xt76ww76wk75 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt76ww76wk75/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19611206  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  6, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  6, 1961 1961 2015 true xt76ww76wk75 section xt76ww76wk75 Art Editor Reviews

KIE IE HIE IL

'I'ranny Ami Zooey';
See Page Five

Today's Weather:
Party Cloudy, Cold;
Low 29, High 49

University of Kentucky

Vol. LIII, No. 41

LEXINGTON,

KV., WEDNESDAY,

DEC

6, 1961

Eight Pagtl

Governor To Preview
Legislative Program

missed next Wednesday for the
Governor's speech to be held in
Memorial Coliseum.
Gov. Bert T. Combs told the
Gov. Combs said in the Monday
Kernel Monday lit' will give a interview he wants to stimulate an
of 1 is 1902 legislative interest in state government in
preview
students.
conprogram at an
Although the governor had not
vocation on Dec. 13.
decided on the subject of his talk,
The 10 a.m. classes will be dis he indicated he would speak about
By LLDON PHILLIPS
Kernel Associate Editor

Ground Floor Plrosv!
Vlnce Guarino wear a smile of relief as the elevator cage in which
lie was branded between floors for approximately 20 minutes is

he incident occurred in the .Margaret I. King
Library yesterday.

1

finally tpenrd.

Going Down?

Elevator Slops;
Student Trapped

Notice to all sufferers of claustrophobia
elevator in the Margaret I. King Library.

beware of the

Vince Guarino, Junior agricul- was an
etymology dictionary. When
ture maji i ficm Lcn Island, N.Y.,
found himnK sti ended between the coed borrower opened the book,
floors in the library elevator yesterday fir about 20 minutes.
Guarino. a stiiclt.it assistant in
the librai's check-tu- t
department,
had none after a volume in the
stacks fi.r a coed and was
upKT
coming t.wn cn the elevator.
When it icached the
floor,
the elevatcr slunk a few times,
eacd down about three feet, and
stopped.
To get cn the elevator, the door
must be opened with a key. Various people tried their keys in
the lock, but the door would not
budge. While one librarian went
dieting through a drawer for
the emergency key, a email
crowd gathered.
Guarino suddenly called out,
''Hey! Si. m body do me a favor.
Call Dr. Saufley pik! tell him I
won't be able to make that class."
When someone a ked him how to
sp"ll the pit lessor's name, he called back, rennet it, I Just know
how to say it."
About 15 minutes later, a man
came (lathing
up with the
emergency key and opened the
cage.
The bx k Guarino brought down

Of Stylus
Due Saturday
lie

student-publishe,

will

d

to

on sale

The charge against Forest Payne,
operator of the
restaurant,
was continued to Jan. 4.
The case against Fred Gardner,
operator of the Paddock Club,
was continued tJ Dec. 15.
The two men were arrested
during police investigations of
their respective establishments
Nov. 17. Both were released after
posting bail.
L. L. Martin, dean of men, accompanied Lexington police and
confiscated the ID cards of the
nine men found drinking beer in
the restaurants.
In police court yesterday one of
the students, Thomas Edwards, 17,

The Department of Pathology will meet Monday to explore the possibilities of developing a campuswide voluntary
blood donation program.
emergencies. Secondly, all the
"The blood program is for the
said Dr.
Hospital,"
University
Wellington B. Stewart, chairman
of the Department of Pathology.
"When the hospital opens, we must
have a good supply of blood on
hand and must be able to maintain a sufficient amount."
Dr. Stewart said the two aims
of the program are to first get
the names of those willing to
donate. "We will also be looking
for people who will put their
names on a list to be called in

in the Paddock Club by a waitress.
Gardner, half owner of the
club.said, "as far as I know we
didn't," when asked if his restaurant served minors on the
night of the investigation. He
added that he does not sell beer
to minors.
His case was continued after a
legal technicality about responsibility for the alleged violation developed.

blood will have to be typed."

the UniverChristmas season
sity will open formally today with
the 27th annual Hanging of the
Greens. The ceremony will be held
7 p.m. in the Stu4 p.m. and
dent Union Ballroom.
The traditional ceremony decorating the Ballroom is sponsored
by the YMCA, YWCA, Student
Union Board, and Student Congress.
The origin of the Christmas
tree, holly, Ivy, and other religious and secular traditions
will be explained. It is the only
campus-wid- e
program to orientate the Yuletide season.

