xt75qf8jf70g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75qf8jf70g/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19500630 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 30, 1950 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 30, 1950 1950 2013 true xt75qf8jf70g section xt75qf8jf70g University of HIE JiUiNTUOLY JSJSKNfcJL 11 Kentucky KENTUCKY'S LARGEST WEEKLY LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1930 VOLUME XL NUMBER 31 Educator Optimistic Seniors Must File For Graduation All seniors who expect to complete their requirements for graduation at the close of the summer term and who have not at a previous time made application for degrees, are requested to do so today or tomor- row, according to Lee Sprowles, reg- istrar. This applies also to graduate students who expect to complete their requirements for graduate de- grees. All apacations should be filed in Room 16 of the Administration Building. As the commencement lists are made from these cards, it is very im- - portant to file an application at this time, he said, Candidates for the bachelor's de- grce will be charged a graduation fee of $3. This will cover the rental of cap and gown, diploma fee. The Kentuckian, and other expenses, Candidates for advanced degrees, other than the doctorate, will be By J. T. Vaughn If South Korea falls to the invading North Korean Communist forces it will not be due to a lack of on the part of the Southerners, Paul Chung. Korean student Jn the College of Engineering, said in an interview this week. With the aid of military supplies now being rushed In by the United States, the army of South Korea should be able to repel the Invasion, he believes. engineering THE student described the terrain of the Western Korea peninsula, where the brunt of the attack is centered, as relatively flat. It would, he said, be difficult to defend against an attacking armored force. The eastern side of the peninsula is hilly and would be easier to defend, he added. The rainy season, while not always aevere, is due in July and August and may be an important factor working against the heavier armored Communist forces if the South Koreans can hold out that long, he believes. The South Korean ground forces and equipped, but are there is no air force of any size, Chung said. The only improved highways in the country are those connecting the major cities, of which Seoul, with a population of about a million, is the largest, he added. South Korea, Chung continued, is primarily an agricultural region, with most of the country's industry, minerals, and sources of electrical power in the North. Chung doesn't believe there are enough Communists in the South to cause serious trouble as There was some Red agitation prior to I'.S. withdrawal in 1918, he said, particularly ht well-train- ed charged a fee of $20 which will cover the above with the exception of The Kentuckian and in addition the cost of the hood to be presented to the candidate. The fee for candidates for the doctorate is $25. Graduation fees are payable not later than the fourth day preceding the commencement which will be August 7. I d An additional list of appointments, resignations, and other staff changes was approved by the Board of Trustees at its last meeting. Major changes are: College of Arts and Sciences Appointments: James W. Hughes, instructor in sociology; Joseph N. Whitten, instructor in library science; Anne English, instructor in voice. Department of Music, for the to serve in first semester 1950-5the place of Aimo Kiviniemi during his leave of absence; Joyce Prebix. instructor in physical education; Robert M. Coffin, visiting instructor in art for the summer term; B. B. Mclnteer, associate professor of botany, made acting head of the Department of Botany during the summer term in the absence of Prof. 1. ifSKrV'' v,iFtlL' m ill 1 - ' : If 'W( f ' government and resent Russian influence over it, according to information reaching Chung. Many Northern farmers and business men have fled south since the end of World War II, Chung said. Since the tightening up the border two years ago, however, the migration has slowed to a trickle, he added. AS DO ALL young Koreans, Chung has had four years of high school military training. Similar to the R.O.T.C. programs of U.S. high schools, his training was under the supervision of Japanese army officers. r: ' . ' ' ' ' Paul Chung . if German Lan?ua&:e Exams Are Scheduled For July 14 Graduate reading examinations in German for the Masters and Ph.D. Degrees will be given at 2 p.m. Friday, July 14. in Room 302 of Miller Hall, according to Dr. A. E. Bigges. head of the De partment of