xt79cn6xx81b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79cn6xx81b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590930  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 30, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 30, 1959 1959 2013 true xt79cn6xx81b section xt79cn6xx81b Nixon Awards UK Law Student 'Page' Degree
Few high school graduates possess diploma signed by the President of the United States, but Jim
sophomore from
Daniel, a pre-la- w
Kuttawa, has just such a certificate..
Jim received his high school education lvhUe working In the nation'! caplicl is a Senate page. lie
attended classes daily from 6:30 to
9:43
and. then his day really
began.
It was necessary far him to have
a working knowledge of each
day's legislation, In order that he
-

in.

-

eoold be of service to the members
of the legislative body.
One of his duties was to keep
the senators Informed as to what
bills were on the agenda Sot the

east his vote.
Jim was at a conservation camp
when the opening for a Senate
page came up and applied Immediately. His appointment deday.
pended on the Democrats gaining
Sometimes he had difficulty get- control of the Senate they did
ting a few senators away from the and Jim served as a page from
golf course to vote on the various 1955-5measures.
During his last year In WashingThe Senate delayed voting on ton, he worked for the Secretary
a particular bill once for an hoar of the Majority.
and a half so that Senator HumThere were 24 boys In Jim's
phrey
whose plane graduating class and they were Inhad been caoght In a storm, could vited to a reception at the White
3.

(D.-MInn-

.),

House by President
and- - Sirs. if he ever went to Ireland, the
Eisenhower. The
President was card would be all he would need
nablo to attend the reception the for a visa.

year that Jim graduated, but he
did get to meet Mamie Elsenhower.
Jim's years In Washington gave
him a wonderful opportunity to
meet many notable political figures, among them former President Harry S. Truman, Briton's
Sir Anthony Eden, West Berlin's
Conrad Adenaur and Robert Briscoe, the Lord Mayor of Dublin.
Briscoe presented him with his
personal card and told Jim that

Jim admits his Interest In polities and law stents partly from his
experiences as a page. The late
Senator BarkJey
once
asked him jokingly, If ho planned
to enter politics or had he "seen-enougalready.
Does Jim have any political aspirations?
twenty years from
"Ask me
now," he told us,
(D.-Ky- .),

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University of Kentucky
Vol. LI

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Good Luck, Son
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9

Over 300 Apply

Dean C. C. Carpenter said yester-

The General Fund was founded
In 1920 with its source coming
from gifts and interest earnings.
The University may loan $75,000
of the total of $115,000. At present
the leans have amounted to $65,-00- 0.
The National Defense Student
Loan Fund Is a result of the National Defense Education Act of
1958. Student loans have already
reached $51,000 out of the $98,000
which must last until .the end of
the 19C0-6- 1 fiscal year, Dean Carpenter said.
This loan fund is appropriated
by Congress through the U. S. Office of Education and distributes
colleges and
allotments among

Van Arsdale To Speak
At Leadership Meet
Highlight of the annual LeaderVan Arsdale is presently a
ship Conference will be a speech
of the Louisville Bar Associaby Jefferson County Judge Bert- tion, Kentucky State Bar Associaram C. Van Arsdale.
tion, Masonic Order, Audubon
Moderator for the conference,
which will be held at Camp Daniel
1,
Boone, Oct.
will be J. Don
1
Marsh, assistant Dean of Students,
Wayne State University, Detroit,

is given to those in the teaching,
science, engineering, mathematics,
and language fields. A limit of
$500 per student a semester has
been set on this loan with one-ten- th
of it due a year after the
student ceases to be full time. The
remainder, with a 3 per cent inperterest, Is due within a
iod, he said.
Dr. C. C. Carpenter is chairman
of the committee for both the
Student Loan Fund and the National Defense Loan Fund. Students wishing to apply for these
loans may see Dr. Carpenter or
the dean of their college.
Continued on Page 2
10-ye-

ar

.