Denver Roberts, chief medical
technician for the Department of
Pathology, said although the hospital will not open until early 1962,
the blood donated now would keep
until that time. "Whole blood keeps
about 21 days under refrigeration.
Plasma can be reclaimed by removing the red cells, and freezing
Four local musical groups and
it. It can then be kept indefinitely. nine students will be featured In
But no blood goes to waste."
the program.
The meeting will be at 5:30 p.m.
Monday in Room MM 363 in the
University Medical Center.
I
'

Students interested in the program of the College of Nursing
are invited to attend a coffee
hour from 4 p.m. Dec. 12 in
Room MS 231 of the Medical
Center.
Dean Marcia A. Dake will be
in charge of the question-and-answprogram. Faculty members of the college will also be
present. Admission and transfer
requirements of the college will
be among the topics of discusstudents are
sion. Interested
asked to call University extension 2142 for reservations.

Off

Boles Funeral
To Be Held Today

A.

9

Funeral services will be hi Id at 11 a.m. today for Stanley
"Daddv" Holes, former UK athletic director and coach.

He was found dead in his apartment at 265 Lyndhui'st PI. Monday.
Saturday inclining, John Martel, Coroner Chester H. Hager said
assistant liteiaiy editor of the ma- "Daddy" Boles apparently died of
a heart attack sometime Sunday.
gazine, sactl yesterday.
The magazine will be sold at
A 10 second silent prayer was
the campus Book-torKennedy's offered for Mr. Holes Monday night
Biokstoie, and at the Guignol at the
basketball game.
Theatre Saturday ni,ht during in"Daddv" Boles was a native of
termission.
Wilhamstown, and tame to the
Muriel a id the magazine gives
University as a physical education
undergraduates the opportunity
he
instructor in 1916. In
ii see their own work in print served as football coach, 1917. folthe
and tli us serves as an incentive
athlowing year he was named
fjr future work.
letic director and held that post
Stylus has been published for the until 1934.
six or seven years and it repast
Mr. Boles was apxinted propresents work done only by UK
fessor of physical education in
fctudents.

Stylus.

lit.'rary niagaint

(.'harms filed against two local restaurant operators for
selling beer to minors were continued to later dates in police
court yesterday.
admitted that he was served beer

Yule Opens
With Hanging
Of Greens
at
Pathology Department Plans
awwiiipii
Voluntary Blood Program
INursiiij; Students
at
at
she discovered the text was all in
a
Norwegian. Not understanding
word of that language, the dictionary was useless to her.

S. A.

Publication

Beer Violation
Cases Continued

something topical concerning stats
government.
University President Frank O.
Dickey was out of town and could
not be reached for comment. However, Vice President Leo M. Chamberlain said he does not recall an
convocation of this nature ever being held here, although
other Kentucky governors have
spoken before the student body.
Gov. Combs said the next fevr
months may be the most important in the students' lifetime. "The
may make a bi?
legislature
change; I would like the students
to be as informed as possible on
the problems of state government."
He noted with discouragement
that if the legislature repeals the
state sales tax "we will start goin?
backward and we will all be
ashamed of Kentucky."
The governor asked two members of the Kernel editorial staff
if they thought students would
like a question-and-answperiod
at the convocation. After an affirmative answer he said:
"Then we will have one. Tell
them to be thinking of some questions they would like answered."
Gov. Combs, a 1937 graduate of
the College of Law, was awarded
an honorary doctor's degree by the
University at commencement exercises last spring.
The convocation and dismissal
of classes were approved in the
November meeting of the University Faculty.
Student Congress President Jim
Daniel will introduce Gov. Combs
at the convocation.

