xt71c53f1d7z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71c53f1d7z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650119  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 19, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 19, 1965 1965 2015 true xt71c53f1d7z section xt71c53f1d7z Ts ustees
By LINDA MILLS
Kernel News Editor
A model of the physical plant for
the "multiversity" envisioned by ac-

"'It will be a city. . . .An urban,
beautiful city," Norbert Gorwic, the
designer, said.
Areas with aesthetic value, including Memorial Hall, the Botan- -

ademic planners was displayed to the
University Board of Trustees Friday
afternoon.

Picture On Page Two

The trustees gave preliminary approval and authorized preparation of
final plans by May or June.
Designed by Crane and Gorwic,
Inc., planning and design consultants of Detroit,' the plan calls for
more construction in the next 15
years than there has been in the
last 100. It is expected to be completed by 1980.
Only a few
buildings
will be preserved in a reorganization
of the campus involving demolition
of 1,038,000 square feet and construction of 2,641,000 square feet of building space.
now-standin-

See Campus Of The Future.

ical Gardens, and the military parade
ground will be retained, improved,
and enlarged.
The new campus will be sandwiched between major thoroughfares,
but no main byways w ill pass through
the academic area. Rose Street will
be closed and replaced by University
Avenue, further to the cast. Other
boundaries will be Limestone Street
on the west, Euclid Avenue on the
north, and the extended Virginia
Avenue on the south.

g

Three-t- o

four-stor- y

classroom-building- s

office buildings will give the campus an urban

and

surface parking facilities will give way to academic buildings and pedestrian squares as four
multi level and one underground parking structure will store cars at the
e
corners of the
academic area.
The capacity of these garages will be
7,000 vehicles.

high-ris- e

skyline.
Center of the proposed campus
would be the Margaret I. King Library, which would border on the
main pedestrian area. A large fine
arts auditorium would also be located in this area.
Classrooms for the new campus
would be multi purpose, serving a
variety of academic departments.

140-acr-

When completed, the new campus
will look somewhat like an ultramodern shopping center with wide
plazas, high-ris- e
buildings, and spraying fountains.

The Administration Building will
be rebuilt. A road bisecting the parade

Trustees Approve
Technical Program
Dr. Cochran Named
University Provost
technical curriculum
was authorized

A two-yeby the
program
University Board of Trustees Friday and Dr. Lewis VV. Cochran,
associate dean of the Graduate School, was named to the position
of University Provost.
The technical program is designed to train semiprofessional
and technical personnel at the
Lexington campus. It will be
similar to technical programs at
the seven community colleges
operated by the University.
Associate degrees will be
awarded by the University at the
r
procompletion of the
gram. A technical institute to be
established within the community-college
system will administer
the program.
University President John VV.
Oswald said courses for the program will be given at night with
the use of classrooms and laboratories already in existence. Dr.
Oswald said most of the faculty
will come from industries and
professions in the Lexington area.
DiC. LOUIS COCI1RAN
Dr. Oswald said engineering
aides, nurses, dental technicians and mining technicians would be
trained by the new program.
Dr. Cochran was appointed provost by the trustees on an acting
basis, beginning March 1. The position on the University campus
has been vacant since July 1962, when Dr. A. D. Albright was
named executive vice president.
President Oswald said Dr. Cochran's "chief responsibility in the
months ahead will be to lead in creating and launching an academic
program upon which the University can move toward success in its
second century."
Dr. Cochran will retain his professorship in the Department of
Physics but will be relieved of his duties as associate dean of the
Graduate School.
A member of the University Faculty Council and one of two
faculty representatives on the Board of Trustees, Dr. Cochran joined
the UK faculty in 1946. He completed his undergraduate studies at
Morehead State College and holds master's and doctoral degrees

grounds and passing under an arcade

in the new Administration Building
would be the main entrance to the

campus. The underground parking
facility will be near this structure.
A major classroom
building to
accommodate all social studies departments will be constructed behind the
Administration Building on the
present site of White Hall and the
Carnegie Library.
Dr. Oswald said after the meeting
that this building would receive first
priority. He said the anticipated completion date was September 1967.
Second priority would go to a Biology building, planned for the southeast area of campus near the Medical
Center. Dr. Oswald said the structure
should be completed by fall of 1968.
Prof. Gorwic said the new campus
would be compact with a maximum of
walking time between
buildings. Parking areas will be located within
walking distance from classroom buildings.
The plan also includes three
complexes located
at strategic points in the campus.

