xt7mw6695w74 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mw6695w74/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680308  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  8, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  8, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7mw6695w74 section xt7mw6695w74 Tie

EC

MTUCKY
The South's Outstanding College Daily

Friday Evening, March 8, 1968

mmh

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Students Protest
Tuition Increase
For

c
v..
--

if-

Vol. LIX, No. 115

Out-Of-State- rs

-

it

v

By FRANCES DYE
A proposal to raise tuition
to $2,000 a year for
out-of-sta- te

K"W

I?

n"

.

.

Speaker O.K. Curry ruled the
referendum suggestion out of order, and an ensuing attempt to
overrule Curry met with failure.
Assembly members reacted to
the referendum idea with remarks
like "Stop playing petty politics." One said it was "a cheap
attempt to railroad something

through the assembly."

"""" '

X

I

:

n

Kernel Photo by Rick Bell

while Speaker O. K. Curry checks the Student
Handbook and Susan Hagaman, clerk of the
assembly, follows proceedings.

form a caravan to Frankfort.
The caravan will assemble
at 12:30 p.m. Monday, she said,
to present a petition to Gov. Louie
B. Nunn, Lt. Gov. Wendell Ford
and other government officials.
Another petition, also urging
defeat of Senate Bill 394, has
been started by Ron Owen, Lee
Bums and Gary Callahan, all
students.
Callahan said his group's pe- -

government officials.
He said he thought 1,000 signatures would be enough to kill
the proposed bill. "About 150 signatures have been collected so far,
and we are confident of getting
the 1,000 by Monday," Callahan
added.
The petition has been circulated in residence halls and. a
booth will be set up in the Student Center to accept signatures
students and
from
sympathizers.
out-of-sta- te

te

"We don't think the

legisla-

tors will pay any attention to

students, but

the

maybe they can be swayed by
Callahan said.
the
Another group of UK students
went to the Kentucky Senate
yesterday to voice their opposition to the proposed tuition hike.
Gerald Ronayne, legislative
aide and spokesman for four
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity
members who visited the Senate,
said the group received floor privfrom Robert's Rules of Order. ileges and met with some senaSeveral representatives left the" tors to suggest a compromise
room, and a brief chorus of "On, to the proposed bill.
On U OF K" was struck up.
Ronayne said the students proOne member suggested "hang- posed that those already in school
ing" would be an effective cloture should pay the $980 recommended
rule.
by the Council on Public Higher
Education, but not the larger
Speaker Curry finally ruled sum proposed by the Senate.
Juul out of order. Juul appealed,
He said the idea was accepted
but was defeated. The meeting
by some senators, but others sugwas adjourned soon after for lack
gested a compromise between
of a quorum.
Senate and House versions ofthe
Earlier, a bill was passed to bill. Two of the senators who
empower the Traffic Appeals spoke with the group mentioned
Board to deal with all compjaints
$1,100 as a compromise figure.
The House version, which
against the Safety and Security
Division. An investigation of passed last month, was sponsored
dormitory fees also was approved.
by Rep. Quentin Wesley
Elizabeth Oexmann and Mike
Under that bill, tuition for
Fowler were sworn in as new
students would be the
Continued on Pare 7, Col. 1
representatives.

out-of-sta-

'Abolition' Referendum

SG Dodges

ished..

,

wT..

.y

Setting: Student Covemmcnt meeting in Commerce Building. Time: Thursday night. Action:
Thorn Pat Juul, an
representative, proposes amendments to the Student Rights Code

