Factionalism Hurls
SC

Today's Weather:
Cloudy and Cool;

Constitution;

2

See Editorial Vnpe

University of Kentuc h y
Vol.

IJ

LEXINGTON,

KV., TUESDAY, APRIL

.,

I

Low 10, High 56

No. '9.1

DM

Wyatt Gives
Ratification Belayed
On '60 Legislature
Wyatt spoke 011 the program enacted by
tlio 1?XK) legislature anil s li.it was expected from them at a meeting
of the Political Science Club yesterday afternoon in the SUB.
Wyatt was introduced by Dr. Ernest Trimble, head of the Polit
ical Science Dep.u tment.
Pointing to the achievements of
the legislature, Wyatt mentioned
the civil service bill which provides the first such program for
II departments of Kentucky gov'
y
ernment.
I A.

C.ov. Wilson

V.

.

The compuhory purgation bill
was lauded as a long needed move
to remove names from the voting
roils which should not be on them.
The bill providing for the geological mapping of the entire
state is perhaps the most
of the bills passed, Wyatt
said.
The Jot, which will require ten
ypars to complete, should serve to
.show to industry that Kentucky
i rich in mineral wealth and aid
In th" establishment of new Industry in the state.
The fir.t two years of the task
are assured. ;:nd $900,000 has been
appropriated for the Job. This sum
has been matched by the federal
Continued On Page 3
far-reachi- ng

Ratification of Student Congress
proposed constitution was delayed
Indefinitely after opposition to the
new representation clause de
veloped at last Thursday's meeting.
Opposition to the clause, led by
Willis Haws, Men's Residence Halls
Governing Council, and Frank
Gossett, Cooperstown, held up rat- ification and eventually led to the
tabling of the constitution until
after the Easter holidays.
Tl,. ttU.irm. n rotlfv mo. 14 lm
possible to get the constitution to
the University Faculty's April
meeting for approval. The Faculty
h
y- met yesterday and will not meet
again until May 9.
Haws and Gossett based their
objections to the representation
"
y
fv
' ? clause on the argument that it
.v
would deprive their organizations
v
vj
of power.
Haws urged the assembly to re- tain the present representation
provision. In his argument, Haws
told of "his baby," the Men's Rest- donee Halls Governing Council,
and its growth in the past four
LT. GOV. WYATT
years. The new representation
clause, he said, would rob it of its
power.
He then told the Greek representatives, "you will be cutting
your own throats if you vote for
it." Gossett also warned Greek
groups that they would lose their
To- - power in the congress under the
Songster, Elizabethtown; Myra
bin. Harned; Elsie Barr, Lexing- - new representation.
The clause provides for repreton; Dave Stewart, Louisville; and
sentation paralleling that of the
Bill Crain, Flemingsburg.
University Faculty with the Inter- B. B. Parks, Program Director, fraternity
Council Panhellenic
said the 500 votes cast showed Council. Men's Residence Halls
"substantial turnout" as compared Governi'ng Council( Family Hous
wiiii past, vuiuig.
ing Council. Women's House Presi- The new Board members will dents Council., nd Student. Union
elect officers Tuesday, M?.y 3, and
?r,
they will be installed the following
Odear, chairman of the SC
week. May 10, at a dinner meeting. Constitutional Revision Committee,
Continued On Page 8
told the assembly that the pro- 1

"

UVZJ

SU Board Members
Selected For 1960
Student
Union
Five vacant
Board positions were filled Friday
by a campus election.
Sharon Chenault, Fern Creek;
Steve Clark, Maysville; Linda
Coffman, Frankfort; Kris Ramsey,
Pikeville; and Larry Westerfield.
liaruoiu, trc sririiru vo juin me
five appointees selected last week.
The outgoing Board appointed
five students for the next year's
SUB last Tuesday.
Appointed members are Kathy

UK Faculty Representation
GROUPS

REPRESENTATIVES

Literature, philosophy, and arts

16
9
8
10

Social studies
Physical sciences
Biological sciences
Agriculture
Home Economics .
Engineering

12

2
8
2
4
5
2

-

LaW

Education
Commerce

Pharmacy

78

represented the
maximum amount of
ment for students the Faculty was
likely to approve.
Continuing his defense of the
provision, Odear warned the eon- gress that the Faculty would prob- ably reject the new constitution if
posed constitution

self-gover-

n-

submitted with the present repre- sentation provision. For that rea- son, the proposed clause is the
most essential section of the cons- titution, he noted,
When a motion calling for an
immediate vote on the representa- Continued on Page 2

Eisaman, Hodge Named
'60 Football Captains
ry
By STEWART IIEDGER
Eisaman. a
Eisaman and Lloyd Hodge lor from Bethel, Pa., won letters
were selected yesterday as co- - his first two varsity years as an
6--

captains of the

1.