In line with the plan the football
stadium will be moved out of the
central academic area and will be replaced by classroom buildings, including an architecture building and
additional fine arts classroom and
and laboratory space.

The new plan allots 40 acres to
housing which will be located on the
north side of the campus.
The campus is designed toaccom-modat- e
20,000 students and 6,000
faculty members.
Gorwic said the campus was designed to serve the academic goals
outlined in the University's 1964 academic analysis, "Beginning a Second
Century."
model was
The
the second step in a developmental
plan being planned by Crane and
Gorwic. The trustees gave preliminary approval to a general development plan 18 months ago.
Planners will accept suggestions
from faculty and staff members before
submitting the final design in the
spring.
Prof. Gorwic told the group attending the presentation that the upcoming period of grow th for the University was both a challenge and an
opportunity.
"The opportunity is even greater
than the challenge," he said.
Prof. Gorwic, who will be soon a
visiting professor at the University,
said the plan would "create a campus
that will be economically sound, functionally efficient, and emotionally
satisfying."
He also emphasized that the plan
was designed for
growth
as new features of the campus could
be blended smoothly with the old.
al

step-by-st-

T&.D3IK HIE
Vol. LVI, No. 61

University of Kentucky
LEXINGTON,

K.Y.,

TUESDAY, JAN. 19, 1965

Eight Pages

ar

two-yea-

-'

from UK.

The trustees also authorized the establishment of three new
departments in the College of Medicine. The new departments will
be neurology, ophthamology and otolaryngology. They will be set
up "at such time as deemed necessary by the proper administrative
authorities."
Dr. David B. Clark, associate professor of medicine and pediatrics
at John Hopkins University in Baltimore, was named chairman of
the new Department of Neurology. The appointment w ill be effective
June 1.
The board also named Thomas L. Hiley as director of the University's Hopkinsville Community College, which will open in
Feb. 1.
September. Mr. Hiley, 37, will assume the position
Carroll County, Mr. Hiley is now completing work
A native of
Continued On 1'age

7

University Hospital Receives
Complaints OfAdmission Delays
Several Kentucky funeral home directors who
operate ambulance services recently charged the
University Medical Center with inefficiency in admission of patients.
Complainst were voiced by a number of persons
who in transporting patients to the UK Center
from out of town, have been detained for as long
as 12 hours.
According to some ambulance drivers, Medical
Center personnel take too much time to process
patients. In some cases the drivers were detained
for several hours because the hospital staff would
not remove patients from ambulance cots.
A Booneville funeral home director said that one
of his ambulances was "tied up all day" because
Medical Center personnel wouldn't let the driver
remove a patient from the stretcher.
Complaints also were made about the absence
of hospital staff to handle patients once they had
been admitted. Funeral home personnel have been
requested to transport patients within the hospital
from place to place until they were situated in the
correct area.
The funeral home directors emphasized that
their complaints were being made because of
economic reasons. Marice Howard, owner of the
Howard Funeral Home in Crab Orchard, said, "We

realize that these are charity patients, but we have
to transport them for nothing and when our men
and equipment are tied up all day long it gets
expensive.
Hospital Administrator
Wittrup said
that prior to the funeral directors' complaints
which appeared in Saturday's Lexington Herald,
he had received word of only one such delay. He
said that plans are now being made to strengthen
communications between Medical Center personnel
and ambulance drivers regarding procedures.
According to Wittrup, ambulance drivers will
have to plan for longer delays at the Outer when
from other communities
they transport
and when bringingin-patient- s
for w hom no advance
arrangements have been made.
"The drivers will have to realize," the administrator said, "that if arrangements have not been
made in advance for
it will take some
time to find places for them when they arrive." In
the case of
from other towns Wittrup
said that the Medical Center tries to give them as
much attention as possible while they are at the
hospital.
"We can't tell someone who has traveled 150
miles to Lexington to come back next week for an
Hie-har-

ts

ts

."