By JO WARREN
In a meeting termed "ridiculous" by several representaStudent
Government
tives,
dodged a proposal Thursday
night to set up a referendum asking whether SG should be abol-

students at UKhas come under
attack from at least three groups
at the University.
Student Government last
night passed a resolution opposing the legislative proposal. And
Robin Lo wry,. Panhellenic representative in Student Government,
said students are being asked to

tition also will be taken to Frankfort Monday and presented to

The referendum was proposed
as an amendment to Thorn Pat
Juul's bill to transfer to SG the
housing and intramural functions
of the Off Campus Student Association.
The OCSA bill passed but was
overshadowed by the referendum
amendment, also sponsored by
Juul, along with Beth Paulson,
Rick Bryant and Joe Maguire.
In other business, SG voted
to oppose any limitation on the
number of

out-of-sta- te

Juul returned to the limelight
when his bill calling for amendment of certain sections of the
Student Rights Code was tabled.
"I wish to thank the assembly
for its continued inactivity," he

said..
Still another Juul bill asked
the SG president to request the
Board of Trustees to reject any
policy that would force students
to live two, three or four years
in UK dormitories. The measure
students passed after considerable discus-

here and any increase in nonresident tuition above the $980
level ordered by the Council on
Public Higher Education.

sion.
Then, noting that no rule pf
order forbids filibustering in SG,"
Juul proceeded to read at length

out-of-sta- te

'Never Really Existed,' Some Say
I

MSU Controversy Dying?
By GUY MENDES
and DARRELL RICE
MOREHEAD
The controversy surrounding the compulsory
ROTC situation at Morehead
State University?
Profs. Vance, Arends and Nor-

-

man say it is dying; many students say it never really existed
and the school administration
is probably trying to forget it.
The controversy began when
a group of Morehead students
and faculty members initiated
a compulsory
action against
ROTC program to go into effect
next fall.
The next step in the controversy occurred when Dr. Robert
Arends, Prof. Kenneth Vance and

Drug Probe
FRANKFORT, Ky (AP)-T- he
Senate unanimously apmeaproved a House-backe- d
sure Thursday to establish a
committee from both chambers to investigate the use of
drugs on college campuses in
Kentucky.

Prof. Richard Norman said their
teaching positions at Morehead
was being terminated because of
their political views and activities, especially in connection with
the ROTC issue.
Two fomms that were to have
dealt with issues relating to the

Dr. Arends, Prof. Vance and
Prof. Norman say they intend
to sit back and let others become
more involved in the situation.
They feel they have adequately
made their positions known and
say they will restrict their efforts
to an AAUP investigation currently underway.

one being sponcontroversy
sored
"What can one person do'
by the ad hoc
anticompulsory ROTC group and when these students are so apaanother by a university-sanctione- d
thetic they aren't even concerned
group were both sched- about their own rights?" Dr.
uled for Thursday, but were Arends said.
called off.
Interviews with a few More-hea- d
The
students revealed general
group cancelled its "Free Forum" to have student opinion to be in favor
been held
in the of compulsory ROTC "because
Rowan County Courthouse lo- it's the only way we can get
calise of threats of physical vio- a program."
lence, said Morehead student
They considered the controBruce Bostick, one of the forum
versy surrounding the professors
organizers.
as hardly worth mentioning. "We
An "Open Forum" also was don't know the facts about it,"
called off due to organizational several said.
difficulties, a spokesman said
Most of the students said the
Thursday evening.
controversy involved only a small
Dr. Arends and Prof. Vance minority, but that it had created
were to have participated in both much general interest which
fonims.
seems to be dying.

.

&

i

k"ty

anti-ROT- C

For The Birds

Kernel Photo by Dick War

Wildlife artist Ray Harm autographed prints of his original bird
paintings for students and Lexington residents last night in the
Student Center. At the head of the line are Martha Moloney
and Winnie Jo Perry.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Triclay, March 8,

A Successful Wedding

By SHERRY LEACH
If you are among the many
UK coeds planning to be married this spring or summer, care-

planning and preparation

ful

can help make your wedding
day a success.
Announcing your engagement
is the first item on the list. Your
parents may want to announce
your engagement at a party. If
not, tell your friends and members of both families by phone
or letter of your engagement before making the formal news-

paper announcement. The bride's

family makes the announcement.
Three to six months before
your wedding you should set the
date, select the size, style and
site of the ceremony. Visit your
clergyman with your fiance before you make any plans for
your wedding. He will try to
comply with your wishes, but
in

all matters under jurisdiction

of the church, his decision is
final. Be sure to ask him if
there are any special regulations
about clothes, music, flowers or

photographs.
Plan your reception and make
the necessary reservations, register your china and silver patterns, and begin your guest list
with your fiance three months
before the wedding. You will
want to begin shopping for your
trousseau then, too.
Most wedding gowns are custoand take four to six
weeks to be fitted and delivered.
m-made

