xt7000000m6z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7000000m6z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19550624  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, June 24, 1955 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 24, 1955 1955 2013 true xt7000000m6z section xt7000000m6z 2

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Opened By UK

11A

Vol. XLVI University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky., Friday, June 21; 19."

No. 32

Union Men
Meet On
Campus
union representatives
from Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee, three visitors from Indonesia
and one from the Gold Coast .,1
registered at the 10th Annual Kentucky Labor School which began

State College.

Cooperstoivn, 1955

Excavation work for the new apartment buildings which will be
are disthe new Cooperstown is now in progress. The old pre-faappearing, one by one, as purchasers cart them away for camps
and other uses.
bs

Takes State "s Golf Honor
old

title-winni-

ville

Courier-Journa-

l:

Four down

the

ng

after seven holes,

that's when Allen called a halt.
He was never down and played
most of the afternoon with a one--

or

two-ho-

d

le

The school is under the supervision of James Wolfe, Director of
the Department of Research and
Education of Kentucky State Federation. Norbert Blume is the Assistant Director.
The school is for the AFL, but
next fall the CIO will be consolidated with it.
Dr. Julian Parks Boyd, well
The session will close next Friknown librarian and historian of
day. July 1.
Princeton University, will speak at
8 p.m. Tuesday (June 28) at the
University of Kentucky as a
Dr. Donovan Leaves
Blazer Lecturer.
The talk, entitled "An AristocFor European Trip
racy for a Republic," will be given
Dr. II. L. Donovan, University of in th eGuignol theater and will
Kentucky President, and Mrs. open to the general public.
Special guests at the lecture
Donovan sailed for France from
program will be members of the
New York City on June 18.
Dr. Donovan is on vacation from Filson Club who have been invited
the University. He and Mrs. Don- by the University to attend the
ovan will tour Europe, visiting program. Each year during the
Spain, Italy, Belgium, Switzerland. Summer Session the University
and members of the Louisville hisWest Germany, and England.
They will also visit the Univer- torical group join together for one
sity of Heidelberg in Germany Blazer lecture.
Presiding at the affair will be
where Dr. Donovan has friends.
They are planning to return to Judge Davis W. Edwards of Louisville, president of the Filson Club.
Lexington in late August.
Members of the Filson Club will
Traveling with the Donovans
are Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. gather prior to the lecture for
(Continued on Page 4)
Rapier.

despite

advantage,

some wild play on the front nine.

Ermal finished the 35 holes three
over par, not too bad after the
exhausting grind of 36 holes a day
for four days. Lear was six over
par.
The crucial hole probably was
the 31st, a medium -- sized par four.
One down at that point. Lear put
his second shot into the fringe 10
feet from the cup. Allen was in
heavy grass on the side of a
bunker off the tee, out weakly in
two, and in the fringe on three.
Ermal wedged up six inches for a
"gimme" 5 while Marvin could get
down in two for a win to go level.
He pitched four feet long with
a two iron and missed the cup
coming back to halve the hole. He
lost the succeeding hole and that
virtually decided the outcome.

Wildcat backfleld
coach didn't seem to be much of
a match for Lear whose golf game
is more impressive for its consistency and smoothness and he
is an exceptionally fine putter.
Allen's game is powerful but it
got him into all kinds of difficulty
in the hollows that wind through
the front nine.
Ermal made a marvelous come
back on the back nine in the Par
morning. After the first seven Lar
Allin
holes, he played the remaining 28
in exact par figures. And that Par
L.ar
takes intestinal fortitude of a rare Allen
kind. He went to the back nine in
the morning three down and came
out with a one-holead at the
intermission.
AlUn
got even on the first Lear
Marvin
hole of the afternoon swing, but AlU-curly-haire-

le

(In)

(Out

443
343
454

443
544
433

(In)