Plans Drawn
For A ddition

Mich.
Sponsors of the conference are
Links, Mortar Board, and Omicron

Delta Kappa.
Registration will be Oct. 6
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the SUB
ticket booth. All campus organism
tlons may send two delegates to
'
the conference.
Students attending the conference will leave at 8 ajn. Saturday
and return, Sunday at 3 p.m.
The purpose of the conference
Is to discuss problems of student
organizations and general campus
problems including student, faculty and administration relations.
Judge Van Arsdale attended the
University of Louisville for four
years and UK for one year, graduating with a BJS. degree. He attended the Jefferson School of
Law and graduate
cum laude

Library

with a LJj.B. degree.
In 1937 Van Arsdale became
secretary to Louisville Mayor Neville Miller. Later that year he
resigned to become secretary-examinof the Civil Service Board,
a position he held for five years.
Van Arsdale began practicing
law In 1942 and In 1954' was appointed County Judge of Jefferson
County. He has been
to
that position In 1955 and '57.
While attending the University
he was assistant editor of "The
er

re-elec-

universities in the VS. each year.
KentuckJan."
The loan from the General Fund
is to be paid in full two or three
A tentative set
of plans has
years after the date of graduation.
been drawn for an addition to the
A 4 per cent Interest is charged
Library, pr.
for each year the student has the Margaret I. King
Lawrence S. Thompson announced
money.
Loans cannot be granted the yesterday.
According to these plans, about
first semester a" student attends 65,000-75,0square feet would be
scheol, and thereafter he must
added, thus doubling the present
snalntain a C standing or better.
Students applying for a Nation- space.
al Defense Xoan must be citizens The library la not committed to
Wallace (Wah Wah) Jones, forof the U. S., full time students, Iri any interior design at present, only mer UK
basketball
need of .financial assistance,' and t the exterior design and the area star and present Republican canprove their ability to do satisfact- to be occupied by the. addition, didate, for state treasifer.- - will
When, and if," money becomes, speak to the Young Republicans
ory college work. - ' '
Any student may obtain a loan available (at least Sl.709.000 is Club at 4 p.m. today. .
from this fund,- - but preference estimated as necessary), a detailed
Warren Scoville, assistant chairbuilding program will be drawn np man of the Young -- Republicans
to provide for the use of the ad- Club, said the meeting will have
ditional space as well as for the special emphasis on further club
SDX Lecture .
- organization. It will be held in the
older part of the building,
It cannot be too strongly em- Music Room of the SUB.
Carney, New Zealand
Jim
newspaper reporter, will speak phasized, according to Dr. ThompJones topic Is "The Importance
to : students at 3 pjn. (CDT) son, that the space to be provided of Youth Participating in RepubliThursday la Room 20$ of the for the proposed addition will not can Politics."
take fully adequate care of all
Journalism Building.
Carney is working on the staff present services and holdings.
Unless
approximately 150,000
SC Meeting
of . the Lexington newspapers.
square feet Is provided, the library
The lecture Is sponsored by the
Student Congress will meet
UK chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, will continue to have to expand .Thursday night at 1 p.m. In the
the departmental library system Lab Theater of the Fine Arts
professional journalism
and to use Memorial Hall arid the Building.

To

1

00

CdmpusClub
Will Hear
UK's Jones
Ail-Ameri-

--

Annex.

Country Club and the 235 Club.
He is Immediate past president of
the Louisville Community Concert
Association.
-

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For Studen i Loans
day.

No. 6

1959

10-1-

Vice President Richard M. Nixon presents Jim Daniel, pre-lasophomore, a diploma, signed by President Elsenhower, upon his
graduation from page school. Daniel was a page from 1955-'5-

Over 300 students have applied
for the General University Student
Loan Fund and the National Defense Loan Fund available to UK
students for educational purposes,

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30,

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JUDGE VAN ARSDALE

.7

J. DON MARSH

30 New Professors
Added To Faculty
A new school year brings new
professors to the University campus as well as new students.
The following list of new faculty
members includes
those having
professioral rank.
College of Arts and Sciences: Dr.
Ellis V. Brown, Department of
Chemistry, professor; MaJ. Arthur
M. Burton,
Department of Air
Science; Dr. Loren J. Chapman,
Department of Psychology, associate professor; Mai Cecil G. Dans-b- y.
Department of Military Science
and Tactics.

Dr. Joseph Fisher. Department

of Chemistry, assistant professor;
Dr. Roy F. Oabbard, Department
of Physics,
assistant professor;
Maurice D. Leach, Jr., professor
and head of Library. Science Department; Dr. Paul O. Sears, Department of Chemistry, associate
professor; Capt. Kulman B. Smith.
.