Shop for your gown at least
three months before the wedding.
The time of day, size of the

wedding, and the type of wedding dress worn by the bride
determine the formality or informality of the wedding.
Accessories Are Important
Your accessories

are as

im-

portant as your gown, and should
be chosen after you choose the
gown. Proper for a strictly formal wedding is a dress with a
cathedral train, often detachable

for

dancing.

But today many

brides prefer a chapel train.
Veils of cathedral length are
rare nowadays, and even the
fingertip veil is less popular than
a nm lti layered veil of ellx)W
length.
Gloves are not mandatory, and
the bride may or may not wear
them, depending on her preference. Any jewelry worn should be
inconspicuous, such as a strand
of pearls.
Attendants Chosen Three Months
Before
Your attendants should also
be chosen about three months
prior to the wedding. Your maid
or matron of honor, ideally, is
your sister, or you may choose
your best friend. The sisters of
the groom may be among the
attendants, but it is not necessary for one to be maid or matron
of honor.
The maid of honor and the
best man serve as legal witnesses
to the marriage.
The more formal the wedding,
the more bridesmaids you may
want. Junior bridesmaids are in
the
age group and flower
girls and ring bearers are drawn
x
set.
from the
Your attendants pay for their
own clothes, but the selection is
in your hands. A thoughtful bride
will keep the figure problems and
financial limits of her attendants
in mind as she shops.
You are expected to give each
attendant a memento of the day,
usually a piece of engraved
jewelry or other engraved gift.
Your groom selects his brother,
best friend or even father or stepfather as his best man. Your
brother may be asked to serve
as an usher. A good rule is to
have one usher for each 50 guests.
Financially, the groom's men
are responsible for the clothes
the groom wants them to wear,
with the exception of gloves and
ties which he provides. He also
provides their boutonnieres.
four-to-si-

Requires Planning

Two months before the wedding you should complete your
guest list, order your attendant's
gowns, and discuss ceremony details with the proir church authorities.
Invitations, announcements
and personal stationery should
be ordered two months before the
wedding. Invitations are mailed
four weeks before
even six weeks is
permissible when numerous
accommodations must be
approximately

the wedding;

out-of-to-

arranged.

Your engraved invitations will
cost about sixty-fiv- e
cents each.
Where cost is a definite factor,
you should consider handw ritten

invitations, which are entirely
proper for a small wedding of
about fifty people.
When a church wedding will

be held,

more people may be

invited to the church than to
the reception. However, if you
are married at a club, hotel or at
home, all those invited to the
wedding are automatically invited to the reception.
Once you've decided how
many you will invite, tell the
groom's mother how many guests
she should list. The groom's family should promptly submit its
list.
A reliable en graver or stationer
will be able to tell you all the
variations in the
permissible
wording of your invitations. The
invitation is always issued by the
and
parents of the bride-to-bif her parents are divorced, usually by the mother.
e,

Matters are simplified considerably, and m is the cot of the
invitations, if all wedding guests
are reception guests.
Discuss Reception With Caterer
Arrange all the reception details with the caterer two months
before the wedding. Breakfast at
a reception is approximately 5
per person; a buffet, $3; dinthe traditional chamner,
pagne toast and champagne continued through the meal costs
6
per guest. The bridal cake
is 35 to 50 cents a serving.
A receiving line headed by
the mother of the bride is a
necessary part of the reception.
Discuss your color scheme
with the mothers so they can
order their gowns (wo months
before the wedding. The mother
of the bride has first choice in
selecting her gown. She should
shop promptly and tell the mother
$3-$-