Donovan Hall at Washington and
Rose Streets, will accommodate
about 100 cars, occording to Dr.
Islie L. Martin, I Van of Men.
This area Is at present Ix'lng used
by residents of Donovan Hall.
Another area, north of Donovan
Hall on Boone Alley, is being put
Into operation.
At present neither of these' areas
will require parking permits.
There will also bo added space
in the Washington and Rose
Streets' orea after the removal of
two houses which occupy that
ground. With the oddition of the
proposed area in the Scott's Street
Barracks area, the parking situation should be eased by the fall
term.
One of the major contributions
to the present tight parking problem is the professional men and
women who are living in the
dorms. They are driving their cars
and, therefore, parking around
these buildings.
The number of cars on campus
in the summer session is almost
the same as the fall and spring
terms though there are only Rome
2,400 students In summer school.
of them are drivAbout
ing. In the regular semesters apof the 6.000
proximately one-thir- d
enrollment operate vehicles.
Many of the students are getting
tagged frequently, according to
the University police. Up to the
present "around 100 tickets are
being given each day," confirmed
Patrolman H. L. Foushee, UK
police.
These tickets must be paid before any grades or degrees can be
received by the offenders. An
automatic fine of three dollars will
be Imposed on any whose cars are
not registered and found on the
campus. The SO A rules empha- cW
that ir which ar nnt reg
istered will be traced. Fines- - shall
be doubled, but not to exceed $4,
if they are not paid within two
ds

tor

Knowles Duo To Sing
In UK Coliseum

543-- 34
444-- 34
543-- 37

544-36-- 70

i

544-30- -73
444-35--

'.

72

y
453
343

543
543

,

543-- 36
643-- 36

553
533

pop-

will be presented Monday, June 27 at 8:15 in the Memorial Coliseum by the Knowles Duo.
No admission will be charged for
this performance.
Paul Knowles, a tenor, Is one of
the rising young singers of the
country. A winner of the 1951
Metropolitan Auditions of the Air
and of a 1951 Fulbright Scholarship, he has sung In thirty six
states and six of the Canadian
comedies

i

)

534
634

,

ular operas, operettas and musical

AFTERNOON

r

police.
One area, located across from

Costume scenes from world

MORNING
( Out )
434
534
435
534
544
544

premium, according to University

two-thir-

Ermal Allen Pulls Upset,
UK as
Ermal Allen,
sistant football coach, won the
Kentucky amateur golf champion
ship last Sunday, defeating Marvin Lear, Lexington, 2 and 1 at
the Paintsville Country Club. This
was the first championship in
which Allen had competed.
The story of his
match against Lear was reported
as follows by Johnny Carrico, former sports editor of The Kernel
and now golf editor for the Louis

Two more parking areas have
made available on the UK
campus, but sixices are still at a
txYti

Library problems held the interest of 53 Kentucky librarians
this week, in a workshop at UK
which brpan la.st wee and will
end July 2.
y
An
visit to the Library
Extension Department at Frankfort and a luncheon meeting at
UK with the Friends of Kentucky
Libraries were the main-evenof
this week's activities.
The remainder of the program
will include lectures, informal discussions and committee sessions.
Of those enrolled, 41 are bookmobile librarians while the 12
others are school librarians.
The UK Department of Library
Science is the sponsor of the conference. Two women, who are interested in library work, have presented scholarships to the affair.
Mrs. Renna B. Martin of Lexington, one of the donors, has provided 30 scholarships in memory of
her husband, the late Rev. Arthur
Martin. These scholarships revalued at $50.
Mrs. Mary B. Gray of Louisville,
through a donation, has made possible 11 other scholarships. Only
librarians who have not had more
than six college hours of formal
instruction may take part, under
the workshop plan.
Leading consultants for the
workshop are Orilla T. Black-shea- r,
director of the Traveling
Library of the Wisconsin Free Library Commission, and Miss Clara
Sue Hefley, supervisor of the Materials Center of Webster Parish
schools, Mlnden, La.
Assisting in the workshop activities are Frances Jane Porter,
director of the Library Extension
Division, Frankfort; Margaret Wil- weeks.
lis,
of the bookmobile
Students that do have permits
Project; Miss Hallie Blackburn, should remember that they are
regional supervisor of the North- - allowed to park only in the area
( Continued on Page 4)
fpeclfled on their permits.
ts

19.

