve, pretect and defend the , whenever he desires without fear. Paper People the very latest in Off-“5'33: '— .7
Our country will become what the Constitution of the Unitedstates,” - Now the burden and the danger set techniques. There is no salesfjfircf
people make It' Unless we are as thirty—six other Presidents have evolves upon Richard Nixon to bear pitch involved. . .and no playgjgriffrnlyfi‘ '. .:_‘_
ready to accept a dmalorShl-P’ Sworn- for the next four years, and to either. If you can’t remember how
we should cease expecting the It was an impressive ceremony him we wish every success and it feels to 5° to bed at nightr'.‘:~53.?2i
President Of the United States ,that gave all the traditions of past safety that can be assured. We "really beat,’ then you‘re goin'gtbj;jé-?;.,~vr
to be all things to all men. He years to such occasions and with greet him as OUR pi-esidem as re-live that moment during the_;;‘rf.jjj;§; ‘.
is a fellow citizen filling one of the colorful parade that followed all of our citizens do and trust month of May. THERE IS NO":
the world’s toughest and mostdan- every aspect of the inaugural was to him to direct the affairs of. REGISTRATION FEEliiThe only-'vggévmil; ;
gerous jobs. ' carried out. state "in the ' best manner possi—. cost to you is your transportation,3.._fight.” . " '
In the long run, the President It is such occasions as this that ble. He can be assured of the motel room, and your meals, with?» j
i can but reflect the philosophy and speaks so well for our democracy wholehearted support of our people the exception of the Saturday noon: ' '. ,
purpose of the people. We should and reveals that here in these and with every attitude of approval meal, which is furnished. ' 1. ;: '4
' United States we have a fixed and we look to the next four years of ' ~ , - I”
; not ask the new President to per— established way that has never advancement built upon what has We’ll be telling you more about;§g§g"§;g§%.;.‘
form like a monkey on a stick. been broken through the nearlytwo gone before, with new avenues of the offset (seminar later, and with”; _.: -
We should ask, what is our phil- hundred years. We, all of us, bow approach that he may foster. Long more detail, but-right now I wante‘ie s
osophy? Do webelievein a govern- to the will of the majority and has he tried to achieve the honor to remind you that the Summer‘féifiiifgvée’
ment 0f laWS? DO we believe in when the votes are cast and the and the burden and now that it is Convention is coming'up June 5-7-.,:§}?.5’§§g§5§:h~3;
local initiative? Do we believe in winner announced we forget our his to carry we wish him health The .place' is Kentucky Dam Vii-"i V
the responsibilitieS, as well as the political harangues and accept what and ability to carry on in the best lage. Make your reservations HOWEE‘N ,-
rights and liberties of the in- the people have chosen. We can manner. ' ' . It's too early to give you any}. 5.} -
dividual? Do we believe in the pass from one administration, be ~ MD. in details, but we promise a dandycig .; '
American system? The 'future of it Democratic or Republican, with ‘ The Hancock Clarion meeting. ' ‘ .13» 9' j! '
the country depends on our an- little change in the aspects of ‘ ' if}...
swers to these questions. The government. Eachnew adminisu-a— ‘ ; r- I.’
man in the White House cannot tion takes up the burden of state - ; ,. ;.;;-f.;_t'?j .
answer them for us. Ninteen hun~ where the other left off and the ' « 1 ’ 171“?
dred and sixty-nine may prove to people of our country realize little ' '; a.) .
be a year of testing people, not change in the process. . ’ » {i '31?” at _
a President —- People who sadly After Eight years the administra— IF ‘ ‘ ~ 7.
needda rerlilewejd slensedof purptise tions that have .been under the ~' ° 1' , -" “3’:le '-
base on t e 1 ea s-an princip es direction of the Democratic Part - - ' 1 e ‘»
of a self—government. come to an end and the Republicarsi . the Kentucky Press Assocratlon served no other purpose, performed fl’ '5
. ' Party takes its bow and brings to no other functions, didn't sell or distribute a line of advertrsrng . , . . ~ ~ 1
0 our mm.” a new set 0f Offichhs .it would still be worth many times more than its present cost in dues.;.... ‘ 1 r , » -
Advertlse and new issues to forward the 1n— , . I . ;- _ , _ , , a -

’ terests of our people. During the as Kentucky publishers one great united force for public protection and _ n. »- _:.;;.;.:3...-.; . .