Department of . Military Science
and Tactics; MaJ. Paul J. Schuler,
Department of Air Science; Capt
Dale A. Rook, Department, of Air
Science.
MaJ. John Thistlewood,

Jr,

De-

partment of Air Science; Dr. Max
J. Wasserman, Andrew Patterson
School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, voting professor; Capt. Robert N. Weaver, Department of Military Science and
Tactics; Dr. John B. Wells, Department of .Mathematics and Astronomy, assistant professor.
College of Education: Inez Hallo,
assistant professor; Blcnda Proud-foo- t,
assistant professor, and Martha C. Sudduth, assistant profes

sor.
College of Engineerlngk)r. O.
Morris,
assistant professorof
OJ

,

.

. . M.1HU,

A.

rMB

A

professor of engineering mechan
ics; Dr. Randolph B. Renda, assistant professor
of mechanical
engineering, and Edwin R. Bennett, assistant professor of sani-

tary engineering.
The College of Commerce has
only one new teacher with
nt
professor of Bureau of
sistant professor of Bureau of.
Business Research.
College of Law additions Include
William M. Lewers, visiting professor from the University of
James S. Kostaa. visiting
assistant' professor from Los Angeles, and Jay W.' Murphy, Ttsltlagv
professor from the University of
Alabama,
- College of Pharmacy's' new tea
chert Include Dr. Howard. Hopkins,
professor and head of Pharmacy
Department, and Dr. Ronald E.
t
..professor of the
Chemistry Department.
College of Agriculture and Home
Economics . new additions include
Janice Walton, assistant professor of home economics and Dr.
Jan W. Abemathie, assistant pro
feasor of horticulture.
pro-slsta-

D-lln- ols;

Orth,-assistan-

.

Kyian Pictures

All unaffiliated seniors, not
previously signed, are to sign for

their Kentucklan picture sittings In the Journalism Building before October 12,

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1950

Law College Participates
In Instructor Exchange

Loans

Continued from Pare 1
Concerning the worthwhile aspects of the loan funds. Dr. Carpenter said, "People do not like to
Three members of the law facgo in debt, but when using money ulty are serving as vlsttlng profess
money
a good in- -, sors at other law schools this year.
to
vestment."
In turn, the College of Law has
thtee visiting professors on the
faculty.
Prof. Paul Oberst, faculty editor
of the Kentucky Law Journal, is
at New York University; Prof. F,
W. Whiteside is teaching at the
University of Illinois; and Thomas
it-i-

UK Professor
Views, Ford's
New Falcon
Scoring Device

.

Dr. Charles EUoa University dan of .admissions and registrar,
rlfht, examines unique electronic test scoring; equipment to b
used to score th battery of tests which Kentucky high school
seniors wCi take this fall. With Elton, who will direct the prop-ant- i
in Kentucky, Is E. F. Lindqnist, of, State Unlrersity of Iowa, where
the scoring of the American College Testing rrogram will be carried
out.

Red Chinese Bumper Crop
Is Millions Of Bad Poems
AP) The west household has set aside walls
HONGKONG
China 'province of Szechwan Is where its members jot down
now called "A Land of Poetry and poems and ballads they compose.
Song."
Typical is this poem about Mao
v
This does, not mean that its
boss of the Chinese
people are gay, lighthearted, and Communist party:
given to frolic. If anything, it
"Our Chairman Mao points at
testifies to their grim and dogged the mountain and the mountain
puts on trees.
determination.
Fdr Szechwan has won Its title
"Our chairman Mao points at
by sheer weight of outputs. Four the river and the river becomes
miliron poets and composers clean.
churned out. 78 million poems and
"Our chairman Mao draws a'
songs last year.
few lines on the man map, and
The poems and songs sound lo, highways and railroads ap'
somewhat forced. Beauty of ex- pear."
pression apparently is secondary
A verse by a Shansi peasant:
to political content. The creations
"No supreme god Is In heaven.
all extol communism, its leaders
No dragon god under the earth,
and the Joys of labor. And most
I am the supreme god and the
of the poets and composers, ac- dragon god.
cording to Peking radio, are forTell the mountains, and cliffs
'
mer illiterates who have Just to make way,'
learned to read and write.
I am coming."
, They dont have to worry about
a publisher. The songs
i finding
are. broadcast into every home,
'factory, farm and public square.
(And the poems are distributed in
printed leaflets, booklets, and
Tse-tung-

.