The school which is sponsored
by the Department of ' Research
and Education of Kentucky State
Federation of Labor, a component
of the A.F. of L., conducts classes
on all subjects in connection with
labor.
The representatives are chosen
by the local unions which they
represent and are in the main, officers, business agents, and stewards in these unions.
The foreign representatives, who
are sent by the various agencies
of the U.S. Government, attend
the classes that are held, as do the
other members, to study the aspects of American labor.
tn the past, Germany, Chile,
Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru,
Dominican Republic, Sweden,
Burma, Italy, England, France, and
Cuba have been represented.
The classes that are being
taught by UK professors are: public speaking and parliamentry procedure by Dr. Clifford Blyton, Associate Professor of Speech; .labor
ethics by Robert Cojeen, Associate
Professor of Accounting; and taxation by John Johnson, Research
Associate, Bureau of Business Research.
Other classes .that are being
taught are: labor ethics and labor
history by Margaret Dean, faculty,
Highland Junior High school. University of Louisville, Bellarmine
College; union administration by
Sam Ezelle, Secretary-Treasure- r,
Kentucky State Federation of
Labor; workshop by Howard
Hayne,s, Business Agent, Dairy-worke- rs
No. 783, Louisville; workshop by William Kaufman, Kentucky representative, ILGWU; social and economic problems in the
South by George Mitchell, Director, Southern Regional Council,
Atlanta, Georgia; labor law by
Herbert Segal, Louisville attorney;
collective bargaining by Jack Sessions, Assistant Director, ILGWU
Training Institute, New York and
labor economics by Leo Troy of
the National Bureau of Economic
Research, New York.
The Kentucky Labor School, in
its third year at UK, was born in
1946 on the campus of Eastern

53 Librarians
Seek Answers
In Workshop
all-da-

Ninety

June

Parking Areas

45
53

--

provinces.

Adriana Knowles has appeared

Dr. Boyd Of Princeton
To Give Blazer Lecture

i

Knowles Duo

Summer Calendar
Monday, June

27

Concert:

Knowles Duo, Adriana Knowles,
Mezzo Soprano, and Paul Knowles,
tenor Memorial Col, 8:15 p.m.

Tuesday, June 28 Blazer Lecture: Filson Club: Dr. Julian Boyd,

A&S Student

Leads Talks

in concerts, operas, oratorios and
television. A graduate of the New
England Conservatory of Music,
In Boston, and the Mannes School
of Music, in New York, the mezzo
(Continued on Page 4)

Tour Of Bluerass
FrtM

To Students

A tour, of the Bluegrass Farms
for students, will start from the
Student Union Building on July

Miss Ginger Miller. A&S sen- 8 at 12:45 p.m. (CDT)
ior, will lead a discussion on the
Any students interested must
subject "The Anxiety of Man" at sign for the trip at the informathe Presbyterian Student Center. tion desk in the Student Union
174 East Maxwell Street. WednesBuilding, before noon, on July 7,
day. June 29. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Miss Margaret Bruce Cruise, proY Lounge, SUB. 7 p.m.; Movie:
This discussion, one of a sum- gram director, announced. Bus
"Passion for Life" Amphitheater, mer series sponsored by four cam- transportation without charge will
pus religious groups: the Meth- be furnished, she emphasized.
8:45 p.m.
Wednesday, June 29 Lecture: odist, Disciples. Lutheran, and
Faraway Farm, home of the
"Africa's Heartland." Mr. Weldon Presbyterian student fellowships, famous Man o"War, will be one of
James, Associate Editor, The Courier-Jo- is open to all students.
the highlights of the trip. Other
urnal
Guignol, 7:30 p.m.
"Everyone wants to be happy, farms Included in the tour are:
Thursday, June 30
Outdoor but no one Is," explained Miss Mil- Elmendorf , D 1 x 1 a n a , Castleton,
Folk Dance Women's Gym, 7:30 ler as she commented upon the Walnut Hall, and Walnut Hall
subject for next week's discussion. Stud.
pm.

University
Librarian, Princeton
and Editor of Series of Jeerson
A
Papers Guignol. 8 p. m.;
Forum: "The Faith of a
Catholic." Father Garland O'Neill
YM-YWC-

;

* TUB KENTUCKY KKHNIX. Friday. June 21. 195.r

2

UK Gives Hurler First Rehabilitation

Baseball Scholarship

The miracles of science will
A total of 2,580 students have
never cease. Now you can drop registered for the University sumcigarettes on cotton without burn- mer session, an increase of 235
ing the material.
over that of last summer.