German Language and Literature. All students ho wish to take the exam should have their books approved by JUNE WEATIIFR'S FAIR AND COOLER for these members of the advanced swimming and diving class who officially opened the new Coliseum pool Monday. The Kernel photographer arrived ust in time to catch Zcll Sharff (abovel demonstrating a front dive off the low board. The thirty men and women enrolled in the course swim daily from 12:00 till 2:00 and start off the period by swimming seven lengths of the 75 foot pool to warm up. The modern pool has complete diving facilities and is marked into six racing lanes for future swimming meets. Ther is equipment to heat the water to any temperature, and the room is Classes in swimming are being taught by Miss Nancy Foe and Alfred Reece, members of the Physical Education Department stall. Dr. Clark Returns First SUB Dance Tonisht By Gene Sears ' ' ' "H Dr. Thomas D. Clark, head of the Department of History, has returned '3 ; from the University of Vienna, Austria, where he taught American his' 'tory since February as a staff member of the Department of the Army. Before the arrival of Dr. Clark at the University of Vienna, American history had never been taught in that university. Dr. Clark organized the first general American history class and held the first seminar concerning the American frontier. At the University of Vienna, Dr. Clark said, the faculty is a law unto itself. Individual professors have much more freedom of decision than do professors in the United States. However, there are fewer persons of professorial standing in Vienna. Young men are not entering the teaching profession because of extremely low salaries. A top professor will receive only about $120 per month. Dr. Clark back from Vienna EACH FACULTY ELECTS its own every year, and rarely does a room after the others have been dean oean serve two consecutive years, seated, he must bow to the professor The faculty also elects the rector as he enters. whose position of honor and reVacation tfme, for a Vienna prospect is equal to that o fan Amerifessor, Dr. Clark said, is whenever can university president. he wishes. All that is necessary Dr. Clark continued that Vienna for him to do is hang a sign on his professors posses a great amount of door before leaving. The professor dignity. It seemed difficult for stumay return from the vacation at dents to approach their professors, his own discretion. As for reand most of them scarcely dare ligious holidays. Dr. Clark the speak to their instructors. When believes their frequency is said he a great the professor enters, the students handicap in the organization of stand until they are told to be class lectures. seated. If a student enters a class- University of Vienna students are i Korean student by Dr. Shelby T. McCloy. This is the second of a series of talks to be given in the Browsing Room this summer. Economics Appointments: Thomas C. Morrison Jr.. assistant in agri- cultural marketing: Walter E. Thomas, assistant professor of animal husbandry and assistant in animal husbandry. Experiment Station; Lib. To Close For Holiday Patch G. Woolfolk, assistant proThe library will close at 6 p.m. fessor of animal husbandry and asJuly 3 and at 8 a.m. sistant in animal husbandry, ExperiJuly 5. ment Station; Glenn E. Thompson, (Continued to Page 4) ART HEAD TO LECTURE AT UNIV. OF MICHIGAN H. P. Riley; Lovaine Lewis, instructor in physical education for the summer term; Beatrice Smith, visiting instructor in library science for the summer term; teonara noDens. Prof Edward w Rannells, head of part-tim- e instructor in English; tne Depart,ment of Art. has Bjork, William Lowden, an invitation to appear as guest ana waiter w. wnanon. pan-uiu- c contem- lecturer for a three-wee- k instructors in chemistry; John F. porary arts and society course to be Foley, instructor in geography; offered at the University of Michiinstruc- gan beginning July 3. Henderson, part-tim- e Max- tor in radio arts; Robert S. In addition to Prof. Rannells. well, part-tim- e instructor in history chief participants in the' course will summer term; Algie Reece be John Ciardi, Harvard professor for the instructor in swimming. Department and poet; Ross Lee Finney, resident of Physical Education, for the sum- composer at the Michigan School of mer term. Music, and Charles Stevenson, proLeaves of absence: J. Reid Ster-ret- t, fessor of philosophy at the Univerassociate professor of English, sity of Michigan. granted leave for July and August. Purpose of the course, which will A. B. Guthrie, Jr., visiting lecbe open to the general public as English, granted leave for well as to students, is to provide an turer in in order understanding and interpretation of first semester 1950-5- 1 that he may complete his book on music, the visual arts, and literature. Platte River; Gordon R. Leader, The program calls for one lecture assistant professor of chemistry, a week by each of the participating granted leave from July 1 to Separtists and a panel discussion once a tember 1 to do research work at week by the entire group. Prof. y1 Rannells has selected as topics for the Oak Ridge National nfiliiiiii i i..i his three tenures the form, function. College of Agriculture and Homcand value ol visual arts. I'rof. Kannolis . . .accepts invitation accept-Kenne- th : Ca-mil- le i t .is f . 