and manager of ticket sales
in 1938. He was supervisor of the
veteran's housing projects at the
University from 1943 to 195.
In 1955. the University put him
on a change-of-woi- k
status.
1931

He is survived by two sons, John
Stanley Boles, Houston, Texas; and
William O. Boles, Tiffin, Ohio; a
sister, Mrs. Z. E. Henderson A.sh- villp. North Carolina; a brother,
Ewing T. Boles, Columbus, Ohio;
and six grandchildren.
The body was taken to the W.
R. Milward Mortuary on Broadway. He will be buried at 11 a.m.
tomorrow at the Hilerest Memorial
Fark on the Versailles Road.

"

1
tmmi-iirii iMimw i mm trton-i-fn'- - i wi in
The late Stanley A. "Daddy" Boles served as assistant football
coach in 1916 when this photograph was taken. From the left are
Mr. Boles and J. J. Tigert, head coach at that time. They are
standing where Stoll Field is today. In the background is Euclid
Avenue the exact location of Memorial Coliseum.

jinmi'

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wc1ncsl.iy, Dec.

x

...

fi,

I1

'Man And Minerals' O'Ndi Play
To Be Read
Rf
To jl Armlvzprl
j
.

m.

-- t-

By JOE MILLS And P.EN FIT7.FATKICK
a worM traveler, a Maxwell Professor,

Take
and the
worlds foremost sjeoijraplier of tin eastern continent of Asia,
anil roll tliem into one Dr. George H. Cressey. Tlie Syracuse
lTniversity professor will deliver a lecture on "Man, Land, and
Minerals" at S p.m. tomorrow in tin Taylor Education liiiilil- Dr. Cressey will sponk on a gro- in" Auditorium.
of the popula- Phic a'"1
The Phi Eeta Kappn Lecture H

.set nsainst world-th- e
tiou
second of a series of public wWe explosion
potentla,8 of nRrlcuituraj
lectures sponsored by the Patter- - ianci alKi natural resources, with
son School of Diplomacy, the Col- - an evaluation of soil, water, and
im- lege of Commerce, and the De- - minerals, and their political
by contin
partment of Sociology. The lec- plications continent
ent.
ture will be based on the profesAsia Is Dr. Cressey' principal
sor's travels to five continents and
field of Interest. "No other livUK. GEORGE B. CRESSEY
75 countries.
ing geographer has seen so much
of the great continent of Asi.i.
as Dr. Cressey," writes the New
York Times. lie lias therefore
been called the Dean of Asiatic
geographers.
He is familiar with every province of China, Mongolia and
Tibet. He has made four visits to
Kentucky's rate of illegitimate lnrtlis among wliites in the the Soviet Union, travelins in nine
United States is exceeded only 1y West Virginia, the Legislative of the 15 republic's, and making five
trips across the Trans-Siberia- n
Research Commission reported Monday.
to the commission's legitimacy were found in Eastern Railway.west
According
Asia is another of
Scut h
report 29 out of every 1.000 Ken- - Kentucky and those for nomvhite Dr.
Cressey's research areas. In
tuckv children were born out of illegitimacy in the Central and addition to
periods of residence in
Western parts of the state.
wedlock in 1950.
Beirut and Baghdad, he has seen
Because the number of illegiti
The report stated, however, that
all of the countries of the Near
mate children receiving Aid to
from Turkey to Afghanistan
illegitimacy is far more common
Children funds has East,
and south to Arabia.
among nonwhites. Kentucky ranks Dependent
risen only slightly as compared to
A native of Ohio, Dr. Cressey
fourth among 35 reporting states the
sharp increase in illegitimate
in the number of illegitimate non-whi- te
graduated from Denison Univerrecombirths. In 1959, about 25 per- births, the commission has
sity, which has also conferred on
cent of the nonwhite births were mended a pilot project to deter- him an honorary degree of Docmine if the A. D. C. case load tor of
out of wedlock.
Humane Letters. He recould be reduced.
ceived his doctorate in geology
The report also said "The anThe proposal calls for the pas- from the
University of Chicago
nual number of births out of sage of a uniform paternity act
and holds a second doctorate in
wedlock in Kentucky has inwhich would provide for detercreased over 90 percent since mining paternity so the State geography from Clark University.
Dr. Cressey has written books
1948."
could fix responsibilltty for the on
the geography of Asia which
The highest ratios lor white il- - child's support.
have been published in six languages. The latest volumes are
"Asia's Lands and Peoples," "Land
of the 500 Million," a geography
of China; "Crossroads," land and
life in southwest Asia; and "Soviet Potentials," a geographical
appraisal.
The broader aspects of human
The Kentucky Law Journal, a publication of the College geography as related to American
of Law, began its 50th year of continuous publication with the foreign policy form the center of
Dr. Cressey's interest. His work
issuing of its fall edition yesterday.
deals with people as the most sigIt is the 10th oldest law journal review editor; and Hugh Cannon, nificant aspect in the geography
in the United States and the oldest comment editor.
of land and resources.
publication in the Southern Law. "
Review Conference. Students rank- ing in the upper 15 percent of the
college publish the journal quarter-

