xt7ffb4wkx28 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ffb4wkx28/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670206  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  6, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  6, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7ffb4wkx28 section xt7ffb4wkx28 Inside Todays Kernel
UK's

pledges

IS. IE DSTxf iE
Vol. 58, No.

91

Amendments making

p

"

WIS-

-

j

provi-

sions lor honor codes and professional school character judgements have heen added to the

student rights and discipline

re-

port of the Senate Advisory Committee on Student Affairs.

The
report, pins
amendments, will be considered
for adoption at a Feb. 13 meeting
of the University Senate.
The amendments concerning
honor
codes and profession
schools were drafted after the
Medical
and Dental schools
voiced strong opposition to the
report at a January Senate meeting. The two schools argued that
the report would hinder them in
making faculty decisions on students' character, morals, and
ethics. The first meeting ended
in a stalemane.
Amendments
proposed now
clarify the Advisory Committee's
position: "This report deals only
with University discipinary offenses and procedures ... it dot s
not cover decisions of the faculty
of a professional school as to the
character, moral or ethical, required of a student for purposes
of awarding a degree or certificate, or for the continuation
as a candidate for such a degree.
W. Carrett Flickinger, chairman of the Advisory Committee,
said the amendment was a statement of what was implicit in the
report, and was merely a clarification.
The amendment also exempt
schools or colleges which have,
or will have an honor code, governed by students with appeal
or approval of the faculty of the
27-pa-

school or college.

The honor code systems would
be exempt from regular disciplinary procedures in the areas of
academic offenses, stealing personal property, or stealing academic material.
The amendments allow the
honor systems to include other
offenses "as are deemed appropriate," but honor systems cannot cover other offenses listed
in the original report, except for
the three specifically mentioned
in the amendments.
Continued On Pace

8

Fire.

Poge

Three historic buildings will go to
make room for the new classroom
tower: Poge Three.

U

J

Eight Pages

V

There is no woy to govern a state
university without political pressures

fraternities announce 304
for the Spring semeiter:

Poge Two.

of Kentucky
University MONDAY. FEB. 6, 19(7
LEXINGTON, KY.,

Amendments
To Rights
Code Ready

19

Brodshaw
signs a
Pennsylvania: Poge

footballer

from

Si.

A UK doctor is doing research on a
drug which is similar to LSD: Page

Editorials comment on the little girls
and the little lawyers: Poge Four.

Seven.

END DRAFT.
16 STUDENT
LEADERS ASK
By WALTER GRANT
Kernel Editor-in-chie- f

WASHINGTON
Leaders of 16 student organizations Sunday
strongly criticized the present draft system and said Congress should
eliminate it.
As an alternative, a majorAmerica and transform the face
ity of the student leaders favored
ofour society."
some form of voluntary national
I
Mr.
Chickering said the
-;
service.
younger generation, the generaAfter a weekend meeting here tion
affected by thedraft,
called by Moderator magazine, "seesdirectly
conscription as an affront
the student leaders agrcedontwo
to the dignity of individual
major points. They were:
choice, and to our willingness
1. "That the present draft
to serve."
system with its inherent injusHe added that no one in government seems aware of "how
The frequent charge that the modern multiv ersity is impersonal with tices is incompatible with trastudents seldom hav ing any personal contact with their teachers has ditional American principles of widespread and deep tuns the
indiv idual freedom w ithin a demresentment toward the draft
resulted from mushrooming class enrollments. An example is Journalocratic society, and that for this
ism 201, etymology, where 400 students arc divided into two secamong young people. No one in
elimtions. So students place papers in a large wooden box in front of reason the draft should be
government seems aware that the
returned as shown inated."
the journalism office, they arc graded, and then
country is in danger of losing
2. "That an
need exthe loy alty of an entire generaby being placed on the floor under signs for each alphabet group. ists within our urgent for
society
young tion of Americans."
people to become involv ed in the
In addition to the joint stateelimination of such social evils ment and
Chickering' s comas ignorance, poverty, racial dissev en of the student lead-

f

The Multiversity?