1 j Registration Is At 3408 Five-Da- y Course TWO CLINICS PLANNED FOR BAND, ORCHESTRA Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Fortune, a secretary in the same office, said that many students came to her that were confused with the number of hours they can take in summer school. She added that not realizing that proficiency rams haw to lie taken and passed one semester before graduation, put ASSISTING Miss Greene in the string clinic will be Dr. Kenneth Wright and Profs. Marvin J. Rabin, Gordon Kinney and Frank Prindl, all of the Music Department. Fitzgerald will be assisted In the band clinic by four members of the music staff. Dr. Stein, Prof. Prindl. Prof. William WorreL and Warren 24-2- Lutz. Dr. Stein said the clinics will provide five days' intensive instruction and rehearsal for student partici-nan- ts and a full schedule of monstrAtioa and discussion periods for teachers and band directors. HIGHLIGHTING the sessions will be a public concert by high school musicians on the closing day of each clinic. The clinics are presented by the Department of Music as part of the program of University's year-rouhigh school activities, Big AL Is Back IN School Speech Clinic Is Inaugurated ALEX CKOZA. one time I K basketball great now turned pro, is back in school this summer. He is up against a different sort of competition in his PE 60, Physical Education in Elementary School, class. Shown with A I. left to risrht, are three of his classmates. Helen Batte, Anna Lee Myers, and Doris Napier. i 11.-0- ' j t it off too long and then cannot graduate at the proper time. ANOTHER COMMON PROBLEM, she continued, is that students put off required subjects until the sen- ior year and then conflicts arise. As a result they must stay longer to finish their Also, students have to turn in plan sheets, which have to be checked before graduation. Played To Martin Sneaks! Records Arts Building In Fine OnjXewTrends He 1 governmental Many units. Prof. Graduate reading exams in Martin said, have established sep- French and Spanish will be given arate finance departments charged July 10 and August 1 in Room with the responsibility of handling 301 of Miller Hall, according to all the various phases of general financial administration. Under such Dr. Hobart Ryland, head of the an arrangement the department per- Lan-- I forms all fiscal activities except that Department of Romance guages. The examinations will of consist of rendine one-ha- lf a book, selected by the candidate and approved by the department, sight reading. fCa !ri" According to Miss Turner, th3re Prof. James W. Martin, director are not as many students dropping of the UK Bureau of Business Re- classes this summer as in proportion search, spoke beiore a meeting of to the number in a regular semester. life insurance officers at Boloit. Wis. this week and told the audience of current trends in financial ad- ministration of city and state gov- Keuding Exam Date Set ernments. For French and Spanish LLstenin? programs of recorded music will be presented in the Music Lounge of the Fine Arts Building every afternoon Monday through Friday from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m., and on Thursday evenings from 7 to 9. according to Mrs. Lewis H. Mills, librarian of recorded music. Listeners may request what they want to hear and may come or leave when they like. A special clinic, to aid children in correcting speech dillicuities. was inaugurated here this week bv the Psychology Department. Dr. Char-- ; les F. DiehL visiting professor psy- -' chology, is in charge of the project, Twenty children are expected to participate in the program which will last until the end of the sum-- I mer session. The group will attend half-da- y sessions five times a week. Dr. Diehl is teaching two special courses. Individual attention will also be given to the children by students of the Psychology Depart-- ; ment and Kentucky teachers en- -i rolled as special students