UK Medical Center Chaplain

Plans 'Internship' Program
By SALLY ATHEAHN

Assistant News Editor
The University Medical Center
e
has recently hired its first
Hev. Halph S. Carpastor,
penter, who assumed duties as
dibector of chaplain services on
Jan. 4.
A Presbyterian, Mr. Carpenter
has served as a hospital chaplain
since 1952.
The function of ministers in
hospitals, according to the chaplain, is based on the idea tha
"Health is not complete unless
full-tim-

there is total life." He views
pastoral woik in the hospital as
the treating of the "whole man."
Mr. Carpenter attributes the
rise in hospital pastorates to the
fact that "Both the church and
medical science have come
the emotional life of man,
and to realize that health is more
than just a physical state, also
including spiritual and emotional
aspects.
"In a way," Mr. Carpenter
pointed out, "you could say that
we are a sort of psychologist."
toap-precia- te

University Hospital will be
the first teaching hospital Mr.
Carpenter has served, and he
commented on looking forward
to its challenges.
He plans todevelop in the near
future a program to train pastors
and theological students in hospital pastoral woik.
" The training program would
begin," Mr. Carpenter said, "as
a group seminar in introductory
clinical pastoral training. The
members of the group would
On 1'ajc 7

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 1965

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Future Campus Will Look Like This
to

the left is Botanical Gardens, which
open space
will be preserved in the reorganization. The building in the left corner will be the new Administraoffice buildtion Building. Behind it is a high-ris- e
ing and a large classroom building, first on the
priority list for new structures.

the model of the future University campus designed by Crane and Gorwic of Detroit in
cooperation with Campus Planner Lawrence Coleman shows the central area and the main pedestrian plaza. The
building bordering on
the mall is the Margaret I. King Library, which
will be the heart of the
academic area. The
A view of

gray-shad-

ed

140-ac-

re

Amidst Green Clouds Of Valor

Kittens Storm Haggin's Walls

By FRANK BROWNING
Kernel Staff Writer
"The rockets red glare
The bombs bursting in air"
Except for the color of the
rockets glare, Keyes might well

have been writing about
Last Stand Sunday
noon in the court yard of
Hall.

Hag-gin- 's

afterHag-gi- n

Laden with stores of icy ammunitions, a hard line front of
mercenaries from Kitten Lodge
stormed the walls of UK's newest dormitory.
Their initial attack began at
approximately 1:15 p.m., and the
barrage continued for about 15
:inutes until the football forces

were forced to retreat for lack of
ammunition.'
A second
onslaught began
shortly afterwards in which a
Haggin student said "The gridiron aggressors, wearing athletic
devices to support their ego, made
a tighter and strategically more

attack."

effective

One freshman student in the
defense lines said, "Their second

attack showed improved tactics.
They used a spearhead front line
with which they could effectively
bombard the dorm stairways
laden with students. Using such
tactics," he said, "they were
able to remain far enough away
from other defensive students

Experimental Films
Group Organized

An organization to bring a series of experimental films to the
University campus has been formed. Dr. Alvin Greenberg, instructor
of English, is the faculty adviser.
Hall from Dr. Greenberg
Six film sessions, which will McVey Ann
or from
Dickinson,
include films by Anger, Brakhage,
Vanderbeek, the Mekas brothers,
Warhol, and Jack Smith, are planned. The sessions will be held
Monday nights, Jan. 25, Feb. 15,
March 1, March 22, April 5, April
18 at 7:30 o'clock in the Student

Center Theatre.
Membership cards at $5 for the
season and additional informal
tion may be obtained in Room 9,

INC.

Phone
575

E.