, ‘ . Paet eight hyears our nation has self preservation in the chambers, halls, and officers of government, ' .1 ; ‘l ‘
‘ 1“ :iljogfospei-ify 3:13;: tea? ax}? 8:551: not only while the statelegislature is in session, but every day of every . I ”43373 -

Th - in recent years. More new laWS ‘ year. . . ' ; ' - » N 3} ~,
, e ; for the benefit of all our people Only in unity can there be strength! , _ . 5515359,?“ . .
~ i have been enacted and greater ad- A KPA b. 1 _ H ' ‘
K t k [ vances in most every avenue of our ‘ ' - mem er. 3515‘};
en “(3 y economy. Former President John— _ * ~ _ . . -
son can be creditedwithmorelaws ‘ - » -» ' ‘ ’ ‘ ; .j » ; .
for the welfare of our people than ‘ . . - '5 ~ \-
PI'CSS ~ any president in recent years, if »_ - ' . ; y , . . : _ .f- .r " .- ,
r1 ever. We are trusting that our new ' 1' - » , ; 1 .- » ‘iéfff',.5’5.ii77'ii.é
‘- » . ._ K. .. ~ , , ., : f” "9“ .. “ ‘ It i: " ‘::.~"" ' 'tt: ‘21." ;-:;writ-31:33.;5..$.25.
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egg. . ' » ‘ _ 5 ’ . ' . JANUARY 1969,THE KENTUCKY PRESS, PAGE 3 .
.V ' . , . ‘ O O O O ' O ' ..
~ ‘ u u I an le s It I e It IS ..
”he, ' -Would you believe I came here trousers. The streets are a con- Here all the horSes were presum- more in bitterness than injestthat ‘
it}? , to talk about Vietnam, Israel and: stant chaos of roaring hondas and ed to be doped. You could see them if the North Vietnamese cared to .
:. 7 _' ”Biafra? motor bikes which some idiot in come staggering down to the fin— infiltrate a whole division, the
. . . - \the AID program imported by the ish line, some running sideways. easies— way would be to 'skip Loas, . 4
7 Actually, there is a slim con- thousands to bolster economy, B— some backwards, frothing at the have the troops strip down to their
IE,“ :5, ' ~neCtion. Covering a war is like girls have gone out of style in mouth under afull headof opium. ' skivies, put a number on their
"J2. 5~ - covering a nudist camp in one way. the morality that followed last . _ backs, mount them on bicycles, and
y , .1th not an assignmentwhere- you year’s Tet offensive, but 1e jazz ‘ But if the race track is closed, village after village would turn out i
t ‘ can take your Wife. , hot still pours out into the sultry there are still Sunday sailboat to cheer as they swept down from
2? - f‘ . As most of you know, I spent 21 night, and the cuisine at the bet- races at the yacht elUb, rlght out theDMZ.
. g»: 5:} months in Vietnam, on three sep- ter french restaurants is still su— there among the blown up Ships
1' i 1*" j‘,’ .‘arate aSSignments, and in between, - perb, even if the filet de beouf 1n the filter, and there s Stlll golf, French Culture Survives ‘
$3.311; got to cover the six-day war in * is of water buffalo, and the salad same as always, at the Saigon é
’. 35] f the Middle East and, more recent— is sure to induce a quaint malady Country club, Where thecaddies are ‘ The amount of French culture
,5; 1’?- » 1y, the war in Biafra. known as the Saigon quick—step all girls, because the men have surviving in Vietnam still sur-
' is}? :51? .. or. Ho Chi Minh’s final solution. either all gone Off t0 war or are prises most visitors. The Viet-
V I. The world and war have changed Saigon swings, until all of a sud— in hiding from the draft, and where‘ namese fought the French for 20 .