for ttke summer session. The teachers participating in the clinic are training for similar work in their own communities, Group activities will be a high light of the program. The children will participate in games designed to enable them to use difficult words. These activities stimulate the necessary corrections. Special phonetic exercises will per-- 1 mit the children to practice certain sounds. Therapy will also be used in special cases. Ag Students Return From Tour In East Twenty-thre- e students returned to Lexington last week after completing a 2248 mile tour of various dairy centers and farms in the East. They by Dr. D. M. were accompanied Seath of the Department of Dairy Husbandry. course, survey of the The dairy industry, is designed to acquaint students with research prob- lems and methods at other institutions and with commercial dairy operations in other sections of the country. The group first visited the Dairy Department at the University of West Virginia, then traveled on to Washington. D. and to Belts-vill- e. Maryland, where they inspected the I. S. Bureau of Dairy 15-d- tion. changing of tax administration, the accounting of expenditures when the debt is incurred rather than when it is paid, and the fixing of Industry. for control of reor it divides bud-- : responsibility of The students attended a meeting get lng from the other functions ami ceipts and expenditures. of the American Dairy Science AssoAs a final trend in current govallows that to be handled through ernment financial administration, ciation June 2 at Cornell Unithe office of the chief executive. prof. Maitm pointed to general versity. Paper were presented by Other trends listed bv Prof. Mar-nn- d of the need for cmpl.yln!', four UK professors. Dr. D. M. Seath. tin in,.ImIt.tl ,lf ,veocniiii of Hie Mxvially skilled persons for hand- Dr. Henry Morrison. Dr. Durwartt importance of budget adniinistia- - ling city debt problems. Olds, and Dr. Ralph Elliott. C g, ' of government demic freedom. Destroying academic freedom would do more damage to the country than a few communists ui the teaching profession, Ward ner said. m their form than the teachers. He continued there was nothing bad about loyalty oaths, but they are an indication on the part of the community to interfere with aca- - all-sta- te Same Old Problems Face Dean ?s Staff at Registration "Seniors failing to make out plan sheets, the putting off of proficiency exams, and veterans failing to apply for military credit points were the most frequently occuring problems during registration," said Miss Idie Lee Turner, secretary to Dr. M. M. White, dean of the College of Aits and Sciences. "Besides this, we were faced with the same old familiar problems," she added. "Students fail to look at 1 their requirement cards that are handed out with the schedule cards. If they would study them they could see for themselves what they are lacking and what courses they have completed. "Then too, some students still do not know how to make out their schedule cards and turn them in to us in such a shape that it would take a handwriting expert to drciper them. As a result, mistakes are inadvertently made." democratic the department. The Other Side By Eleanor Mclnturff Rannells Invited eager to learn about America, he added, and most of them are of good quality. Few of the students have outside interests other than in the activities of their political parties. Vienna students are totally unlike I K students in most ways, he said, but they are alike in being dissatisfied with most of their professors. Vienna students have a method of informing their professor as to their approval of his lectures. If the students agree with their professor, they rap noisily upon the desks with knuckles, and if they disagree, they scratch their fingernails across the desks. Some of Dr. Clark's Vienna students had been prisoners of war. One or two had been in prisoner of war camps in America. The doctor of philosophy degree is given the students upon their completion of the prescribed courses, said Dr. Clark. The degree is about equal to an A.B. here, and at the most is no better than our M.A., he continued. LIVING IS VERY CHEAP about $160 will pay for room, board, and tuition for a year. Tuition alone is The University of Vienna has its own library, as does the Seminar. Dr. Clark said he was told that students were enrolled, but that he saw little evidence to support the high enrollment figure. In expressing his opinion. Dr. Clark said he believes the Vienna educational system and equipment is far behind that of the United States. all over the country to obtain the minimum starting yearly