$5-$-

$3-$-

of the groom the color, fabric
and style of dress she has chosen.
At a formal daytime wedding
the mothers may wear long or
short cocktail dresses. Only after
6 p.m., the usual hours for formal evening weddings, may traditional ev ening dresses be worn.
Engage a photographer and
arrange for your bridal portrait
about two months before the
When facilities are
wedding.
available, it is a good idea to
have your portrait taken at your
final fitting. This eliminates the
Continued On Page 4, Col. 4

Complete
Floral Service
for

Kernel

The Kentucky

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein Is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION

Weddings
Let us help you plan
that great day, CALL

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* Smashing' Smug Protest

Society's children, some Smith
have faltCollege
ered in following the good advice
of Yale Chaplain, William Slone
Coffin Jr., "to do something about
the Vietnam war." Smith girls have
decided not to make the scene at
the school cafeteria this week. Instead they are fasting for peace.
mini-activist-

s,

The only opposition to these

fruit juice drinkers on campus came
from coeds who thought the effort
was futile. The opposition should
take heart, though. Next week's
steady diet of sirloin and string-bean- s
will surely make some of
the seven sisters' cashmere set participating in the diet-s- t niggle, attain goal two in Coffin's sermon:
"Get up and say something, but
say it well."

.. AM:

4
IT MOVING JT
......
x

mlrigbt!!...
LET'S KEEP
...

.....

-.-

7"

:.-

.1

Treasure Tub Runneth Over
Shooting arrows in the air, landing, . . . they know not where,
are all supporters of Senate Bill
391. This bill proposes to increase
student tuition about
130 percent over the next two years,
from $820 to $1,400 for the 1968
school year and to $2,000 for 1969.
The only logic behind this bill
seems to be to reverse the supposed
students
attitude of
that we (educators, legislators and
taxpayers) are fools for subsidizing
their education.
There is no doubt that the
tuition should be increased
to meet the rising costs of
yearly
higher education in the state but
such a monstrous increase as Bill
394 calls for is unsound. An edustudent
cation for a
at UK would cost more than a
Harvard education.
should
Frankfort
legislators
consider the terrible burden this
increase would place on
students and their families.
out-of-sta- te

out-of-sta- te

out-of-sta-

non-reside-

te

nt

out-of-sta- te

They should consider the number
of Kentucky resident students who
leave Kentucky to attend public
colleges and universities in other
states. These schools end up subsidizing Kentucky students as well
as their own state students. But
they should ultimately consider the
net effect this bill will have, for it
will encourage provincialism on
the college campus and reduce the
student populace to inbred mountaineers.
Bill 394 is undesirable because
Kentucky has not reached the
student saturation point
and therefore has no need for such
a restrictive student measure. The
"get rich quick tycoons" in Frankfort will not help higher education
in Kentucky by passing Bill 394.
They will succeed however, in ranking Kentucky high in the rating
chart for states ranking low in
educational diversity. They will
succeed in boiling in their own
treasure tub brew.
out-of-sta- te

Trusty . . . Trustier . . Trustiest,
Student Trustee Bill

about the
bill which has been
slowly and cleverly turned into a
baby pacifier to soothe the sporadic
tempers of state representatives.
Voters of the bill have indicated
that they don't want students, especially the wrong students to get
too much power in controlling their
own education. To accomplish this
goal they have made a farce out
of the student trustee bill.
The original bill was to have
a voting student member on the
University Board of Trustees but
this was later changed to a nonvoting student, stipulating that this
student must be the student body
president. This was done to "assure quick passage of the bill,"
sponsors said. The bill was later
changed and stipulated that the
student be a resident of Kentucky.
We are concerned

student-truste-

e

The bill was later changed so that
the Legislature could have control over the student representative.
The student body should elect four
student representatives plus their
student government president, thus
giving the Board a choice of five
students to pick from. The bill
was later changed so that an ar-- .
rangement could be worked out
where the student could be kept
out of certain discussions whenever the Board members felt he
was not needed for comment.
The student trustee bill has
evolved into a meaningless, negative piece of legislature. Originally
it was going to be the start of
something good, and we think it
would have been. Realistically it
is the continuation of something
bad, an obvious lack of trust in
the youth of tomorrow.