Government Considering
Novel College Aid Plan
(c) New York Times News Service

A novel plan for financing the cost of college,
under which the student would borrow the money from the government and pay it back in extra income taxes over the course of his
working lite, is under serious discussion within the Administration.
Any college student who main- - auiv niore tjian ne received to
tained a satisfactory academic finance his education. On the
performance would be eligible for other hand, a graduate who enfield or was
government financial assistance. tered a
No decision has yet been made not much of a financial sucto adopt the plan, but the govcess, might not pay the full
ernment has a task force of eduamount back.
cators working on the idea, along
Many details of the plan rewith officials of the Treasury main to be worked out before
Department, the Bureau of the it is formally proposed by the
Budget and the Department of administration if it ever is.
Health, Education and Welfare.
One problem that so far has
A key and unusual feature
the experts stumped is what to
of the idea is that the amount do about women wIkj marry and
of money the student would renever work or work for only a
the government would vary-- as brief period, after finishing their
pay
the income tax itself
education.
on how much the
The seriousness with which
student earned after he finished
the administration is examining
this new college financing idea
college.
A person who had received
was disclosed in general terms
government financial assistance Saturday by Joseph W. Barr, unfor his education and who went dersecretary of the Treasury, in
a speech to the New York Chapon to become a business execucateter of the American Institute of
tive in the $100,000-a-yea- r
gory would pay back consider- - Banking.

WASHINGTON

low-payin-

does-depen-

g

ding

crimination and war."
The students' overwhelming
rejection of the draft is particularly significant since those attending the special conference
represented political opinion
ranging from the far left to the
far right.
Although most of the student
leaders said they could not outline official policies for their
organizations and could speak
only as individuals, the conference nevertheless indicated
widespread opposition to the
draft from nearly every quarter
of student thought, and
political, religious and
social perspectives.
In conjunction with the draft
conference, Sherman B. dickering, publisher of Moderator, announced that his magazine is
organizing a registry for potential volunteers to show that a
national voluntary service is
practical.
Mr. Chickering called the registry which eventually will become an independent
organization "the beginning
of a grass roots movement which
could touch every individual in
many-differen-

non-prof-

it

;':vJ5S
4

FOR WHITES ONLY?

The Scholarship Nobody Wants To Claim

Nobody knows what the Jesse Clark
Scltolarship's worth.
Nobody knows what its specifications
are.

Nobody knows Iww it's awarded.
Nobody knows who awards it.
Not the Dean of Women's office. Not
the office for Financial Aid. Not the
Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority wIkj sent
the announcement to The Kernel.
Not the Theta Mother's Club who
does remember writing checks for the
recipientsbut now Iww much.
Not even Mary Ellen Heller, a Theta,
who brought in a Bulletin Board an-

nouncement aliout the scholarship remem-

bers whether a "whites only" clause was
really there or if it was accurate.
Neither does she remember that at

the time she couldn't "understand" why
The Kernel would not mn the announce
ment with such a specification or that
she "expected" that attitude from the
paper.
(Kernel policy is not to run announce-

ments which are racially discriminatory.)
Mothers Club President Mrs. George
Luigard thinks The Kernel "really ought
to drop" an investigation of the award
because the lady wlo knows something
about it has gone to Florida and will
be gone for two months.
Mrs. R. C. Choate, active in the
Mothers Club, carefully explains how it's
all handled by the Dean of Women's
office. "They have a much better way
of choosing the girls than we do." She
went on. "The selection depends entirely
on them."

Assistant Dean of Women Betty Jo
Palmer differs:
"It's not handled in our office at
all. The only thing we ever get is the
name of the girl who's to receive the
scliolarship." She added that she was
speaking from her five years experience
in the office.
Mrs. Palmer agrees there seems to be
some confusion somewhere, either from
bad records in the Mothers Club or elsewhere in the communications chain.
And, as yet no One remembers anything at all alxmt race being a qualification for receiving the scholarship; no
one, that is, except the reporter wl took
the infonnation from Miss Heller, who
thought the stipulation should be announced "since that's the way it is."