ft. j if ,a good deal “since I was an in- den a keening sigh rips through the bunkers are sometimes real years, regarded them as rigid col-
' g? ' fantryman in World War TWO-and the sky, like a giant zipper rip— bunkers, With mortars and machine onialists, but the Frenchhave been
,1» j'- ’ mom hunga blue star in the win- ping open the night, a sound you’ll guns in them, especially on the gone for nearly 15 years now and
fix; dow. . ». . 'never forget, a Viet Cong rocket back nine Where security condi— they still cherish all vestages of .
. S?! f ‘When I first went to Vietnam in with a ZOO—pound warhead crashes tions aren’t considered too good. French culture; french wine, '
a; “ 1"“ - July, 1965, the number Of Ameri- into the city, followed by another, , For people who wonder lf we’re french perfume, french cooking,
w. ,9: . cans killed for the. whole war, and another. One night recently making any Progress at all OUt in the french language in the better .
ah“; ‘ l * gOing all the- way back to 1961, there Were 34 of them dropped Vietnam, I can remember Whenl Schools. Vietnamese officers . I
g . .. ire-numbered about 700. When I left indiscriminately on the city from firSt went out there you could only ' trained by the French are fond of
(in? the-"last time,‘ early in Novem— the darkened rice paddies and play the front nine, but since then telling their American advisors -
Kalli? her, the death toll had rolled over jungles less than 20 miles away. we’ve managed to pacify the back that the French way of doing things ‘ ’
lg the 30,000 mark and was approach- Always the same sound; the tear- ' nine. is still the better way. The French 3
" ._ ingethe 33,000 killed in the Korean ing at the sky, followed by the There's a war going on and all bUilt a two and a half million
g .1/1‘ .War. ; ' . tumultuous explosion. Then every- up and down the 600 mile length dollar medical school in Saigon, ;..
_ . '. , one scatters, or tries to find of Vietnam, all roads lead to death with closed circuit TV and.- 170
g ; ,. More men lost . a stairway to hide under, because and destruction. Anywhere you fly dental chairs. Twentieth Century
' . - that’s \what the posters on the you can lookdownand seethebones pathology for a country where
$ij :. sf» We already have lost more men crumbled walls say what you are of convoys that never made it, the most of the deaths are from 18th .
Ll ; j in Vietnam"than we lost in the supposed to do. Then there is the blackened carcasses of blown up century diseases. Vietnam has the
: ‘ War of 1812, the Mexican War and wail of the Mp jeeps, and the sad trucks, the burnt out villages,dried highest incidence of TB. in the ‘
«‘2‘: the Spanish Americanwarcombin- wail of the MP jeeps, and the up rice paddies, defoliatedpatches world. It had 150,000 cases of
’t . . ~ed. ~. “ . sad clanging of the alarm bell 0f forest, here and there the glint leprosy., The Chol—Ray hospital,
it; ’ Since I first Went to Vietnam, on the funny little French ambu— of sunlight on the fusilage of a the country’s biggest, still doesn’t
e“ _- ‘ the refrigerated 'morgue at Tan lances, the fire engines scream- downed plane. have running water, and the waste
. . Son Nhut airport has had to be ing out to where the sky is a giant And yet this year, same as any pipes from the operating room em- ,
" ‘ enlarged four times, gand now sheet of flame. Then gradually year, the annual bike race took pty directly into the Saigon river.
'7 z, they’ve even added new morgues the curious return, to see where place from Hue to DaNang, a dis- Right in the city limits, 5,000
. . . in each of the four corps areas. they fe11 this time, who got it tance of 80 miles. Bike racing is refugees live in a Catholic grave— . t
‘ ‘ AnyT‘Thursday you can see them and how many. No bombers over a national madness that the Viet— yard, using the mausoleum for
' " loading ‘ the aluminum coffins—— the north tonight, just a rain of namese inherited from the French. . .