195-pou-

sen-Jer-

nd

UK football alternate starter at quarterback,
sopho-Th- e
Voted on the
more team in 1958. Eisaman ranks
RpWtinn marker! thp ninth
Ume m 1Q years tnat cocaptains among the SECs leading passers,
nave been selected rather tnan
country's better
n. .
,
cinalo olinto,n
thm aerial? arusis, usaman is expected
.j,.
.
v. Ives vntpH nn thp mipstlnn
10
ine
ais numDer one
U'A
"in
h
"
ior quarterback in 1960.
V10'
.
.
irom wnuesDurg, is scneauiea 10
One of Kentucky's better puntbe transferred to guard this
b
ers, Eisaman is best remembered
son to make room for center Irv by
Wildcat fans for stealing the
(j0(Mje
ball from Tennessee fullback Carl
A fine defensive player and
on the run In 1958.
guard, Hodge played Smith while
The unusual action set up the
center last year after playing full
touchdown which enabled UK to
back in 1958.
Hodge started all 10 games last take a 6"2 victory and earned hi,m
year and made
0
tackles a ine "V,e OI Pennsylvania
game. He is termed by Coach Elan- - PocketAfter looking good in his
ton Collier as "one of the top
man campaign in 1956, Eisaman
in the South."
Having won a letter in his first ran into an Injury jinx that has
two years of varsity competition, dogged him every since. Just be- Hodge will be an
candi- - fore the opening game In '57, he
suffered a shoulder separation and
1960.
date in
out that season,
Hodge's 1959 performance won
him the Lexington Salesmen's
In 1958, he received a minor
Best Back Award despite playing fracture to the lower spine in an
defense. Hodge won over such out- - auto accident. Last year, he
offensive backs as Calvin ceived a leg injury in the season's
Bird, Charlie Sturgeon, and Glenn opening game and never reached
Shaw.
his full potential.
1960

team.

All-SE- C

".

,,r

...

l--

sea-Bo-

line-backi-

ng

15-2-

-

fresh-lineback-

m s I "'Mi
11

jif

i

11...

,

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lYrM r

ers

AU-SE- C

Tau Sigma Depicts
f tiiii. Hi,

University of Illinois Glee Club

Illini Presents Pleasant Evening
By PHYLLIS JEXNESS

On Saturday night in the Coliseum, the Men's
Glee Club from the University of Illinois provided
a fairly large audience with a pleasant evening.
Directed by Harold A. Decker, this chorus proved
to be extiemely well trained. They sang with consistently fcocd quality, expceptionally fine diction,
and an abundance of spirit.
An opening group consisted f the familiar Welsh
chorale, "Laudamus," Gretchanlnofrs "Glory to
God," and a set of five songs by Grieg, based on
Norwegian folk melodies. This latter is attractive
music, and was performed with charm and animation.
A brass ensemble supplied the second portion of
the piofcram, with a toccata by Bonelli performed
antiplionally by two quartets, one on stage, the
other in the far reaches of the balcony. Their ensemble playing was excellent, despite the handicap

of distance. This was followed by a three movement
"Suit for Brass" by Lenoard Lebow, this time with
all eight players together.
The evenings most rewarding music came In the
third group with Oustave Hoist's setting of Walt
Whitman's "Dirge for Two Veterans," for chorus,
brass, and percussion.
The remainder of the program was made up of
a group of sea chanteys, effectively done with guitar
and harmonica accompaniment, an embarrassingly
gauche quartet, and a miscellaneous group of folk
and "popular" songs. It was obvious that the men
were much at home in this njiusic, and hence they
sang it with pob and verve. ?
On an occasion of this sort, and with a talented,
finely schooled group such as this, one might wish
for a program of more musical substance. We were
provided with an evening of entertainment, If not
always of real music.

Love And Perfume
Spring themes of love and perfumes will be depicted by Tau
Sigma, UK modern dance group, in its annual spring concert at 8
o'clock tonight in the Euclid Avenue Building.
Perfumes to be depicted Include Woodhue, with a fragrance
blues and jazz; My Sin. with its air of small town girls lost
in the big city; and the musty scent of Sortielege calling upon the
powers of witchcraft.
Dancers express the freedom and self, even in a crowd. Love of fun
freshness of escape from April will find a boy and girl doing a
Showers; the allure of Intimate country hoedown.
Choreography and direction of
seeks the privacy of new love; and
the rhythmic beat of Bay Rum the numbers has been done by
leaves an exotic aroma.
senior members of the organlza- Dancers will interpret the moods tlon. Members of the Physical
feelings of original love as cation Department did the set con
found in the creation in the lives struction,
A cast of 23 will present the con- of Adam and Eve, the hurt and
disappointment of cruel love, and cert.
Mary Keffer, president of Tau
the comfort of the greatest love
in the crucifixion of Christ and Sigma, said a larger male cast this
year enables the dancers to perthe grief of Mary.
Narcislsm, self love, will show the form more difficult motions and a
involvement of a person in him- - wider range of them.

*