State Ranks Second
In Illegitimate Births

Frank Burdlck, a Junior English
major, will give a dramatic interpretation of Eugene O'Neil's "Long
Day's Journey Into Night" at 4
p.m. tomorrow in the Music Room
of the Student Union Building.
The reading of O'Neil's play Is
the second In the series of .three
"Reading Hours" sponsored by
SUB Topics and students of oral
said Dr. J. Reid
interpretation,
associate
Sterret,
professor of
speech and presentations.
Although "Long Day's Journey
Into Night" took nearly four hours
to present on Broadway, Burdick
has cut the play to 45 minutes by
attempting only to suggest the
characters and diologue.
The play tells the story of O'Neil's own life and was not to be
released for production until a
.specified ixriod following his death.
O'Neil's wife, however, sold the
rights to the play several years
ago.

The last in the series of Interpretations will be given by D.mg
Roberts, Lexington senior, Feb. 22.
He will present "The Rose Tatoo."
In 1914 Prof. Enoch Grehan established the Department of Journalism. He and Miss Margie McLaughlin made up the staff of two.
The present Journalism Building is
named after Prof. Grehan.

BEN A

Tivo Scholarships
hi lAbrury Science
To lie Granted
Two scholarships and an assist-antshare available to graduate
students in library science.
The Azile M. Wofford Scholarship Fund Is offering a $1,000
Maurice
scholarship for 19C2-6Leach, director of library science,
announced yesterday.
The other scholarship Is granted by the H. W. Wilson Co., a
publishing house. This scholarship
is for $1,000 and is given only to
accredited
library schools, Mr.
Leach said.
Deadline for applications for the
scholarships is March 15.
A graduate
for
assistantship
$1,200 is available for 19tJ2-ti:- i.
Ap- plications must be made by May 1,
Mr. Leach said.

Plume

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For information and tvkets call
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I N t I K AM I
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Some day when ou ale married, you painting from the Fine
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will need the protection only life insurance can pro ide.
our present line John Codey, Sigma. Nu House, Phone
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KenAmong the
RIDES WANTED
tucky lawyers and politicians
who have been members of the
lost RIDE WANTED
to New England or
braieli't
silver
Holmes Hull mid New York for Christmas holidavs loo
Kentucky Law Journal staff is Wi'd Nov. 22
FunlioUM r. Call (iliiil.
t
Dee. 15 or ltii. Contact .Mr. Uudlev
CIov. Bert T. Combs, who served
1D41
31a Linden Walk.
as managing editor in l!):!G-2LOST- - Pair of white frame s lasses in Mann,
old case. In swim pool bleatllers lit
(iDUt
The current staff is composed of Memorial Coliseum.
MISCELLANEOUS
Jackson W. White, editor-in-chie- f;
FOR SALE
GO TO JAMAICA. West Indie, Aroe
Whayne C. Priest Jr., Hssociate
nd nil of Eastern
lor student
pud.
you SALE lliul-- m
editor; James H. Jeffries III. note rooms, bedf'ird stone. south balhs. 3 bed- rate. liMij round tripEurope, summer of
by air,
1'j
ot
editor; S. Roy Woodall Jr., book
KHA I9't2. Also Nassau, spring vacation
Sep .rate uar.ice.
'(2 For informalion call Haleiijli Lane

ile.