Conference
the Ends Today

Dawson, star hurlcr for in the diamond sport. It marks
Louisville
Manual's state high
school baseball champions, has first time that scholarship aid has
Eighty to one hundred specialbeen named recipient of the first been offered by UK, although
baseball scholarship ever awarded most other SEC schools give some ists from all over the state are
by the University of Kentucky ac- scholarships In baseball, Coach In attendance to a Vocational Re-

Joe

cording to Wildoat Coach Harry
Lancaster.
Often the "doormat" of Southeastern Conference baseball and
victims of a disastrous season this
year when they copped wins only
in their first two starts against
opponents, Kentucky
decided late this spring to begin
awarding two scholarships a year
non-leag-

ue

COOL! AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT!

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THREE FOR THE SHOW

Betty Grable
Color
Marge and Gower Champion
PRINCE VALIANT
Technicolor
Robr. Wagner, Janet Leigh

June

Sun-Mon-Tu- e.,

26-27--

28

HOW TO MARRY A
MILLIONAIRE

Technicolor
Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe
RAGE AT DAWN
Technicolor
Randolph Scott, Mala Powers
Wed.-Thur-

June

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Elroy Hirsch, Barbara Hale
NEW ORLEANS

UNCENSORED

Arthur Franz, Beverly Garland

Lancaster explained.
The grants are limited to either
a pitcher or catcher and must go
to a prospective player not alerady
enrolled In the University.
Lancaster said he was very impressed by Dawson's stellar pitching efforts for Manual this season,

particularly the big righthander e
state championship In the recent
tournament at Louisville. In the
final game, against Ilall Illght,
Dawson allowed only three hits
and struck out 17 batters.
The UK coach said he had not

habilitation Conference which began Tuesday and ends today.
"Integration of Rehabilitative
Services for Physically Handicapped Adults" is the theme of the
event. The conference is being
sponsored by UK with the cooperation of the Kentucky Rehabilitation Center, which is located in Memorial Coliseum.
The Office of Vocational Rehabilitation of the Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare,
Washington D. C, made the conference possible with a grant of

definitely decided on who would
get the second scholarship for next $5,146.
Elvis J. Stahr Jr., University
year,
provst, presided at the opening
session which was held Tuesday
at the Funkhouser Biological SciSUMMER
ences Building.
The Rev. H. Harold Snape,
TUXEDO
David Memorial Goodwill Industries, Washington, D.C., and Willis
RENTAL
C. Corthy, director of the Institute
for the Crippled and Disabled,
SERVICE
New York, were the principle
speakers.
We use "After Six" Formal
Other speakers, in addition to
Wear Exclusively. The Latest
those taking part in the first sessions, follow:
Styles, In The Lightweight
E. J. Taylor, deputy director of
Summer Fabrics.
the Institute of Rehabilitation,
New York University; Dr. Arnold
1
Gesell, Yale University; Dr. Ly
Phone
man V. Ginger, dean of the UK
College of Adult and Extension
Education; L. E. Blud worth, manager of the Huttig Sash and Door
Co., Louisville; Henry Viscardi Jr.,
MEN'S WEAR
president of the Abilities, Inc.,
West Hempstead, Long Island,
120 SO. UPPER
4-65-

ORCHESTRA
FRIDAY NIGHTS

RICHARDSON'S ORCH

Club and Fraternity
Parties Welcomed

NIGHTS
Phone

41

or

2-71-

KENNEDY
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405 S. LIME

130 N. LIMESTONE

KUst door to Chop Suy
PHONE
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ACROSS FROM SUB

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* TIIK KKNTIiCKY KKKNKI.. Friil.iv. June 21.

Marketing
Specialists
Meet Here
Marketing specialists from
states, Canada, Hawaii,
and Puerto Rico have been meeting on the campus during the past
week for conferences and a short
course.
A total of one hundred and
sixty men and women representing state universities and experiment stations, state departments
of marketing and other institutions, the United States Department of Agriculture and agencies
concerned with the marketing of
farm produce registered here Friday, the seventeenth.
The University and other Kentucky institutions sent about forty
delegates to the meeting.
International and national specialists on the marketing problems
spoke to the general assembly In
the mornings, while in the afternoon workshop groups dealing
with particular problems met.
Presiding Friday were Dr. A. J.
Brown, head of the Agricultural