254-041-

Third St. at Nelson

222 South Limestone

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Cadet in 1894, became
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continuously
Kernel since 1915.
Published at the IJnl
tuiky'i Lexington campus four times each
week during the school year except during holiday and exam periods. Published
weekly durinif the iiinmiHr trm
The Kernel is governed bv a Student
Publications
Board, Prof. Paul Oberst,
College of Law, chairman; and Stephen
Palmer, senior law student, secretary.
Entered at the post office at Lexington. Kentucky as second clss matter
under the act of March 3. 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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KERNEL TELEPHONES
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KING ATTACKED IN ALABAMA
SELMA, Ala. A white segregationist attacked Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., . in a hotel lobby yesterday, punching and kicking the
Nobel Peace Prize winner after King's voter registration campaign
here met little resistance.
Dr. King, leading his first integration drive since he won the
Nobel Prize, was not seriously hurt by the two punches and two
kicks that landed.
Dr. King's attacker was identified as Jimmy George Robinson, 26, of Birmington, a member of the National States Rights
Party. Dr. King later said he was a symbol to the "sickness in
'
.in our society."

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WASHINGTON Congress has given President Johnson's $49
billion defense program, which is 2.3 billion less than last year,
'
'
a generally warm reception..
to completion of many
The President attributed this
needed changes and increases in the military force structure, and
cost reduction programs which are starting to bear fruit;
President Johnson outlined three new weapons systems designed to beef up this defense might The Poseidon, a larger yield
producing Polaris missile, a new payload for strategic missiles,
e
attack missile SRAM which could be fired from
and a
B52s or other bombers.

while prolonging an effective offense."
"The beauty of the freshman
valor, untrained and without supplies, withstanding the tightly
The English technique of
disciplined Kittens" was another change ringing, in which bells
description of the afternoon.
are pulled by hand rope, is almost unknown in the United
After poincing on the dormitory twice more, the Kitten?? were States.
driven from the grounds by
"heavy mortar snowballs" and
"bags of water thrown on the
invaders from the upper legions."
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252-355- 7.

Lexington
Motors

Churchill Fading
But Still Holds On

The Associated Press
LONDON Sir Winston Churchill spent a very restless night
and his condition deteriotrated further, a medical bulletin announced this morning.
A spokesman for the British Medical Association, after hearing
the announcement, said he thought that "for the next two days
things would deteriorate rapidly."
physician, was called to
Lord Moran, Churchill's
at 2:10 a.m. and spent five hours there.
Sir Winston's bedside
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Jan.

Around The Campus
Pin-Mal-

Elections

es

Lois Jean Hays, sophomore
education major from Paintsville,
to John Roberts, junior mechanical engineering major from Paintsville and a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.

Clare Jaquith, junior education major from Paducah, to Bob
Kunklc, junior education major
from Lexington and a member of
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.

Engagements
Donna Dowards, sophomore
secondary education major from
Henderson to Gary O'Nan, a senior civil engineering major from
Henderson.
Judy Grisham, sophomore journalism major from Henderson
and a member of Alpha Xi Delta
sorority, to Gene Clabcs, sophomore journalism student at the
University's Northwest Center
from Henderson.
Mary Beth Fraley, freshman
Home Economics major from
VVaylandto Clay Stephens, a junior majoring in Personnel Management from Prestonsburganda
member of Lambda Chi Alpha
fraternity.
Carol Lee Plciss, sophomore
secondary education major from
Louisville and a. member of Chi
Omega ;sorority to Lee Clare,
senior business major at Georgetown College from Crest wood.
jane Elizabeth Trammell,
sophomore math major from Lexington to Donal Gene Allie, senior
chemistry major from Ashland
and a member of Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity.
Margaret Ann Perkins, University graduate, to Robert
Hughes, a junior in pharmacy
from Lexington and a member of
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.

Society Tips

.by the way. If your organization has found its name
missing from the social column
recently, perhaps you should
check Kernel deadlines.
In order to facilitate the social
column for Thursday's paper, announcements of social functions
must be on the women's desk by
noon on Wednesday.
And organizations know better than the society editor the
"specific" of social events. . .
.

.

Organizational

The meeting and pledging ceremonies of Alpha Lambda Delta,
freshman women's honorary,
scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 19,
has been rescheduled for Tuesday,
Jan. 26 at 6:30 p.m. in the Student Center. All members are required to attend.
Tau Sigma, dance honorary,
will hold tryouts on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday of
Practice sessions will begin
at 5:30 p.m. in the Euclid Ave.
Classroom Building.