salary of $2400 established by the N.E.A.," Wardner said. The educator, who is on a year's leave of absence from teaching duties at Garden City High School of N Y has visitprf 3fl statps tn r.nn sult with teacriers from every state in the nation. Commenting on the Blue Grass area, he said. "I have seen some of the farms and envy the horses their habitations." Wardner said that Kentucky was n;a in scenic beauty, but it was unfortunate that the state ranks so low from the salary standpoint. He expects the situation to improve rapidly in the future. Wardner said the organized teaching profession at various levels has and ill continue to improve their welfare and standards. Questioned concerning the threat of Communists infiltrating the teaching profession. Wardner stated that there is no single professional body more loyal to the First dance of the summer session will be held from 9 to 12 tonight on the terrace of the SUB. music clinics, both Two five-da- y The dance, for which there is no charge, is open to a!l students. free to Kentucky high school muteachers, will be Tinker Baggarly's band will play. sicians and their at the University. held this summer Dr. Edwin E. Stein, head of the De- partment of Music, has announced. A string orchestra and ensemble clinic will be held, he said, from July 8 under the direction of ( Elizabeth Greene of the University "t TLTinKicraw pnnrlntr ef th tirh- Registration figures for the sum- - igan high school orchestra mer session now stand at 3,408. ac- - ' since 1943. cording to an announcement from SCHEDULED the following week. the registrar's office. Last summer s July 31 to Aug. 4. is the University's comparable total was 3793. annual summer band clinic for high The present figure will be increased school bandsmen and their directors. by several hundred. Dr. Lee Sprow- Directing the clinic for the second les, registrar, said, with the addition consecutive year will be Bernard of students execled to enroll in sev- - Fitzgerald of the University of courses scheduled to Texas. eral short-terbegin later in the summer. There will be no charge for either The Graduate School office re- - cijnic. Dr. Stein said, and the Uni- ported a total of 1.460 students, versity will provide dormitory rooms slightly more than 43 percent of the ree Ior au student enrollees. total student body. History Dept. Head Tells Of College Life In Vienna "73 iH ' "The future for teachers is brighter now than ever before." So spoke Phillip Wardner, president of the Classroom Teachers Department of the National Education Association. in an interview during the teachers' work shop held at UK the last two weeks. Professor Wardner. here as speaker and consultant for the work ;rxp. stated that young people entering the teaching profession today have a wonderful opportunity. He said that teaching is offering mor pro- -; fessional security and protection by "THE OPPORTUNITIES are much than they have been from a salary standpoint. The move is on ' TV By Wynn Moseley fcpfter present McCloy To Speak In Library try. The majority of the common On Church In Roman World people of the North dislike their "The Church in the Roman World" will be the topic of a talk to be given Monday at 4 p.m. in the Browsing Room of the library Staff Changes Are Released ' Dr. H. L. Donovan, president of the University, will participate in a round table discussion over station WHAS at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Topic for the discussion will be "What Can Be Done To Improve Education In America?" Others who will take part are: Dr. J. A. Williams, College of Education; Dr. N. C. Turpin. superintendent of Fayette County Schools, and Miss Martha V. Shippman, critique teacher at the University Training School. Q. J. Wilson, research assistant of the Bureau of School Service at the University, will act as moderator for the discussion. & university students. While he has been away from home for almost three years, Chung has been kept abreast of the political situation there through letters from his parents, the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Chung, two brothers, and a sister who still make their home in the South Korean capital Seoul. CHUNG'S FATHER, a graduate of Asbury College, Wilmore, in 1925, and a Church of the Nazerine minister, has spent many years in the U.S. For this reason Chung fears for the safety of his family if the Communists take over the coun- -- HOPES RISE IN TEACHING law. ts. Communist-pamphlete- Avrii7 v Koreans Pres. Donovan Will Fight In Radio Talk among Read Letters To The Editor 20-2- * I The Kentucky Kernel articles end cclumnt are to be MEMBER cf the irrilfrt Kentucky IntercolleRiate Pr Association veian7 rellast Lexington Board of Commerce puivn el The Kernel. Kentucky Press Association National Editorial Association I WEFKLY DURING THE MMMHTIB POM NATIONAL ADVSKTIStNO HOLIDAYS S'!Ml. VFAR EXCEPTPEHIODS .).'