The Induction Line

The Kentucky

Iernel

The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
KSTABL1SHED

1894

FRIDAY, MARCH

8. 1968

Editorials represent the ofrinions of the Editors, not of the University.

John Richard Kimmins, Editor

Robert F. Brandt, Managing Editor

Greek Ad, A Sign Of The Future?
The advertisement is Wednesday's Kernel, purchased by the
Greek Activities Committee and
addressed to "Mr. Kernel," brings
hope and promise of a revitaliza-tio- n
of Greek confidence and vigor
on the University campus.
Fraternities and sororities, when
they achieve their full potential,
are an invaluable experience for
many undergraduates. When they
operate according to their statements of principles they perform
the admirable function of building
mature men and women. And for
this they can only be praised.
The inescapable
conclusion,
however, is that when the Greek
organizations provide these invaluable experiences their members
will develop an undying love for
the system. They will care, and they
will care intensely enough to unashamedly express their feelings
so that others may understand the
value of fraternity and sorority life
and thus perpetuate them. This the
Greeks at UK have not done.

Editorials critical of various
phases of Greek life have been repeatedly ignored. It is fair to conclude from such apparent apathy
that the Greeks have nothing to
say, and therefore have nothing.
But it is hoped that the initiative
taken in placing the ad Wednesday is at least an indication that
this is not the case.
It is true that actions speak
louder than words. The voluntary
participation of more than 800
Greek members in the local Heart
Fund Drive last month is evidence
that this is true. But it cannot be
denied that the Greeks' reticence
in expressing their feelings has damaged the public opinion of that of
which they are so proud.
We suspect the Greeks on campus have a great deal to offer. The
fraternities and sororities here
should continue to strive for improvement. And their individual
members should begin to recognize the implications inherent in
their unwillingness to stand up for
them.

Letters To The Editor
Greek Discrimin ation?
To the Editor of the Kernel:
Dear Mr. Creek Activities Committee,
It seems to me that the Kernel gives
your people too much space, but evidently not enough for your insatiable egos.
There are Creeks on the Kernel staff,
but evidently not enough for your purposes. Would you really want the Kernel
to print "ALL" the news about your
system? I imagine some of your initiations
would make interesting copy material
and just think of the possibilities (too
bad a photographer wasn't along for the
trench coat affair of last semester).
But the height of it all, Mr. Creek
Activities Committee, is your accusation
that "the Kernel is guilty of biased discrimination in its most disgusting form."
How many Macks, Asians, or Africans
are Creeks? A better question might be,

"who is guilty of biased discrimination
in its most disgusting form?" Take a
look at your "20 percent of the student
Ixxly," before you answer, Creek Activities Committee.
J. II. Musselman
A&S Senior

To the Editor of the Kernel:
And Mr. Byron Petrakis.
it pleases me to see how selflessly and
sycophantically some rush to the defense
of others.
But, really, it is my fault that the
terms "backwoodsman" and "thinking"
have a negative connotation to my lord?
Thank you.
Herbert Creech
A&S

Junior

To the Editor of the Kernel:
The tale of Lord Dor of Nob, Jim

Stacey's most recent publication (Kernel,
Mar. 4), has been labeled satire. However, I'm not sure that satire is the
proper category. Lord Dor's tale seems
in many ways to fit into the grand tradition of Kentucky folklore, the same
tradition which includes "Provincialman"
and other tales, many of them as yet
unrecorded.
(Incidentally, there is a real crying
need for someone to take an interest
in these unrecorded tales. I was thinking in particular of two: "Lord Dor's
Encounter with The Thin Cray Line,"
a story of speedy justice, and "Hetreat
of The Big Blue I ine in The Face of
Um Dor's llage," a tale of hasty retractions. No doubt there are other unrecorded tales of interest. In all probability, we need only give Lord Dor and
Lady Filet free reign and they will pro