Commander, Gary Cranor, senior
English major from Owensboro;
Lt. Commander, Bob Dawson,
senior commerce major from
Bloomfield;
Secretary, Rufus
Lisle, senior agriculture major
from Lexington; Treasurer, Roy
Lang, Arts and Sciences sophomore from Stoughton, Mass.

this-week-

Rush Chairman, Danny Key,
and Sciences junior from
Paducah; Pledge Marshall, Dave
Kane, junior English major from
Jeffersonton; Intramurals Chairman, Elvis Humble, senior education major from Campbellsville;
Social Chairman, Steve Scott,
senior commerce major from
and Scholarship Chairman, Walt Conway, junior commerce major from Frankfort.
On Tuesday, January 19, at
6:30 p.m., the Baptist Student
Union Executive Council will be
installed. Leading the service will
be Jim Hardin, retiring president.
Incoming president is Dennis
Weaver, a junior in engineering
from Louisville. Weaver is currently a member of the Patterson Literary Society, Pi TauSig-- .
ma Mechanical Engineering
Honorary, the Honors Program,
and the Arnold Air Society.
Arts

Stars In The Night
Organizations wishing to present an award at the AWS "Stars
in the Night" program, March
10, arc to contact Martha Eadcs,
telephone

Mun-fordsvill- e;

Other members of the Council include Marian Spencer, Promotions chairman; Ann P'Pool,
vespers chairman; John Bennett,
summer missions chairman; Charo-lettMcDonald, secretary; Judy
Warren, treasurer; Ken Hines, intramural chairman; Ellis Bullock,
editor; Sondra Fletcher,
Azuqur editor; Karen Smith,
social chairman; Johnnie Cross,
party chairman; Bea Talley, all
church fellowship chairman;' Pat
women's enlistment chairman;
Gary Jewell, men's enlistment
chairman; Janice Ashley, publicity chairman; Archie Allison,
Interfaith Council representative;
Jim Bennett, Student Center
chairman; Glinda Talley, personnel chairman; and Linda Coulter, choir representative.

266-798- 7.

None Apply Yet

For

SC Post

Steve Beshear, Student Congress president, said today that no
applications have been received
for the post vacated by Representative Heidi Hanger.
Applications will be accepted
for the position until 5 p.m. Friday in the Student Congress office. The election will be the
following Friday by secret ballot
of the Congress.
Miss Hanger announced her
resignation last Tuesday night,
explaining that academic and
other activities made it impossible to continue as an active
member of Congress.

e

Experimental Films
Membership is still open to
those interested in joining the
newly formed experimental film
society.
Films by experimentalists
Stan Brakhagc, Kenneth Anger,
Jack Smith, to name a few, will
be shown during six sessions
scheduled for this semester at
the Student Center Theater.
Membership and season ticket
costs $5. Tickets must be obtained before the first showing
7:30 p.m., Monday, Jan. 25. Those
interested contact Dr. Alvin
Greenberg, extension 2686.

large New York newspaper
the equivalent of the net
annual growth from 6,000 acres
of commercial forest land for a
Sunday edition.
A

uses

...

OF

THINK OF

for

today

is

.

The Miss Lexington Pageant,
the annual beauty contest to
select this city's entrant for the
Miss Kentucky Pageant, will be
held March 23, and applications
for entry to the pageant are now
being accepted.
The Metropolitan Women's
Club is again sponsoring this
scholarship pageant which is the
first step toward the Miss America Pageant in September.
Last year's winner, and the
reigning Miss Lexington, is Joyce
Sharp, a University sophomore.
Paula Choat, a UK junior, was
Miss Lexington in 1963.
The tryouts are being held on
Jan. 30, at 1 p.m. in the Kentucky Utilities Auditorium. The
pageant in March will be held
at Henry Clay High School.
Donna Axum, Miss America
of 1964, will be the Mistress of
Ceremonies.
To be eligible for competition,
a woman must meet the following
requirements:
Entrants must be single and
never have been married, divorced, or had a marriage annulled.
An entrant's age on Labor
Day of this year shall not be
less than 18 or more than 28
years.

Entrants must possess and
display talent in a routine not

to exceed three minutes. Talent
maybe singing, dancing, instru-- .
mental, dramatic, art display,
dress designing, creative poetry,
etc. or she may give a three
minute talk on the profession
she wishes to pursue.