New Office Hours In Effect For Summer
The offices of the University clays during the summer. Satur-wi- ll
close at 4:00 p.m. on week days all offices will close at 12:30.
1

Adl

ONE DAY

thirty-t-

W

:,

3

cm

a
(J

111.-.-

0.- 0dU

Gran

DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF

hree

Department

Economics

at the

University of Kentucky and Wilson M. Routt, assistant state commissioner of agriculture. Speakers
that night were W. C. Crow of the
Department of Agriculture at
Washington and L. L. Bodger of
Michigan State University.
At an opening dinner meeting at
the Student Union, Dean Frank
J. Welch of the College of Agriculture presided and Dr. Leo Cham-berli- n,
acting president of the University welcomed
the visitors.
Frank Frazier, Richmond, Va., delivered the speech of the evening.

SERVICE
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
Hit Piano and His Orchestra

NO ADDED COST

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SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS
Repair service, adding machines, new and used portables, carbons, ribbons, and
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FAYETTE COUNTY
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Dr.
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Dr.
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See that fine fat mountain yonder?
You can iron it out. Hat as a llounder
. . . and easy as whistling!
Just point one of Chevrolet's sjKfial
at it (either the Ki2-h."Turbo-Fir- e
V8" or the 18();h.p. "Sujk-Turbo-Fire"- )
. . . and pull the trigger!
Mister, you
got you a flat mountain!
At least it feels flat. For here are
engines that sing as sweetly as a dynamo
. . . built to pour out a torrent of pure,
e
vibrationless jH)wer.
V8's with
the shortest stroke in the industry.
So most of the time they loaf. Kven at
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purring out a fraction of their strength.
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* r
4--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, June 24, 1955

TIIE

53

Librarians

(Continued from Page 1)
ern Kentucky Project; Roy Mays,
Irene Oullette, state supervisor of
school libraries.
Dr. Edward J. Humeson Jr.,
head of the UK Department of Library Science, Is serving as workshop
and members
of the UK library science faculty
are participating.

Dr. Boyd

Knowlcs Duo
(Continued from Page 1)
soprano went into T.V. with the
"Show of Shows." This coming
reason she will return to that program.
This presentation is sponsored
by the Central Kentucky Concert
and Lecture Series, Inc. This Is a
Joint undertaking of the University of Kentucky, The Lexington
Public Forum and the Central
Kentucky Concert Association.

(Continued from Page

a dinner at UK's Boyd Hall.
As a historian, Dr. Boyd is
known as a distinguished scholar
In the field of 18th century history,
His greatest activity as a librarian
has been as editor of the monu
mental "Papers of Thomas Jeffer
son," a
project which
recognized as one of the largest
undertakings in
the history of the country.

CLEANED

and
PRESSED

60-volu-

book-publishi-

He

NOBODY CAN
LAUNDER
A
SHIRT LIKE

1)

CASH AND CARRY

ng

first Joined

the staff at

Princeton in 1940 as librarian
With various experience as a
teacher, historian, author and 11
brarian, he played a vital role in
the planning of Princeton s Fire
stone Library, one of the world':
unique educational structures and
library in
the "largest open-stac- k
existence."
This library was opened for use
in September of 1948, and was
formally dedicated on April 29
1949 as "the very antithesis of as
sembly-lin- e
education."
Dr. Boyd is a product of the
South. He was born in Converse
S.C., and was educated at Duke
University, receiving his bachelor
of arts degree In 1925. He was a
fellow In political science at Duke
the year following his graduation
and won his master of arts degree
In 1926.

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The Kentucky Kernel
Entered at the Post Office at Lexington
Kentucky, as second class matter under
the Act of March 3, 1879.
Published weekly during school except
holidays and exams.
Dave Allen and Eugene
Marvin
Photographer
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A

Ermal Allen

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0

Championships are fine things to have, and we are all proud
of the championship in golf that has been won by Ermal Allen.
A fine coach, a personable fellow, and a great . football player
when he wore the Wildcat Blue, Coach Allen is a worthy champion.
The Stirrup Cup is proud' to extend an invitation to him to
come in and enjoy any two of our fine meals.

NOW SERVING DAILY
NOON AND EVENING MEALS

11:45 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

STIRRUP CUP
RESTAURANT
AIR CONDITIONED
MAIN ST. AT ASHLAND

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