UK Teachers

I

periodicals.
j
They are also chalked on doors
'and walls. According to Chinese,
press reports, they're even painted
on hillsides "specially prepared for

the purpose."- The muse has bitten so deep
that some Chinese Communist officials even make speeches and
reports, and conduct debates and
discussion meetings in verse.
It's all part of the nationwide
a poet" campaign
"eyerybody
launched last year.
Since- - then, the official New
China News Agency reported recently, 830- million "creative
worsn have been produced In
China.
In Szechwan, NCNA reports, it
.has reached the point where it's
a source of embarrassment to
visitors. Hosts welcome visitors in
; verse,
and expect responses in
-

-

i

i

verse.

LITTLE MAN

A UK . professor . and a high
school student from Ashland have

just

returned

from

where they attended
Teen Age Conference.

This marked the third year the

conference has been held. It is
attended by newspaper association

representatives and teenagers. The
teenagers compete for college
scholarships.
Victor R. Portmann, assistant
professor of Journalism, and Glenn
Graber, Ashland ' TTTrh School,"
visited various parts of the Ford
manufacturing and . experimental
plant while at the conference.
Portmann, who is also secretary
to the Kentucky Press Association,
said he and Graber saw the new.
Fords and watched them being
manufactured.
"I was also very pleased to see
and drive the new Ford Falcon,"
the KPA secretary said.
The Falcon is the Ford answer
to recent "small car" demand.

Tickets for the Keys Dance
may be obtained at fraternities,
in Donovan , Hall cafeteria after
evening meals, or from any Keys
member. They are 82 per couple
in advance, or
at the door.
The dance will be held from
8 to "12. ' pan.' Saturday in the

LI

UK Professor Directs

Mining Engineer Croup

r

- ft

Vl-

"The Long Hot Summer." 9:45.'
FAMILY "Ask Any Girl," 7:00,

m

10:38.

-.

NOW

9
.sr.

'The Man

Who

Could

Cheat

Death." 9:05.

BLUE GRASS "Anatomy of a
Murder." 7:25.
LEXINGTON "Damn Yankees."
7:07, 10:53.

.

CHRISTIANSBURO, Va. (AP)
Mrs. Roy Kessinger and her six
sisters arent doing a. thing to
make life easier for the census

taker.
Mrs. Kessinger. wife of a McCoy,
Va., farmer, recently gave birth to
her 15th child. That put her one
up on one sister, Mrs. Arley Simp-kin- s,
who has 14. and safety ahead
of another sister. Mrs. Frank
Adkins, who has 11. Another of
the sisters has nine, still another
six and two have four each. That's
63 for the seven sisters.

3:07. 5:59, 8:51.
4:26, 7:18, 10:10.

USED BOOKSTORE

(Other Than Text)

DENNIS
BOOKSTORE

TONITE on the BELTLINE!

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TONIGHT

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"LONG HOT SUMMER"
(CoUr)
Paul Newman

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in

"GANG WAR"

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TODAY

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To Hell,"

1:34.

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ON THI NOKTHEaN BELTLINE

ENDS TOMORROW!

"ASK ANY GIRL"

TEN

SECOND

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NOW SHOVING
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advootwros tho world has
known!

Caevy ChaM

Toano

7S

ADMISSION

Om of th

Now Showing!
"THE DEFIANT ONES"
Tony Curtis Siinoy PoMer
Lon Chancy- - Cara Williams
"FIRST. MAM INT6' SPACE'
.

7:10

STARTS

TASHUNTEI
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Near 3rd

257 N. Lime

Kill!

w UKIEB CU Ml KTS

PHONE

LUS

CO-FEATU-

Tcfcniclr Trr !
"THE MAN WHO COULD
CHEAT DEATH"
OPEN

p.M.

STARTS

ADMISSION

7:05

7S

70

BLUE GRASS
ON GEORGETOWN

"Oang War," 9:22.
STRAND "Pier 5 Havana," 12:15.
"Ten Seconds

Centrol Kentucky's Largest

Tough For Census

.

7:10. 11:45.

lilt

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?$e&zid Latest with 0DmMte?3(&sw&

SUB Ballroom.

Summer

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ft

Keys Dance Tickets

Read Papers
At Cornell

.