,

t

ments,
ers made individual statements
at a press conference Sunday afternoon.
Continued On Page

8

Six-Progra- m

Theological
For n m Set
An address on theecumenical
movement by the Most Rev John
J. Wright, Roman Cat lio lie bishop
of Pittsburgh, will open a
Theological Forum
.

series here Tuesday .
Sponsored by the Newman
Center in cooperation with the
Theological Forum Committee
and the Office of Religious Affairs, the forum session will begin at 8 p.m. in the Agricultural
Science auditorium at Goper

and

Drive

South Limestone

Street.

The aim of the forum series,
which is open to the public, is
to bring to the campus leaders
and speakers who are making
recognized contributions to theological discussion and debate.
Bishop Wright, member of
the preparatory and theological
commissions of the recent Vatican Council, frequently lectures
before ecumenical, educational
and church groups.
Other speakers will discuss
such current topics as science
and religion; the "death ofGod"
in American literature, and issues
in ct) ntem ik) rary theology and
ethics.
Speakers in the series are, on
Feb. 16, Dr. Ronald McNeur,
study secretary for United Ministries in Higher Education, Philadelphia; Feb. 26, the Rev.
Walter J. Kapica, professor of
Xavier University , Cin2, Dr. Ralph
of English,
professor
Sacred Heart Seminary , Detroit;
March 20, Dr. John Killinger,
Vanderbilt University Divinity
School, Nashville; and April
Dr. Esther Swenson, professor
of religion, Maryvdle College,
history

,

cinnati; March

s,

3--

Tenn.

* H

hi'W('Vw'i

-

2-

I

am j

lie

I

sprinj;
Ai ril

'

ii

V tin

k t (I
r

GAMMA

mi

Ii.itc

ID

N

,i

list

l

plnlcs.
RHO

Aley. Owensboro; Thil
B;tcs, Irvine: Charles E. Blakeman.
Lnncitcr . L. Alan Balkpman. Lancaster; Dmjsls Hay Brown. Georgetown;
Halph Ward Coliirs Jr.. Aueusta John
Samuel Croftmi, Ta lorsviile; Tim J.
Dievcrt. Danville; Johnny Gault. Ashland. David L. Hawkins. Owcnton;
Havward Conrad Havne. George-towTed A. Holbrook. Tine Ridee.
Kobtrt Preston Jackson. Radcliff;
James V. Kelley Jr., Middlesboro;
Hobert L. Klineenfu. Crestwood;
Charles Henry Meng. Ghent; James
Bennett McElroy, Morpanfield; James
William Sparrow, Gravel Switch; Calvin Leslie Spicer. Wilmore; Darwin J.
Thomas III, Tay lorsville; Robert Clinton Van Hook. Stanford; William A.
Wagoner. Mt. Holly, N. J.; Woodrow
Thomas Wilson. Versailles, and Donald Lee Woodward. Pineville.
Mirk

C.

;

ALT II A TAU OMEGA

in

vMm

i

w

'

"

"r'"1

"