vide the Kentucky tradition with motifs
yet unheard of.)
But I digress. Whether the tale is
satire or folklore isn't so terribly
Both are categories of literature,
and, as literature often does, the tale
in question seems to deal with archetypes. That is the main point.
Jim Stacey simply recognized an archetypal pattern and objectified it through
an understandable medium. Libel? Hardly. The archetype was there on the Moor
of Head and Mr. Stacey jerceived it.
But I did not write to praise the
process of art or talent for collecting,
as the case may be. I wrote, instead,
to suggest that the real prize for innovation go to Lord Dor and Lady Filet,
who long ago created their own images.
Melinda Buckman
A 6c S Senior

* Wedding Traditions
Are Ancient Customs
By JUDY THURMON

The Nashville Tcnncssean
Although many wedding traditions begun thousands of years
ago h ave become extinct, traces
of ancient rituals, the reasons
forgotten but the actions repeated, still survive.
The practice of giving a wedding ring to the bride apparently
dates back to the early Egyptians,
who considered the circle to signify love without end. Much care
was taken by the artisans that
there was no flaw in the circularity of the ring.
The Romans amended the custom through their hypothesis that
the third finger of the left hand
was directly linked by a major
vein to the heart.
The American bride's white
dress and veil is regarded as
proper, and most of the western
countries believe white indicates
purity and modesty. The touch
of blue demanded by the old
adage originated from the Hebrew symbol of purity, love and
fidelity.
In eighteenth century Japan
a bride wore white but not for
the same reasons. In Japan white
symbolizes death, and the bride's
clothes signified that
from the time of her marriage,
so far as her parents were concerned, she was dead.
The Dutch tell the story of
a beautiful girl who couldn't
her
father
because
marry
wouldn't give her a dowry. Interested friends each gave her
a gift so that she could establish
a dowry thus the beginning of
what we now call the bridal
shower.
At Roman weddings
they
didn't cut the bridal cake the
bridegroom broke it over the
bride's head. Small pieces of the
cake were then distributed to
guests.
A popular wedding form in
early days was "marriage by
capture," and from this grew
the tradition of attendants.
The bridegroom's best man
pale-color-

was supposed to protect him
from relatives who would object
to the girl's capture. The bride's
attendants were to rescue her.
Dad's function of walking his
daughter down the aisle shows
his consent, but has another dimension: he is to make sure
the marriage contract is fulfilled.
In America the automobile
is the vehicle by which the bridegroom whisks away his bride,
usually to return in a few weeks
and live in the same home town
of the parents.
But the ancient Creeks bridegroom came in his oxen drawn
chariot to carry his bride to her
new home. And when they got
there the axle of the vehicle was
burned as an indication that the
bride would never return.

s

Wedding Plans Ahead?

everything you need

.

.

.

the bride's dress,

the bridesmaids' outfits, the lovely
lingerie, the trousseau linen, and

engraved invitations and announcements.
Brides have been coming to Wolf Wile's

use the

Jwv

I9G8- -5

8,

Wolf Wile's is ready to provide

mom?
-

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, March

for three generations. Shouldn't your
choice be

"Lovely"

ed

is the word for

our handling
of your

At

dvrtid

Short

and

at

Dial

Lime

252-353- 1

on

-

Iffj,

mr
Mr.

v

ding. We go to the rehearsal
and the wedding to keep

C-

)

'
1

Floral Service gocsfci
much further than
just decorations
We work with you and your
minister to plan your wed-

i,

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Homt

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MAIN STREET EAST

In Downtown Lexington

RINGS

in Bnd

ON FASHIONABLE

KELLER-FLORI- ST

Art Carved
WEDDING

domplete Service

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It takes two
lu inane a
marriage!

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Wedding

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things running smoothly and
according to the rules of

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etiquette.
All

future brides are invited

to come in and discuss their

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wedding plans in our bridal
salon. Even if you decide not
to use our services it

is

worth

looking into.
The model is carrying

A

RAFAEL SET,

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sliapcd bouquet of
tulips hilighted with daisies
d
and interspersed with

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love-knotte-

tulip foliage.