Electric
Starts 7:00

"WORLD AT NIGHT"

CLASSIFIED ADS

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for the Broadway drama hit,
"Rhinoceros."
Producer Leo Kerz said he had
at first felt the show might be a
bit abstruse for road audiences, but
that high favorable reaction from
viewers had changed
that opinion.

STARTS TODAY

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Die

fi, l!Kil

3

Social Activities

e

v.--

.f

;.

fi iMMzM-- i

1

p.m. Sunday, Dec.

Meetings
Chess Tournament
The Student Union Doard Recreation Committee is sponsoring a
Chess tournament tomorrow.
All interested .students and professors may sign up at the information desk in the Student Union
Building.
Heading; Hour
The SUB Topics Committee is
presenting a reading hour at 4 p.m.
tomorrow in the Music Room of
the Student Union Building.
Frank Burdick will read "Long
Day's Journey Into Night", a
Broadway play by Eugene ONeil.
All interested persons are invited to attend.

riii Mu Alpha
Ed Carlisle, drum major, entertained the members of Phi Mu Al-

These mrmbrrs of the brat generation rrrrntly
attended a Beatnik Dance sponsored by Vpsilon

Kappa Phi sorority and Beta I'hi Delta fraternity at I'K's Northern Center.

Northern Center Holds "Cool" Party

By CAROLYN WILLIAMS
Like. Beatnik, man. You know,
those cool cats who swing on and
cn arriving in "Endsville" every
day from, dawn until dusk. The
kind who think nothing of rebelling against the whole world without any Inspiration at all.
The same cool cats whose fairer
stx walk around with long straight
hair and wear black leotards while
bearded mates wear
their way-osunglasses even though there's no
bright light around.
Like, you know the score, don't
you
jLike, sure you do.
Will, let me clue you in on a
little event that took place at the
Northern Center recently. Center
ttudents and Northern Kentucky
Pin-Mate-

to portray these characters from the
beat generation at a Beatnik Dance
sponsored by Upsilon Kappa Psi
sorority and Beta Phi Delta fraternity.
Clad in the usual black of this
set, the Beatniks took on the favorite pastime of the way-ocharacters. . . . beating the bongos
and reading beat poetry that never
seems to make any sense to
squares.
Keniors had an opportunity

pha, national music honorary, yesterday at his home on Roanoke
Drive.
He presented a program on high
fidelity and sterophonic sound.
Wesley Foundation
Wesley Foundation will hold an
ice skating party from 3:30 to 5:30

Of course there were still others
who just sat around wearing their
sunglasses and sporting the typical
faces of typical Beatniks.
Tom Moreno's Jazz Combo provided the way-osounds for the
occasion.
To complete the evening, a prize
for the "Most Beat Looking Boy
and Girl" was awarded to Drew
Gaskins, Northern Center freshman and Janice Rhein, a Dayton
High School senior.

10,

at

Garden-sid-

Following the skating party them

at the

will be a supper at 6 p.m.

Foundation, and evening vespers.
The Rev. Tom FornLsh will give
a Christmas sermon, followed by
caroling.
Reservations for the skating party may be made at the Foundation
office or by calling

Elections
Westminster Fellowship
The Westminster Fellowship recently elected officers for the year.
Thry include: Marilyn Dixon, president; Monte Gross, vice president; Maxine Coldiron, secretary;
and Brute Cherry, treasurer.
Junior Panhellcnic
The Junior Panhellcnic, consisting of sorority pledges, recently
elected Daphne Dollar, president.
Other officers include: Cheryl Kel- ly. vice president; Marian Metkley,
secretary; and Barbara f aulooner,
treasurer.