-

mm

juj

-

-

--

IVIi. o, IW7

James Cole Strode. Lexington: Thomas V. Sh.ik. Ixineton; Leslie N.
Richardson. Shrlbyville: Rolert B.
Radebaiigh. Chillimthe. Ohio; William
Atterburv Prrrv. Frankfort; Edward
Hudson Oldfield. Mt. Sterling; Samuel
Rush Nicholson Jr.. Louisville.
Douglas McGutre Nruman. Louisville; Timothv Bruce Moore. Covington; Jarr.es Carrick Mitchell. Lexington: Paul Mansfield. Lexington: Jay
Kirk Kittell. Louisville: Robert F.
Houlihan Jr.. Lexington; Allen Womb-we- ll
Greathouse, Midway; Albert L.
Entwistle Jr.. Louisville, and William Owen Crumbaugh. Frankfort.
KAPPA SIGMA
Keith Bohart. Louisville;
JohnEarle Borries. Lexington; Gary
Philip
L. Brickler, Jeffersonville. Ind.; Patrick Lee Class. Tucson. Ariz.; James
Oscar
E. Cleveland III. Ashland:
Gavle House. Tendon: Robert Glenn
Cleveland. Tenn.; . EdJohnson Jr..
win Allen Logan. Frankfort.
Michael Dennis Major. Covington:
Benjamin C. Sewell III. Maysvllle;
David Frederick Stith. Kankakee. 111.:
Daniel Nelson Thomas. Skokie. 111.;
Tucker. Bradfords-vilkTom Thornton
Henrv Lawrence Veateh.
William Warren Weaver,
Carrollton. and William Steven Winfrey. Campbellsviile.
d;

John Roache Cook III. Lexington;
Thomas Arthur Dials. Woodbridge,
Va.; Alfred Clark Fish III. Lexington; Dan Rhorer Glass Jr., Wilmore;
William Dean Gross, Louisville; James
Wesiev Hudson Jr., Lexington; David
Walsh McAlduff, Seminole. Fla.;John
Anthony McGill, Lexington.
Robert Paul Mueller, Covington;
Anthony Kent Oexman, Anderson,
Ind.; Douglas Terry Patterson, Louisville; Michael Wayne Petrey, Louisville; Staddard M. Pickrell Jr.. Prospect; Lawrence Henry Price, Pa- t.
ducah; Dale Warren Tellefsen,
111., and Roger Doty Winthrop.
Elm-hurs-

New York.
DELTA TAU DELTA
Michael
Gene Baldwin, Madison-vill- e:

Charles Kent Hatfield. LexHillenmeyer, Lexington; John W. McCormick
Jones,
ington; Robert
East Lansing, Mich; Johnny G.
Mt. Sterling; John Edward
Mt. Sterling; Clark Lee
Quisenberry, Winchester.
Robert S. Sergent. Lexington; John
S. Shropshire. Lexington; Gary Lee
Shultz. Bloomington. 111.; Edwin F.
Struss III. Louisville; Job Darbin
Turner III. Lexington; James A.
Wade. Lexington, and Frank Letelle
Wilford. Lexington.

Led-for- d,

FARMHOUSE

Barney Osric Barnett, Springfield:
Daniel H. Blevins, Louisa; Michael
White
Carter, Hustonville; John
Wavne Crowder. Owenton; Louis
Frank Elliott. Springfield: Howard
Francis Gardner. Ashland: Joseph Eric
Hinton. Vine Grove; Douglas G.
Overhults. Centertown; John Walter
Reynolds. Perry ville; Charles Daryl
Thurman, Sacramento, and James
Terry Tidwell. Williamsburg.
KAPPA ALPHA
Robert Fielding Young. Bagdad;

CHI ALPHA

LAMBDA

Jonothan Robert Arem. Rochester.
N. Y.: Rodney Vernon Cloyd.
Benny Norris Coffey. Columbia; Eugene Edward Cole. CumGerald Patrick Fields.
berland; Glenn William Ford, Washington. N.J.; Kenneth Irvin Foree,
Bedford.
Freeman Lee Johnson, Dalton, Ga.;
Steven Franklin Koon. Hopkinsville;
Jerrv Lvnn Patton, Louisville; Derek
James Potter. Elk Horn City; Norman W. Preston Jr.. Jenkins; Ronald Paul Stogner. Louisville, and
Terry Lee Studebaker, Dayton, Ohio.
PHI DELTA THETA
Ronald Earl Brown, Louisville: Leslie Keith Cheatham, Fulton: David
Ross Douglas. Louisville; Warren Jay
Gibson. Danville; William Glen Johnson, Louisville; David Harold Koon,
Bowling Green: James Terrence
Louisville: Robert B. Morrison Jr., Louisville: Dannie Lester
Mullins. Somerset.
Christopher B. Piatt. Lexington;
Charles Allen Ratliff. Louisville: Robert Conley Shearer. Somerset; Gerald
Lewis Smith. Louisville: Robert Lee
Templeton. Louisville; William Kenneth Weedman. Cincinnati, Ohio;
David Patton Wheeler, Louisville;
Kip Wicke, Louisville; Roger D. Wilson, Ashland, and Edwin Jon Wolfe,
Louisville.
PHI GAMMA DELTA
Robert Luther Abrams, Russell;
Thomas Benn, Cleveland Hgts.,
Wayne
Ohio; Joseph B. Bogardus, Pikeville;
Carroll Stewart Brown. Louisville;
Victor Clavton Caven, Conover, Ohio;
David Allen Clark. Danville; James
Everett Denton, Hillsboro; Lester
Morn-ingvie-