. ill . sometimes 400 at a time —— onto - rockets on Saigon. j American advisors have suggested Contlnued to 93997 -- ‘
i; ' - , the‘*C-141 cargo planes for the long » _ ' :-
"“t jvoyage home to Travis Air-Force -A strange City, a strange war » i l-
.‘.:;,.r‘-';, 1": -“ 2 ‘Base‘. Among the dead have been “ _ . . . s . .j . . ,l
Wf: 1' 18' correspondents, three ‘of them There’s a war going on, and the ' ‘ '1 ~ ' - j ' ' ' ‘ ‘ \ “"“’" "'3
3 .v ~_ photographers with the Associated highways don’t ’go anyplace any- i
,’ Press. " p more and the railroads end in - =
- I, And yet people have a hard time a Snarl of twisted track just out- - ‘ j
understanding the war in Vietnam. side town. The Viet Cong have long DO YOU KNOW '
. ' ‘ No other war in our history has ago blown up the bridges, cratered j ———‘——_' ’ .
“ caused so much controversy, so .the roadway, planted mines and ~
- . .much confusion. You hear people roadblocks along the right—of—way. ,. ‘ j * ’
:igif ‘ _ say all the time: “if only we» Death and ambush await at every . '.
he really knew what was happening lonely curve and jungle clearing. 10 fetal .
g} out there.” In‘ Vietnam. to this day about the ..
E: » Part of this confusion is under- only really secure road night and ' o »
3.”; ‘standable. Vietnam' is a strange day is the 14-mile stretch of mmotlon makes ever
"'t'g’. 'j ‘ _. land. The east at‘ its most my- divided highwaythat the Americans 35
3;. fin. . steri’ous and inscrutable. Also, the built from Saigon to Bien Hoa, . g
f east at its, most alluring and ex- the big jet base northeast of the 9 \
my 7‘. . “citing. Saigon was once a gay city. city. And yet the Vietnamese, with S OpperaWIIlner .
Vinita . The Pearl of the Orient, they no place to go, are stilltheworld’s ' , '
4% ’ called her. The Paris of the East. most inveterate: Sunday drivers.
a“ Ocean liners on the grand tour al- Every Sunday afternoon, same as , ll (1 ‘ t' _ T (1' St
Egg , ~Ways made the winding 100 mile plways, thousands of Vietnamese "Sthat sma won er among promo lOllS. ra mg amps.
is; ~ ,. journey up the Sai on River to amilies crowd into their littlee - - , '
i“ I call at this fashiongable French .beater cars or hop aboard the fang? They are saved in more than 80 per cent Of the nation S-
ill 35 capital of' Asia. ’ » . 11y Honda, sometimes five or six - households. And here 5 one big reason they re so popular.
“‘ ; ~ -> on the hand eba . - -
«.3 j . Tries .10 keep gay seat, and t all e argp‘i‘gdofllembgggg , Unlike most reta1l promotionshthey allow a merchant to
it ’ , , Heat and then a family picnic right return the benefits of the prOmotion to all hlS customers—
» Behind the mask of war, Saigon ' along the side of the /road, be- and in direct proportion to their patronage. ’ -
1h ..-.’ still tries to keep up the gaiety. cause it’s not wise to venture too ‘ , , _ - , s
. .. Artillery fire on’ the outskirts of far into the woods. That’s enemy Here are some things an average food reta11erdomga$l.2
° is? town rattles the hotelwindow.B-.52 cduntry. What results is a traf— , ‘ million annual business might use to promote sales instead
33;”? ’_ strikes in the nearby jungles dis- ‘fic jam of Mack Sennett proportions, of ivin stam 5'
. ~15 , . — turb. the night withatre‘mblingroar 14 miles of chaos and confusion, g g P '
, :gjj‘ ' t