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liridul gown courtesy of
McAlf tin's Bridal Salon

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Her

$32.50

Wf&L

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212 So. Limestone

Phone

255-485-

4

ine icweiers

159 EAST MAIN

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crescent

Across from Stewart's

KERNEL CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS

* 4

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Triclay, March 8, 1968

Wedding Planning

IJcAfaiA
Torfland Mill
278-603.-

1

Once In A Lifetime
.

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To make that once in a lifetime
day perfect, come in and see our
collection of Spring and Summer

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Our courteous
staff will assist you with each
detail from the selection of the
wedding trousseau to home furBridal Gowns.

if-

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.

.

.

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nishings,
Mrs. Tompkins

RSVP

for an appointment.

Floral topiary ball by Foushee Florist

Continued from Tage 3
possibility that your dress will
be wrinkled or damaged through
transportation to the photographer's studio.
Don't Forget Gift, Ring
One month before the wedding you should buy the groom's
wedding gift, mail the invitations and choose and order gifts
for your attendants. Thank-yo- u
notes for gifts should be written
as the gifts arrive, and a record
should be kept in a bridal book.
At this time you should choose
and order flowers for the wedding
and reception. It is becoming
the custom for the bride's family to pay for her bouquet along
with the other flowers. The
groom, however, is expected to
present corsages to the mothers
and grandmothers and bouton-niere- s
to the fathers. He also
corbuys the bride's going-awa- y
sage.
You should order the groom's
wedding ring a month before
the wedding. On your wedding
day, don't forget to shift your
engagement ring to your right
hand. The wedding ring is placed
on your left hand first, and the
engagement ring worn above it.
If your wedding ring is inscribed,
the groom's initials come first,
then your initials and the date
of the marriage. On his ring,
your initials, as the giver, come
first.
Lodging for
guests
and attendants should be arranged a month before the wedding. Your attendants must provide their own transportation to
your city, but it is your responsibility to pay for their housing
(and their husbands') if you are
unable to arrange housing with
relatives or friends. The groom
is responsbile for the accommodations of his ushers.
Time For The Showers
One month before the wedding
is the time to make arrangements
for the bridesmaids' luncheon.
out-of-to-

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attending the bridesmaids'

luncheon. You should also deliver
the wedding announcement and
picture to the newspapers, and
check final details with the florist
and photographer.
All you have left to do is
pack for your honeymoon and
sit back and enjoy your wedding!

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The luncheon gives you a chance
to present mementos of the wedding to your attendants. The
groom may present the ushers
with gifts at a bachelor party,
which is optional. His best man
may make arrangements for the
party, but the groom is the host
and pays the bills.
The rehearsal dinner creates
an opportunity for the family of
the groom to entertain. It should
l)e planned one month before the
wedding, and it is wise to schedule the rehearsal two or more
days before the wedding.
Your friends will want to give
you showers before your wedding.
No members of either family,
however, are permitted to give
the bride a shower. After the first
shower in your honor, it is permissible to advise attendants
who should be invited to all
parties in your honor that they
should not buy gifts for any future showers.
The one indispensible item
of the reception is the wedding
cake. It should also be ordered
one month before the wedding.
Two weeks before the wedding you should go with your
fiance to get your wedding license. You should also be sure
to arrange transportation for the
wedding party to the church.
Complete your trousseau shopping at this time, too.
With careful planning, one
week before the wedding you
will have only a few final preparations to attend to. These include giving the final estimate
of the number of reception guests
to the caterer, making sure the
announcements are ready to mail
after the ceremony, and giving

F

Malicious
woods burning
is something
to get mad about.

HELP PREVENT
FOREST FIRES
IN THE SOUTH?
0 REPORT WOODS
ARSON!

'
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J'

. . . ask
pretty Linda Faye Carroll, Kappa Alpha Theta . . . she may tell you how she
won l'at Kink