Farl Downing Jr.. Morganfield; William Leslie Fisher, Russell.
Ronald Ward Fore. Ashland; King
J. Fothergill III. Bellorose. L. I David
Horton Johnson. Dalton, Ga.; Richard
I ,co Kincaid. Louisville; Jeffery Lynn
,
Pikeville; Richard H. Rodger. Bedford; Kenneth Ray Troutman,
Louisville; Alan David Ward. Glasgow, and Arthur Clyde Wotlf. Charleston, W. Va.
PHI KAPPA TAU
Harold Edward Barre, Jr., Owens-borGregory P. Bell, Ashland; Steve
A. Bootes, Louisville; Gordon Moore
T.
William
Campbell. Versailles;
Congleton. Lexington; Joseph Hedges
Ewalt, Bowlind Green; Brian Held
Gorrell, Owensboro; Hubert Gregory
Hume, Maysvllle; Joseph Elias Isaac
III, Lexington; Thomas Michael
Isaacs, Lexington; Robert Abell Kersey, Lexington; James Rhett McGregor. Nortonville; Bruce L. McDonald,
Fair Lawn. N.J.
Robert Meriwether, Paducah; Paul
Edward Mitchell, Frankfort; Wayne
Dwlght Moore. Urbana, III.; John
Wayne Morton. South Shore; Kenneth Carl Pedlow, Indianapolis, Ind.;
Robert Gary Pope, Louisville; Paul
Micha?l Robinson, Louisville; Zenah
Bain Teater, Harrodsburg; David W.
Victor Jr.. Hulen; Otha Eugene Warren, Henderson; Thomas Alan Wilcox, Owensboro, and William B. Willis, Russellville.
PHI SIGMA KAPPA
Joe Calvin Lewis, Glasgow; Darrell
Lee Christian, Louisville; Michael
Gibson Elliott. Hustonville, and David
Jerome Brown, Williamson, W, Va.
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Barry K. Allen, Indianapolis, Ind.;
Kenneth Thomas Baccile, Elmira, N.
Y.; Clarence H. Besten Jr., Lexington; Larry Edward Bird, Norwood,
Ohio; Alex Moreland Blaine, S. Ft.
Mitchell; William Major Busey, Bagdad; James Boyd Downey, Lexington; William H. Green Jr., Mayfield;
Terry Vaughn Grissom. Glasgow;
Harry M. Hadden III, Mt. Sterling;
Daniel Paul Issel, Batavia, 111.; Dennis Robert Joyce, Minoa, N.Y.; William Yates Lansing, Staten Island, N.Y.
Terry Lalosh, Cincinnati, Ohio;
Francis C. La Rocques, Ossining, N.Y.;
Luis Arsenio Morales Jr.. San Juan;
Roger Davis Parks, Kettering, Ohio;
Michael Ransom Pratt, Dayton, Ohio;
Clifton Boyle Sobel, Nashville; Jay
Sparr, Paducah; Terry William Stiles,
Ft. Lauderdale. Fla.; Julian Allen
Taylor. Bardstown; Martin A. Wilson.
Louisville; Charles Laurence Woods,
Paducah, and David Hoyt Woosley,
Louisville.
:

MrC-llum-

SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON
John H. Anderson, Iowa Park, Tex.;
Jerry Geo Bressler, Dayton; Donald
Lee Cornette, Greenville; Thomas M.
Engstrom, Frankfort; Timothy Ray
Futrell, Cadiz; William Robert Gam-bo- e,
Louisville; Steven R. Graves,

Oxford, Ind.; Joe Raymond Hammond, Hornell, N.Y.; Marvin Hopkins
Woodson, Pikeville; James Price Hurt,
Pikeville; Ernest Henry Jones II,
Bowling Green; Jeffrey S. Kerr,
Titusville. N.J.; George Gilbert Lacy,
Colfax, 111.; Arthur Joseph Laib III.
San Francisco, Calif.; Richard V.
Manuel Jr.. Frankfort; Robert Shel-to- n
Martin. South Ft. Mitchell.
James William May, Greenup; Edward Anthony Mayer, Louisville; Guy
Marius Mendes, New Orleans, La.;
Joseph Randall Miller, Benton; Keith
Barton Simmons. Barlow; Chris Thomas Sullivan, Hamden, Conn.;
Paul

CANTERBURY HOUSE
Ash Wednesdaly Services, Feb. 8
5 :00 p. in
12:00 noon
7:15 a.m.

472 Rose Street

OKHLDRfflDTE
... Challenging

Opportunities await Qualified Graduates

1

OtiO
O

i.
5

mn

Pledges For 19 Fraternities Number 304
)rmg

I'mu tvii
.i

uuMtwomiiwiin

lJ

ini.i.i''-n.i,jinniftiiiin--

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Mondav,

tits
in

i

Daniel Wolff,

SKJMA f ill
Wooden
Baker, PailiK'ah ;
William Ralph Duke Jr.. Owensln.ro;
Ronald Lee Ihincan, Louisville; Sonny

Jose ph

Lexington; Robert
Donald Goble. Prestonsl.urg;
Alan
CJwInn Jr., Louisville;
Montgomery Hall. F.liabethtown;
Lewis Hallenl.org, Anchornge;
Rnhfrt
Richard Rodrlrk Honsel. Camp Hill.
Pa Kenneth Lee Kramer, Louisville;
Lambert Jr., Baton
John Harold
Rouge. 1.; Richard Balle.V Lee Jr.,
Madisonvllle; Dwlght Paul Little.
Bartlett

Gaunt,

Janie-Stanl-

;

Marion.
Allen Frederick Montgomery,

.
.
PnlnU-vlll-

Cornelius C;. O'Brien. Ixiuls-villMark Kenneth Reed Jr.. Mate-waW. Va.; Harry M. Stimmel III.
Louisville; Robert Brock Stocker,
Stools Jr.,
Louisville; Robert Lewis W. Tomlin-soBristol. Tenn.; Richard
Camp Hill. Pa.; Stephen Needham
Warren. Louisville; John H. Way III,
Carrollton; George M. Woolwlne,
Princeton, Steven Luther West, Murray, and Bnrry Ward Roister, Lexington.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Bryan Thomas Bunch, Iuisville;
Clarence A. Chaplin, Wilmington,
Dela.; Surur Joseph Dawahare, Pikeville; John Richard Doidgc, Grand
Blanc, Mich.; Glenn Emmett Emig,
Lexington; Bruce Wilson Godfrey,
East Orange, N.J.; David Baxter
Jones, Akron. Ohio; James Hurst
EdKlser, Nashville. Tenn.; George and
ward Robertson. Owensboro,
Roger Clements Troy, Ft. Thomas.

n.

TAU KAPPA

EPSILON

Robert S. Bauermeister, Southgate;

A Links scholarship is being
offered to any junior gui who
would not be able to return to
school next fall without financial aid. Contact Mr. ingles in
Room 4, Frazee Hall by Feb. 10.