CAMPUS

ON-- i

Michigan
the Ford

Dr. Ernest M. Spokes, professor
of mining engineernig at UK, has
been named director of the Society
of Mining Engineers to represent
the coal division.
Dr. Spokes will take office in
Two members of the UK De- February for a term of three years.
partment of Rural Sociology read SME is a society of the American
papers at the annual meeting of Institute of Metallurgical Enthe Rural Sociological Society at gineers.
Cornell University, recently.
Papers' by Dr. C. Milton Cough-enou- r,
Busy
an associate professor, and
NEW YORK (AP) The 1959
De Jong, a graduate asGordon
sistant, were two of the four pre- summer theater season has been
sented at the meeting on "Farm the busiest for actors in the history of Equity, the performing
Practice Decisions."
union.
De Jong, of Gray Hawk, JackAt the peak of the period, 4,500
son County, was the only master's
present a paper. Dr. professionals were employed, comcandidate to
A. Lee Coleman, head of the UK pared to the previous record of
departments of sociology and rural 4,200 in 1958. During an average
sociology, discussed De Jong's winter week about 3,000 actors are
engaged.
work on the same program.
Two other UK staff members,
OPEN DAILY 1:30 P.M.
Dr. James S. Brown and Dr. Harry

graduate
;
But other provinces aren't far Schwarrweller. and a
student. K. M. Oeorge, attended
behind The central China pro
meeting.
vince of Kiangsu produced 59 the
million "creative works" last year
and a single factory In the north
China province of Shansi turned
MOVIE GUIDE
out 160,000 in .one day.
; NCNA rrports thai a perspiring
BEN-A")Lliraele of the 111113,"
' peasant pn&kod a loaded wheel. 1:17, 3:49,:21, 9:53.
barrow tola the editorial office
"Here Come The Jets" 12:00,
of a literary magazine reeeaihr.
The', sack was full f manuscripts. ,2:32. 5:04,' 8:36, 10:08.
A' Private's Af fair"
farmer in an KENTUCKY
A
12:00", 3:57, 5:56, 7:55, 9:54.
acold folks home has won wide
claim, the agency says, singing ASHLAND "First Man Into
.Space" 2:17. 5:27. 8:37.
duets with his aged wife.
"The Defiant Ones" 3:33. 6:43,
counties in south
In three
9:53.
Szechwan, it says, nearly every
CIRCLE 25 "John Paul Jones,"

P. Lewis, an assistant professor
of law since 1957, is doing graduate work at Harvard Law School.
Prof. Jay W.' Murphy Is a visiting professor of law from the
University of Alabama. Also teaching here this year are Prof. William M. Lewers who formerly
taurht at the University of Illinois, and Prof. James 8. Kostas.
who . has been practicing law In
Los Angeles.

PIKE

ADULTS ONLY!

"ANATOMY OF MURDER"
if Ono Showing at 7:25

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Sept.

2

30

Aquarium .Is Short OjrFish,
Awaiting New Pullman Car
CHICAGO

Walter

(AP)

H. for tiny tropical salt water fish.
When the 'car is on" tbe move
and laden with fish, water Is cir- culated through both large and
smal tank systems by two pumps.
FUte-fobaggage type doors
permit entry and exit of the large

