fi
42 UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
affairs of the University. The officers for 1959-60 are as follows: President,
Dr. Ralph ]. Angelucci, ’34; vice president, L. Berkley Davis, ’33; Director of of t
Alumni Affairs, Helen G. King, ’25; and treasurer, Bernie A. Shively, ’36.
THE PLANT OF THE UNIVERSITY Shol
. mal'
The University of Kentucky is a small city in itself. It has its own post
ofHce, bookstore, radio station, newspaper, printing plant, theatre, police force,
cafeterias, and hospital. The University community, including students, faculty and
and staff members, and their families, numbers about 15,000. the
There are 74 major buildings on the 706-acre main campus at Lexington.
The campus farm contains over 400 acres and the Experiment Station Farm, SPN
and Coldstream Farm, located just north of Lexington, has 1,150 acres. PTO?
The South farm, used largely for horticultural purposes, contains 202
acres and is located approximately five miles south of Lexington off the stue
Nicholasville Pike, on the Higbee Mill Road. An 89—acre poultry farm located
near Lexington on the Leestown Road. Sub-experiment stations at Princeton and stui
Quicksand includes 14,800 acres. The University’s Eden Shale Farm in Owen
County has 934 acres, and 140-acre and 400-acre farms in Woodford and ap;
Mercer Counties are under long-term lease.
Five centers, each offering two years of college work, are operated by the am
University. These are the Northern Center at Covington, Ashland Center at hb;
Ashland, Northwestem Center at Henderson, Southeastern Center at Cumber-
land, and Fort Knox Center, at Fort Knox. he;
Locations of campus buildings are shown on the map near the front of bar
this publication. Following is a list of the major buildings, with brief enumera- H;
tions of the services housed in them. cuf
Administration Building. In this building are located the ofiices of the W
President, the Vice-President of the University, the Vice-President (Business
Administration), the Dean of Men, the Dean of Women, the Dean of Admissions sig
and Registrar, the Department of Public Relations, the Director of Counseling CO
(including veterans’ affairs), the Director of Testing, the Kentucky Research M
Foundation, and the Placement Service. U]
Agriculture Building. The oflices of the Associate Dean of the College of th
Agriculture and Home Economics and of the Horticulture Department are
located in this building. The remainder of the building furnishes classroom ay
and laboratory space for the departments of Agricultural Entomology, Agron-
omy, Agricultural Economics, and Horticulture. tc
Agricultural Experiment Station. (Scoville Hall) In the Agricultural Ex- S;
neriment Station are located the oflices of the Dean of the College of Agri- P]
culture and Home Economics and Director of Agricultural Extension, and those C;
of associate directors. The building also houses the ofHces, laboratories, and O·
research facilities for agronomy, chemistry, entomology and botany, agricul- A
tural economics, fertilizer, feed, and seed control, and agricultural extension. I;
Rural Sociology is in the Experiment Station Annex. Ii
Alumni Gymnasium. This building, located at the corner of Limestone fi
Street and Euclid Avenue, houses the ofiices of the Men's Department of Physi-
cal Education, the main playing floor, a corrective gymnasium, classrooms, and k
lockers and showers. The majority of physical education activities and intra- a
murals for men are held in this building.
Anderson Hall. This quadrangle, made up of several rather distinct units, I
houses the oflices of the Dean of the College of Engineering, the Engineering
Library, and the departments of Mechanical, Electrical, Civil, Chemical, and ,
Mining and Metallurgical Engineering. - (