Applications for Keys, sophomore men's honorary, are
taken and will be taken
until March 10. Qualifications
are 3.0 overall grade point standing, and a sophomore classification. Send applications to: Bill
Moss, 410 Rose Lane.
now-bein-

YMCA Cabinet elections will
be held Tuesday at 4 p.m. in
Room 111 of the Student Center.
Participants of any Y program
are eligible to vote.

Phi Mu Alpha, men's honorary music fraternity, will sponsor an American music concert
at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Memorial Hall. Admission will be
25 cents.

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
frtck Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel

o

SUBSCRIPTION

1

J

u

Q

(III

ZETA BETA TAU

John J. Wickey, Central Islip, N.Y.;
Gary Neil Seibel, Ft. Thomas; Alan
Ronald Prescott. Great Neck, N. Y.;
Robert Steven Miller, Huntington, N.
Y.; Norman David Katz, Shaker
Heights. Ohio; Mark Steven Hammer,
Lexington; Larry Gayle Godhelff,
Lexington; Martin H. Callncr, Cincinnati, Ohio; Edgar C. Archer, Louisville, and TTeywood Henry Adler,
White Plains, N. J.

Dr. Rozilla

M.

Schlotfeldt,

dean of the Frances Payne Bolton
School of Nursing at Western
Reserve University, will speak
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
hospital auditorium of the Medical Center. She will discuss "Education For Service The Coal
In Nursing.''
As of this week the gravel
parking lot immediately behind
(east) of the Medical Center, pre-

lot, will be consently a "B-C-"
verted to a "C" commuter student lot. The commuter spaces

presently located in the Washington Avenue lot and the Agriculture Science Center lot will
be removed to this new commuter
lot.
A jam session sponsored by
Pershing Rifles and Kentucky
Babes will be held from 3 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Wednesday, in Buell
Armory. The Marauders will be
featured. Admission is 50 cents
per person.

The Craduate Education Club
will meet at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday,
in Room 109 of Dickey Hall.
The speaker, Dr. Ivan Russell,
will discuss guidelines for dis-

sertation proposals.
ments will be serv ed.

Refresh-

RATES

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
KERNEL

$8.00
$.10

Ken-tuckia-

TELEPHONES

Editor. Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk

Advertising, Business,
Circulation

2321

....

All women living in residence
Halls (except Complex 5) and
Do ik) van, the Quadrangle, and
Haggin Hall must make appointments immediately for
sittings by calling 2S25
or going to the Photographer
Service in Room 214, Journalism

2320
2447
2319

Building.

snploymeroi

Management positions with exceptional
opK)rtunities and continuing advance
inent for outstanding graduates in business administration, economics, account
ing, engineering and related fields.
On campus interviews will be conducted February 9 from 9 a.m. to
p.m. Please consult
ment service.
4

MM

THETA

Jerome Francis Conway, Pittsburgh,
Pn.; David Mar Devers, Livingston,
Tenn.; Jesse Lee Jones. Clinton;
Thomas Bradley Price, Lexington,
and Danny Kay Stockton, Albany.
TRIANGLE
John Timothy Burkhardt, South-gatDonald Ray Clemons, Leitch-fielSamuel Adair Cropper, Vance-burRobert Jamei Durlnka, Buffalo. N. Y.; Timothy James Enterllne,
Portsmouth. Ohio; Philip R. Feigel
Jr., Lexington; John Bowler Fuller,
Lexington; Thomas Lynn Hall, Bardstown; Darroll Lee Hawkins, Louisville.
Stuart Kammer, Bowling
Donald
Green; Dale Ray Legg, Habit; Wayne
Lucas, Georgetown; Kenneth
Taylor
T. Overturf, Ft. Knox; Frederick Allan Payne, Hardlnsburg; Wayne Sellers Redding, Ft. Iauderdale, Fla.;
Dan Curtis Roby, Paducah; Dwlght
Ronald
Morton
Ross,
Centertown;
Frvin Seibel, Florence, and Anthony
Lee Watkins, Hopkinsville.