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Sally Gaul, a sophomore education major . from Lexington, to
Tommy Green, a senior majoring
in marketing from Lexington, and
a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Pat Fowler, a freshman English
major from Kankakee, 111, and
pledge of Alpha Oamma Delta sorority to John Berend, a sophomore
mechanical
student
engineering
from LaGrange, 111., and a member
of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Stanya Burlew, a senior commerce education major from
Owensboro and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority to Bill
Offutt, a student at Washington
and Lee University. Lexington. Va.,
and a member of Phi Delta Theta

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Luanne Mahlinger, a sophomore
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* The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentvcky

ircnnH cln
matter tinder the Art of March 3, 1879.
Entrrrrl lit th pot nffic Hi Lenington. Kentucky
Published tour timet a week hirin)i the n sular hol year extent during hnliriayf and rianii.
SIX DOLLAHS

A

SCHOOL

YEAR

Ed Van Hook, Editor

Wayne Gregory, Campus Editor
Jean Schwartz, Society Editor
Bice McReynolds, Ciirtooriist
Bobbie Mason, Arts Editor
WEDNESDAY NEWS STAFF
Tom Lennos, Associate
Jace Guthrie, Sews Editor
Ben Fitzpatrice, Sports

Kerry Tomfll, Managing Editor
Ben Fitzpatrk e. Sport Editor
Dice Wallace, Advertising Manager
Bill Holton, Circulation Manager

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First it was the noise. Now, it's
the heat. Studying in the Margaret
I. King Library has not proved to be
one of the most enjoyable parts of
student life this semester.
Students and faculty members
alike have submissively tolerated the
unavoidable, but certainly bothersome
and nerve-racking disturbances
which have resulted from construction of the library addition. Tolerating
the "sweat box" is cut of the question,
however.
Although library personnel do not
have a way to electronically or mechanically control the temperature in
their building, it takes very little
effort and physical strain to raise a
few windows in the various rooms.
We do not understand how they themselves can continue to work in such
hot, stuffy surroundings unless they

The Readers' Forum

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have become accustomed to it and
no longer think anything about it.
Aside from the overcrowded conditions of our present library, students (or, at least most of them, we
believe) cannot comfortably sit for
an hour or two, or three, and try to
concentrate on tlieir books. The library should be made more pleasant,
because no one enjoys being suffocated or forced to wipe the perspiration from his brow while attempting
to work off his outside assignments.
It is hot enough during the summer months without having to contend with the heat for the entire year.
Kentucky weather is unpredictable, to
be sure. But, when it does vary, a few
adjustments (up or down) with the
windows will go a long way toward
making the Margaret I. King Library
a little less like a Turkish bath or Ye
Olde Sweat Shoppe.

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IIoiv Come I Always Have To lie The Neighbor

Suggests Renovation

To The Editor:
This last week I had the pleasure
of showing around the campus Dr.
John Maxon, director of the Chicago
Art Institute, one of the three greatest museums in America. As well as
knowing art, Dr. Maxon knows architecture. Two buildings on the campus
caught his eye as masterpieces of
superb, elegant design. Guess which?
White Hall and the Administration
Building.
When I told Dr. Maxon White
Hall was slated for destruction he
replied, "You're mad, insane. You are
destroying one of the few really beautiful buildings you have." And I might
have added, our link with the past,
too.
Why is it necessary to tear down
White Hall? Dr. Maxon pointed out
that it would be much cheaper to gut
the building and put in a new thin
concrete shell interior than to build
a new building of equal space. Several universities have thus renovated
their old buildings, putting new
within a superb old exterior.
Anyone who stands on Euclid
Avenue and looks up at White Hall,
dominating the hill of the campus,
will notice the striking beauty of this
building. And anyone who examines
its classic Southern facade from a distance, or close enough to observe that
the original doors with their worn sills
are now two windows, will appreciate
the elegance of the design. It is a
perfect foil for the more elaborate, but
Administration
handsome,
equally
Building. Now that the Commerce
College is to move out of White Hall,