Chute, director of the John O.
Ehedd Aquarium in Chicago, is in
a pretty kettle of fish.
His aquarium is almost empty
.because the average life of fish in
captivity is l'i to two years and
the old railroad car used to trans- port new supplies of salt water
varieties wore out two years ago.
-It takes time to build a new
one," he said , refully.- - The only
rare fish we have now are flown
in by plane. Some tarts that
should have a. lot of fish in them
only have on or two."
Dr. Chute, 67, has been director of the inland aquarium for 30
years. That's almost as long as
the Jlfe of the., institution Itself.
aquarium's " special" 'rail; The
road car, dubbed Nautilus-1.- : was
retired after 28 years of service.
Its replacement. Nautilus II, will
Pullman For
be ready for service in the spring.
Nautilus II looks like a window-le- a
Dr. Walter IL Chute, director f the Jha G. ghedd Awum,
passenger car.
Inspects Urj--t wooden tanks used to carry salt water fish from
The only way to transport so
coastal ports to Chfcar.
many fish ranging from minnow-size- d
gopy fish to
sharks
is with a railroad car capable
206,028-Acr- e
of traveling with the fastest
passenger trains," Dr. Chute said.
Wood Is used for its 16 tanks
for larger fish because wood is
inert and does not add harmful
HALSEY, Neb. (AP) The Plnchot changed his mind,
Impurities to the water."-- "
world's largest man-mad- e
Today the National Forest 1s a
forest
There are 29 smaller cans and
Ttees In one of the least likely mecca for foresters from all over tanks
'fitted Into an upper berth
places, the Sand ' Kills of north the world. This year visitors have
come from Australia, India, Park- central Nebraska.
plantation was lstan, and Yugoslavia, ' countries
The 206,028-acr- e
the brainchild of a botany pro-- which have the problem of start- Parking
fessor who paid no attention to a tag forests from scratch,
IVhilc the Rose Street parkchorus'of:
Here In th Sand IliQs tbey find ing lot is being paved, persons
"tm cant make trees 'grow ponderosa pine, eastern red and holding parking permits, for that
Rocky Mountain eedar, Asstrlaa lot, may park en Scott Street,
there!'
A hundred years ago Nebraska red and Jack pine. Black Hills 'Boone Alley, or the hew lot on
was noted for its lack of trees, sprue, Russian olive wild plum. College View, behind the
Wagon train parties couldnt find
Half a century after It was
wood
for fires. Settlers built created, 30 million trees grow In
houses of sod because there were the Nebraska National Forest,
Nearly three million have been
no logs.
Sailors Go Air. Force
And In the Sand Hills would-b- e
distributed for planting elsewhere,
OMAHA (AP) A dozen memfarmers gave up trying to plow.
bers of the 1S59 graduating class
The newly furrowed soil just blew
away.
from the U.S. Naval Academy
YM-YWCA
have found the quickest ' way to
Picnic
But an Indian legend told of
trees once having been there and
The YMCA and TWCA will become admirals ' is to join the
Dr. Charles E. Bessey of the Unihave a picnic for aU students Air Force.
The 12, after graduation, were
versity of Nebraska found cedar Thursday. Students will meet in
ponderosa pine along the river the "Y" Lounge at 5:30 p.m. commissioned second lieutenants
and
There will be bus service to the in the Air Force and assigned to
and valleys and In sandstone outLexington reservoir.
the Strategic. Air Command Atlas
cropping in bluffs.
Missile Squadron at Offutt Air
In 1891 Bessey finally talked the
Force Base here.
U.S. Division of Forestry Into sending him some trees for an experiThen Nebraska
Stilt Owns A Horse Brooks commissionedGov. Ralph
each an admental planting. A prairie fire
in the Nebraska Navy. A
miral
destroyed part of them, but the
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. (AP)
admiral" is on a par
rest grew remarkably well.
Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain, the Nebraska
'
with a Kentucky "colonel.
1902 Teddy Roosevelt estab
In
basketball star who will
lished
the Nebraska National be playing for the Philadelphia
Forest.
Warriors this winter, is registered
Will Thompson, music composer
There were still people who as a horse owner. Spooky Cadet of East Liverpool, Ohio, wrote
weren't convinced. Among them will carry his orange and black both "Softly, Tenderly Jesus is
was the great conservation and colors and will be trained try Coming" and "There's a Great
forestry adovate, Gifford Pinchot. Rodney Noel of Baltimore. '
Day Coming."
in isii pincnot, men cnier
forester, told University of Nebraska geologist O. E. Condra he
U
was going to permit the Nebraska
forest to revert to .its original
CAMPUS CREDIT CARD
status, and demanded of Dr.
Condra :
SKop.snd charge in over ISO greater Lexington stores! Get only.
"Do you expect to raise lumber
there?"
....one bill each month for all of your purchases! to grow lumber
"We dont plan
In 'Nebraska." Condra replied.
APPLY FOR YOUR FIRST NATIONAL CAMPUS
"We want trees around qur farm
CREDIT CARD at any First National office, r
and ranch homes, posts to fence
at any member store. It's the quick, easy and
the grating lands, firewood, windAtotmmt J
smart way to shop in Lexington!
breaks, cattle protection, the Sand

Its tanks will be loaded on a
chartered barge, along with a tiny
wooden house to shelter the xrew.
A tug will tow the barge in the
Bahamas where traps will be set
for groupers, butterfly fish, ocean
turbot, and hundreds of other
tanks.
brightly colored tropical fish,
There are accommodations for
After several weeks, barge,
six men comprising a collecting tanks and men will return to the'
party.
NaitUns for the
run to
come spring, the Nautilus is the aquarium alongside Lake
.'!
certain to make a trip to Miami. Michigan.
ot