( EXAMINATION Natwnai Advertising SenrkejK. at the Post Office at Lexington. ii'u.vy, as second t iriss matter under tliC Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION K tN I UC r rinny, June :';0 KbKNtL K. Y Outstanding Writers The Kentucky Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa has announced that it will publish each year an outstanding piece of prose or poetry in any field submitted by an undergraduate in the University. Imaginative and expository or research writing will be equally acceptable. The purpose of the program is to encourage undergraduate scholarship and writing of publishable quality, the announcement said. The University Library will distribute the publication to all the major libraries of the world through its exchange system. Manuscripts should not exceed pages. 50 double-space- d The Chapter reserves the right to postpone publication until suitable material is submitted. Students should submit their entries directly to any member of the following committee at any time: Dr. C. Arnold Anderson, Department of Sociology: Dr. Herman E. Spivey, Department of English; and Lawrence S. Thompson, University Library. The advice of special judges representing individual fields will be solicited if required by the nature of the papers. The Chapter requests that the members of all faculties call to the committee's attention any outstanding piece of writing submitted for class work, although writing is also acceptable. 'Editor, The Kernel: Last year was the students' first year in the new remodeled lootball stadium. Seating capacity was increased to 35.000 and I assumed that at last' I would get to see a University athletic team paricipate from a good. seat. Like many others NcwVoaicN. V. 410 MaowoN Ave rssacuca Catena mm las aesi'is RATES $1.00 per semestet . Advertising Manager ..Editor Wilfred Lett type-writt- end-zon- e. i en(i-Zon- e. So Early The Hour Another Asset For UK I, years of grinding through Spanish had not been in vain. Should you p'.an to drive to Mexico City in the near future, don't bother about checking anything on your car except your horn. Yep, the horn's the thing. You see, the city has a shortage of stop lights and stop signs. In order to gain the right of way at an intersection, the for missing even one day. car with the loudest horn that is of many of the blown the longest time before reachFrom the reaction students, it is clear that several I ing the intersection has a clear will mention no names of the stu- road, unless the car coming the oth-- i dent body would probably take er way decides he needs to cross great Joy in sleeping, going to the first. Sounds confusing? It is! beach, and going to taverns. Mexico City is foreign. It's diffi- What is this younger generation coming to? There must be a way cult to realize that it is only 796 to save them before it is too late. miles from Laredo, Texas, and about Have they no sense of shame? The 2200 miles from UK's campus. In American educational system was fact all of the country after leaving not founded on such things as the Laredo takes on an appearance students indulge in today, and it quite different from our lands of tne u n 1 e a states, one rides cannot grow or even survive. through miles and miles of waste Ima G. Init (The University calendar lists lands, covered with cactus, infested with rattlesnakes, and spotted with July 4 as a holiday. Ed.) quaint villages and towns. Finally the climb into mountains begins. To the Editor of the Kernel: I read your editorial last week, Here is seen such tropical vegetation and I agree with you that the regis- as banana trees, orange groves, pinetration lines should be, speeded up. apple plants, palms, and various At my age, I can't stand in those other plant life peculiar only to this in the last issue of the Kernel I have hoped that it is not true. Why, I ask you. should students want to stay away from classes? Surely everyone who has paid out good money to attend school should want to get the most from it. I am able, because of other duties, to attend school only during the summer session and I can see no reason 1 lines. well-arrange- nounced by Bonne director of University athletics. Another example of a step in the right direction. A. Shively, Books At Top of List Named By Review Magazine, Recently outstanding books of the decades from 1924 to 1944 as! tawrence T. E.) Seven t