tsesi oop
THE KENTUCKY

Tage Four

to bid me farewell. Stand by my
side: close your eves, and then
think of your four, Joyful years
here. Remember tiiat though I
speali not, I rejoice in all the good,
that you have done and shall do.
Make this university proud to have
lady happens to be. No mother yo uas a graduate; and sometime
ever worrlei any more than Mrs. in the fu'ure when I Irarn of your
Cnllms does about each one of the success, I ,hnll thinic of you as the
student who "decorated" my figure."
225.
After a few months time every
girl becomes intimately known by
her. and then the dormitory be- Cut-i- n
comes one big home with a happy,
congenial family.
Asked as to what one thing annoyed her iTiOst; in ruch a position,
By CLYDE WALDEMERE
replied.
Mrs. Collins laughingly
The chilly wind or the straight
"Well, the never-ceasitread of
blew
footsteps up and down the halls card dances in the North stacmy ears, at southward and hit the warm
and stairs, throbs In
Kencato of the
times, long after I am In bed."
dance, and
tucky
Changing to a different vein of out of mountain square the whirling
the storm came
conversation, she thoughtfully add- "cut-i- n"
dance.
ed, "One of the nicest things that
Whether this modern
can happen, is for one of my girls
original, the effect of which
to come In and say, 'Will you look of the
of the
has already reached
at me, please, I always let mother larger northern cities, some become
will
look me over before I go any place
nationally acepted or die out as a
dressed up.'"
fad,, cannot be readily answered
The opinion of one freshman girl

INTERVIEWS

CO-- ED

'MOTHER'

OF WOMEN'S DORMITORIES
By LESLIE LF.E JONES
How would you ,ike to be the
"mother" to 225 girls for nine
months out of the year? That
sounds like a tremendous undertaking for sny one person, yet Mrs.
Marylee Collins fulfl'lls this duty at
the University, acting as social
director :f Patterson and Boyd
halls, the two women's residence
halls.
Mrs. Collins, a native of Birmingham, Alabama, came only last year
to assume this responsible position.
A tall, stately woman with a kind,
gentle face framed by silver-whi- te
heair, she moves sero.;ly among the
girls, stpdylng their likes and dislikes.
Talking to Mrs. Collins In her
office, I learned that she had previously attended Randolph-MacCollege, and Columbia University,
where she received special training
in personnel and guidance work.
Being a true native of the south,
Mrs. Collins chose to come to Kentucky In order to take up her work
of social directing.
Dealing w.'th 225 girls day in and
day out never fails to bring many
an unusual case before her. Such
harrowing experiences as one night
when the lights went out, once
when a false fire alarm was turned
in at midnight, and once when a
real Are broke out, to add excitement to tho Job that makes It all
the more interesting, if a little
on

frightening.
Not the least of her duties is one
of seeing if every one of her girls
is in by dormitory bedtime, and if
not, where this paitlcular young

.pup
EXPERT

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Cleaning A Specially
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Ave.
Ph. 1940-- X
Univ. P. O. Box No. 1764

250 Rode

Dance la
Highly Intriguing

ng

ng

off-sho- ot

PATTERSON
ANSWERS
By IRMA JEAN GROSS
"Ah, yes. You have painted me,
sat on me, wondered at me, and
decorated me; yet I have rigidly
sat on my chair, my book in one
hand, my cane in th eother, for
lol these tv o long years. But now
it is "my day." A new semester Is
beglnnig, which provides an opportunity for unfolding what I have
held in my heart since my dedication on June 1, 1934.
When you put a freshman cap on
my head, I did not laugh, as did
you who rejoiced in your behavior.
I warmly glowed inside. Why, I
was indeed gratified to have this
smybol of educational virginity bestowed upon me. I, too, might
share in tha "prlveleRe" of being a
freshman.
When you, as a sophomore,
placed your lovely co-- ed
in my lap
to pose for a snapshot, I secretly
gently embraced her, for she was
the essence of young womanhood
seeking knowledge in the institution for which I dedicated my life.
Ndw that you are a Junior, you
may polish my dome, until it glows;
you may place a bouquet in my
outstretched arms; you may put a
stove-pip- e
lid on my cane; but 1
shall not budge nor shall I grow
angry with you. To me you represent all for which T worked and
strived, all that I meant you to be.
When that time comes for you
to graduate 1rnm this institution of
learning, I want you, as a senior,

1.;

l

seems to epitomize the whole situation.
"No ma',tT whom you're dancing with," she complains, "whether
he's a good dancer or a poor one,
you have to look like you're having
a good time. Looks and personality means very little when you begin
to show signs of getting "stuck."
Furthermore, you'va got to get all
your
slated ahead of
time or e!se you stand a good
having to sit one out;
chnnce of
and If you once hit the side lines
you're usually thrre to stay."
"But." slit hnstrns to add, "I
somehow prefer it to the straight
card dance You get straight dancing in the
and yet It
of
retains the intriguing gamb
changing pnrtners.
And so the battle lines are drawn.
On the one side are the conservatives whose interest Is in dancing;
and on ths other the more sportlike crowd who love the kaleidoscope of changing partners.
"However, there la this to be
said," admonishes a senior boy, "If
the whole thing could be passed off
as a game, there would be little
objection, but unfortunately It is
s"

Friday, Oftober
the precursor of more Insidious
practices In later life eoclal climbing. By virtue of the dance a student may be elevated to an unearned social position on the campus. It Is south' way of dragging
out the lorgnette and planting the
root of the family tree In the noble
soul of some great man who has
been dead so lng he couldn't possibly nourish It."
campus, of all
"A university
places, should try io stimulate Intelligent serial relations. But campus social life like campus politics
very often emulates the most undesirable aspects of the social

tary

lives.

Futhermore that

any-

one who sang around there was
bound to do the same.

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A

The Junior Collegian says a
noted naturalist made a study of
birds and found that the birds that
sang the sweetest usually lead soli-

30, 1936

tmi

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