Each entrant must be a resident of Lexington or Fayette
County, or a college or university student.
Entrants may be either professional or amateur.
The first, second, and third
place winners will receive scholarships of $300, $150, and $100 respectively. Miss Lexington will
be eligible to enter the Miss
Kentucky Pageant, and the winner of that contest will represent Kentucky in the Miss America Pageant.
Part of the proceeds from the
Miss Lexington Pageant are used
for a $1,000 scholarship, given by
the Woman's Club each year to
a junior or senior at UK. Additional money is given to local
agencies whose work benefits our
community.
Talent and charm advisers
are available to all girls wishing to enter the competition.
Transportation, furnished by club
members, is also available.
Anyone desiring application
blanks or further information
should contact Mrs. Lowell E.
or Mrs. LuLawrence,
ther Hundley,
277-620- 6,

277-729- 7.

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19, 1965

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housing eligibility University programs have always
policy approved by the Board of been designed to accommodate the
Trustees at their December meet- needs of
Kentucky.
ing offers an equitable solution to
Though nonresident students
a ticklish problem.
pay a higher fee, even with the new
the policy gives first increase the extra amount paid in
Basically,
priority for undergraduate housing four years would not equal the tax
to Kentucky residents and first money the average Kentucky resipriority for married students' hous- dent sending a student to the Uniing to graduate students. Both are versity would pay.
in line with the aims of the UniThe policy may discourage nonversity.
resident students temporarily, an
The decision to give preference admitted
handicap to the solution,
to Kentucky students applying for but the construction of the new
undergraduate housing was compli- dormitory complexes should greatly
cated by the fact that there has relieve the
housing shortage and
been a recent disproportinate rise allow for a
large number of nonin nonresident fees as compared to residents to be housed in Univerincreased costs for residents. It was
sity owned facilities.
also noted that the policy might
The policy adopted for married
discourage applications from out
of state students, a necessary students' housing is in line with the
stuUniversity's aim of putting greater
ingredient in any
dent body.
emphasis on advanced and gradwell-round-

ed

The first responsibility of the
University, however, is to the resident student, the son or daughter
of a Kentucky taxpayer. The foremost aim of the University has
always been to serve this state
first by providing the best possible
education to any Kentucky student
seeking it. Students from other regions have been welcomed, but

uate study. It is essential that the
University provide such living facilities if it hopes to attract topflight graduate students.
Perhaps the high marriage rate
among undergraduate students,
often leading to dropouts, would
Univerbe discouraged if low-cosity owned housing were not available so readily to these students.
st

Letters To The Editor

The Untold Tale Of The Saga Of Rene Wrinklerump
To the Editor of the Kernel:
I didn't mind so much your
deleting my name from my letter
in the Jan. 13 Kernel after all,
"Anonymous" has been responsible
for a lot of great literature but
the fact that you deleted over half
the letter along with the name was
somewhat more difficult to accept.
I think that every Kernel reader
has a right to know the story of
Rene Wrinklerump, as much of his
story, at least, as modern scholar-

ship has been able to produce. In
the interest of intellectual honesty,
academic freedom, etc., may I request that you print the entire
letter.
Thank you.
We apologize for the technical
slipup that omitted the writer's
name and the last half of his
letter. We have reprinted the letter,
anil the author's signature, below.
THE EDITOR
The front-pag- e
story in the Dec.
11 Kernel "UK Frosh Sets 'Shower' Record" will be the cause of
much agitation throughout the academic world. I, for one, am alarmed.
It depresses me that I must be the
one to assume this responsibility,
but my unmitigated dedication to
ablutionary history constrains me to
inform you that Bob Pemberton
does not hold the world's shower
record. This honor belongs to one
Rene Wrinklerump, who spent no
less than 6 years, 295 days, 4 hours
and 23 minutes in the shower.
Who, you might ask, was Rene
Wrinklerump, and what were the
circumstances of his spending such
an ungodly length of time in the
shower? Good questions both. Actually, our knowledge of this man
is scant, but from the scattered
references to him in the Kentish

Kronicle

(begun by King Kent,
brother to King Kong) we
younger
are able to piece together a reasonably coherent picture of his career.
I p