bv Henry Seidel Canbv were Pillars of Wisdom; Lewis, Arrow- .i, c;, ysmilh and Dodsw'orthy; Lindsay. ci 1 very Sou Is a circus; Uppmann The books, listed alphabetically A p,.eIace to Morals; Llewellyn, l.y author, include Adams, The Epic How Green Was My Valley; Mann, of America: Akins, The Old Maid; Tne Magjc Mountain and Joseph .':Anthony Adverse; Anderson, tne provider- - Marquand, H. M. Pul- Lark laughter; Asch, The Apostle; h.m Es . Millav. Wine From These Ardrn; Poems; Beard. The Repub- - orarjes: Milne. When We Were Verv lit ; Beer, The Mauve Decade; Benet. Young; Mitchell. Gone With the John Brown's Body; Boyd, Drums; Wind; Morison, Admiral of the Lnxiks. The Flowering of New Eng- Ocean Sea; Munro, Short Stories of land; Buck, The Good Earth and Saki; Nathan, One More Spring; Drnpon Seed. Nordhoff , Hall, Mutiny on the Eumham, The Managerial Rev Bounty. Tobacco Road; olution; Caldwell, Odets, Six Plays; O'Neill, Strange C ithf-r-, Shadows on the Rock and Interlude; Porter, Flowering Judas; Comes for the Archbishop; Priestley, The Good Companions; Death of Things CiiurrhiU. Blood. Sweat and Tears; Proust, Remembrance Davenport, The Valley of Decision; Past; Rawlings, The Yearling, RemPnv, Life with Father; Dewey, arque, All Quiet on the Western I'j-iDreiser. An American Trag-- f Front; Richter, The Sea of Grass; i:y: Dos Passos, U. S. A.; Eliot, Roberts (E. M.), The Time of Man; K.), Northwest Passage; Four Quarters; Exupery, Wind, Roberts Sand and Stars; Farrell, Studs Lon-- :: Robinson, Tristram; Salten, Bambi; The 100 Snt. :c7orZLe c: r:i. Faulkner, Sanctuary; Ferber, Show Host: Fitzeerald, The Great Gatsby; Forster, A Passage to India; Freeman. R. E. Lee; Frost, Collected Swan Song; Fiicms; Galsworthv, Olasrow. Barren Ground: Gunther, Inside Europe; Hellman, Four Plays; minaway, A Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls; Hilton, Mr. Chips; Hitler, Mein Kanipf; Hogben, Mathematics for the Million. Housman, Collected Poems; Jeff ers. Roan Stallion. Jovce, Finnegan's Wake; Koestler, Dukness at Noon; Lardner, Round U,j; Lawrence D. H.), The Plumed n Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln; Bull-tong- Tarkington, Kate Fennigate; Reach; Undset, linson, Gallions Kristin Labransdatter, Van Loon, Lives; Welles, The Time lor De- cision. Werfel, The Song of Bernadette; Wescott, The Grandmothers; West Black Lamb and Grey Falcon; SPECIAL 50c LUNCH LUNCHES DAILY Kinds Serving 3 Times Doily, 7 a.m. 10 p.m SUNDAY 8 a.m. Till 10 p.m. 2. Madam Editor: There is a rumor circulating about the campus to the effect that all of the classes are to be dismissed Tuesday for the fourth of July holiday. Since I saw no mention of The Last Puritan. Sandwiches Of All a. Saroyan, The Human Comedy"; Sinclair, Dragon's Teeth; Smith (B. A.), Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Smith L.), Strange Fruit; Spender, poems; Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath; Stuart, Plow; Man With a Student Short Orders San-tayan- Editor, The Kernel- It seems as though this University is run strictly for elderly people. I can't understand why the younger people on this campus must suffer in the summer session when it is so hot. Why is it that in the winter time we get 12:30 permission on Friday and Saturday, but in the summer time we must be in early in order that the elderly ladies can get their rest and not be disturbed by the youngsters coming in late. Not only do we have to be in early, but we must be quiet by 10 o'clock every evening, and have all radios turned off by II o'clock when quiet hours don't begin until 11:30. Don't the regular students get any enjoyment in the campus in the summer? The dance posters state that a dance is to be held at the How can we go, Union from when we must be in at 11 o'clock? I suggest that we have some things done about this situation. There are too many complaints. Disgusted (For partial relief, see related edi Ed.) torial. tropical jungles. Yours truly, As the ciimb continues higher inSusan Cartwheel to the mountains, the air becomes Dear Madam: I was reading a newsaper recently and ran across this sentence: Youth is the one defect that is curable. I still remember these words because they express adequately my opinion on the subject. You see, I have been living in a girl's dormitory all week. My main objection to these youngsters living around me, aside from their keeing late hours, is that every one of them play cards. Cardgames at noon, midnight, on Sunday, and on floors. I don't know who supervises the recreational activities of these students, but I think this is one activity that shouldn't be permitted because it is sinfu