it can easily be renovated for office
use.
What we need on the campus is
a Fine Arts Committee on Amenities,
Design and Esthetics (this name is,
of course, chosen because its initials
spell FACADE; Madison Avenue decrees that agencies have meaningful
initials these days).
I propose as chairman Charles P.
Graves of the Department of Architecture. He has a masterful sense of
good design, old and new. Since he
redecorated the Faculty Club patronage has doubled. He will serve if
faculty members show an interest in
preserving the best of the old and
in securing really good contemporary
design in the new.
Why must our campus continue
to be filled with undistinguished, nondescript, mediocre architecture which
dulls the human spirit? The human
quality, beauty which is part of the
necessary emotional cement of a universitymust be restored. At present
our approach is concerned almost
entirely with the bare necessities of
functional space. This functional approach is frankly not enough. However adequately it deals with the
physical foundations of university life,
it leaves out all its upper stories.
Emotional and intellectual and spiritual satisfactions must also be taken
into account.
Jesse Dckeminuh Jn.
Professor of Law

Protects Unfair Penalty
To The Editor:
A situation evists that needs publicity. Some instructors believe they

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Views On White Hall, Academic

II Klnf.

he Denver Pent

have the right to hold students in
class after the end of a period often
for as long as 10 or even 15 minutes.
Other instructors believe in penalizing tardy students by giving short
at the beginning of a
allowed.
period, with no make-ua student having conObviously,
secutive classes under these two types
of instructors is being unfairly penalized.
Assuming fairly slow speech to
be spoken at about 100 words per
minute, there are few concepts that
cannot be presented in 50 minutes,
or 5,(XX) words!
The instructor who habitually
holds his students overtime is either
showing his inability to competently
present material, or is showing contempt for his fellow instructors. In
cither case, UK doesn't need this type
of instruction!
David Flxton Smith
"pop-quizze-

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Academic Standards
To The Editor:
In the Kernel of Nov. 20, on the
very front page, there was an article
entitled "President Asks Action From
Athletic Board." This article reported
that the board w as certain to consider
the University's admission standards
students. I was shockfor
ed as I read that the board felt 1),
these standards were too high; 2),
these high standards were one reason
we were losing good football players; and 3), these standards should
be lowered so that the University
could stand out as having a top ball
club.
The article stated that the present

You? No Christmas,

Standards
regulation adopted by the faculty
stulimits admission of
dents to only those ranking in the
upper 50 percent of their graduating
class. Are we to believe that these
standards are high? I. feel sure that
any student who has. really looked
over a wide range of schools' before
choosing a college w ill recognize that
these standards are not high. Such
standards as the one used by the
University of Kentucky can Ik ranked as above average, yes, but certainly not high! I think the admission
standards adopted by the faculty
show signs of progress and I hope
that in the future the standards will
go even higher until they can be
ranked as high.
It was suggested that the board
may consider urging the Board of
Trustees to provide for "legislative
appointments" and "trustee appointments." Do I understand that these
appointments would apply te football
players who do not inert the admission standards? I ask you, is this institution to become e)iie where any
dumb, but good, football player can
obtain admission er is it to remain
one ef higher learning? Does it
mean so much to an institution eif
higher learning to have a winning
football te am? Is this the main reason
lor its existence?
is
I feel that this very
an insult to all the honest students
who are here to ge t a good education.
It is my hope that the Board ef Trustees will not approve any such actitm
w hich wemld ce Mainly lowe r the prestige ejf this institution of higher education.
B. B hooks Sun'
sugge-stio-

boo-ho-

(Match IbU apace) f

* THE KENTl'CKY KERNEL,

Salinger Writes For

By DAVID

POI.K

I). Salinger, the terrific
friend, lias written the Jiook
eve ry undergraduate lias read.
Tin's would he enough to turn
you against him hut you know
that you arc the one he writes
to.
J.

But, twice a day you hear how

re's Just like Thomas Wolfe

In

that

from 17 to 24 you
have finished his first
chapter. Why do we all keep red
hats in the bottom drawer
under our sweaters?
you weren't