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* The Military Appraisal
reappraise the
ROTC program, the University Military Science Department is in the
process of conducting a survey of
former UK ROTC students who participated in the Korean War. As
it, the survey is a nationwide one and is apparently designed
to present a perspective of how
ROTC students perform during wartime.
Wherever the idea for the survey
originated, it is at least somewhat noble of the armed forces in any way to
allow itself to be reappraised. This
action, in itself, is highly unusual.
But, in circulating a questionnaire
to UK alumni, the military has asked
a simple question: "If you attended
military classes at the University, did
they help you in active military service?" This question is only one of
many inquiring 'about the student's
military histbry active and inactive.
This is the graduate's chance to ex

In an effort

to

press frankly what he thinks of the
ROTC program and whether it is
justified being taught as a course at
the University of Kentucky or any
other university, for that matter.
The value of ROTC, and especially
compulsory ROTC, has long been
questioned on college campuses..
There are some who rationalize and
say that it is a "good deal," and a way
to get around the bugaboo of military
obligation. Others consider it an efficient method to train officers for the
Army, and give facts and figures to
prove it. Still others say that it is a
means of necessary discipline that the
average "high school punk" needs upon entrance to 'college.
But the alumni who appraise the
ROTC program will be evaluating it
realistically, in the light of experience
during the Korean War. We are anxious to see the results of the reappraisal and if ROTC is actually a
beneficial organization at all.

--

.7

Kernel CarWe

ment. This is accomplished, ideally,
through letters to the editor and the
University Soapbox.,
We invite students and faculty to
comment on any campus or campus-relate- d
topic in the form of letters
or signed articles. In a population of
8,000 or more students, there are no
doubt numerous gripes and commendations. The Kernel, being an
uncensored college paper, offers the
opportunity to publicize both.
The only stipulation is that the letters and soapboxers are not libelous
and are in good taste. The letters
also must be signed but the name
will not be printed if the writer requests that it is withheld. Neither
must they be .too Iaborous in their
content as space problems prohibit
printing of lengthy letters.
.

.

Hr4a

"Achoool"

Education

:

A Common Ground

--

The Soviet minister Said it wouldn't
be seemly for a guest to speak of
things he didn't like in this country,
but he was surprised at how little
American students know about

By G. K. IIODENFIELD

WASHINGTON (AP) -- American
and Russian educators, it seems, have
at least one problem in common: is it
more important for a teacher to know
what to teach, or how to teach?
'
A debate over subject matter versus
methods has been raging in this
country for years. And Vyacheslav
P. Yelyutin, Russian minister of higher
We feel the only way to discover education and secondary specialized
whether your conviction is worthy is education, acknowledged it's an issue
to publicize it. Many times your opin- in Russia, too.
Yelyutin, who toured the country
ion is a legitimate one.
with Soviet Premier Nikita S. KhrushBut do you have one?
chev, is a subject matter disciple.
"A teacher must know his subject
very well," he told a news conference.
"If he knows his stuff, and loves his
A series on" Russia, written by a children, his heart will tell him how
former Kernel staff member, will be- to teach."
But the minister said his colleagues
gin on tomorrow's editorial page.
Don Mills, who graduated from the sometimes differ with him, and Russia
d
course.
University in 1958, toured Russia for is seeking a
Similar efforts are being "made in this
15. days and observed the character
country.
and economy of the Russian people.
Yelyutin said he was impressed with
included in the series are photoAlso
the lively and gay student bodies in
graphs of the Soviet people and their this country and with the dedication
that U. S. teachers have in their work
way' of life.
Mills won a Rotary International' He also was impressed, he said, with
Fellowship upon his graduation and the extensive laboratories and other
studied last year at the University of facilities he has seen in some U. S.
universities and colleges.
Scotland.

Russia.

Do You Have An Opinion?
The Kernel, like any other college
newspaper, attempts to be a medium
for campus opinion and student com-

Br

New Series On Russia

-

middle-of-the-roa-

.

.

"I asked the students about Pushkin (a famous Russian poet) and
they didn't know who he was. On
the other hand, it would be very
difficult to find anyone in Russia who
didn't know about Jack London."
He mentioned Edgar Allen Poe,
Theodor