J'

. ir

your place-

GENERAL TELEPHONE
COMPANY

J.

fa

ri

"r- -

N.

1915.

Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

a

Douglas Leigh Bowman. Fayettevllle,
N.Y.; Philip Tucker Hand, Jutland.
N.J.; Ted Bryant Herbert, Louisville;
Ira Harvey Herman, Huntington, W.
Va ; James K. Kennedy III, Louisville,
nnd David Edward Norat, Clifton,

UK Bulletin Board

since

o

Jo

Richard Wagner. Louisville; Thomas
Mills Watklns III. Ashland; Itlc li;rl
nml "tt
Spurr Webb IV. Lexington,
Ft. MM'hell.

OF KENTUCKY

AS fcOUAL OI'KMTUMTY

LMl'LOYEH

Op porta oties

ARE OPEN FOR THE FALL
MEN'S RESIDENCE HALL

ADVISORY STAFF
Applications may bo picked up at the
Men's Residence Hall Office
109 Kinkcad Hall

Applications will be accepted through Feb. 15

n

* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Mond.iv.

Irk

(, lH7

t

Th ree Buildings Coming Down
To Make Way For Neiv Toiver
By SUZANNE

classrooms, campus expansion,
and the general crowded condi-

BIEEITER

Eighty-fiv- e
years ago White
Hall and Patterson House, two
of the first three buildings on
the University campus, were established. This spring they will
be destroyed.

tions, no one questions the destruction of these landmarks and
their replacement by a better
complex. Their
history is sufficient proof that
they have served their time.
In 1880, under the direction
classroom

With talk today of portable

j

V"

.W--

of Trcsidcnt James K. Patterson,
the Agricultural and Mechanical G)Ilege of Kentucky pnjosel
the construction of three build-ingat the wst of $33,000. A
classroom building, a dormitory,
and a president's home, now
s

called

respectively

Anderson

Hall, White Hall and Patterson
House were built.
The Lexington Leader, at that
time, rex)rtetl the bricks used
for the construction were "handmade from the school'sown soil."
And that, "fifty hands were present to help, including President
Patterson's janitor, Pierre."
The dedication ceremonies, in
1882, drew crowds from far and
near. The legislature was invited
to attend in a body and, with
few exceptions, the members responded. This was the first visit
by a legislative body since the
Civil war.

"When one reads of the flow
of wine at the banquet in the
evening,

CARNEGIE MUSEUM: Served

As

it

is not to be won-

dered that they came with alacrity," speculated one of the
local papers of that time.
Henry Wattcrson expressed
that the dedication was a step
in "regaining the glory of the
former days when Clays and
commanded the council
of the nation."
In 1919, the growing University transformed the "old dormitory" into classrooms to meet
its needs. This was the same
year that the bell system replaced
the old steam siren which would
burst forth every hour to mark
the end of classes.
Soon after this, in 1922, Walter
Patterson moved into Patterson
House, following the death of
his brother, President James Pat- -

First Library

Crit-tende-

i

JflqnqLj a. Li

EVERY

ONE SHIRT FREE WITH EVERY

SHIRT LAUNDERED

mi

ping-pon-

m

f

in

Phone

255-431-

4 sir
7!

-

Ocular

.

102

etanc)

gal.

EAST MAIN AT WOODLAND

Open 6:00 a.m.

Move up to an exciting career and the
Florida way of life with Martin Company
in Orlando, Florida. Immediate openings
for graduates with BS, MS, and PhD

degrees

11:00 p.m., 6 days

CASHED . WITH 10 CAIDS

V

in:

Electronics
Aeronautical
Engineering Mechanics

Mathematics
Mechanical
Physics

MW'ft INTERVIEWS

.f MY

i

ON CAMPUS
FEBRUARY 6

Hi!
MOVE

UP WITH MARTI H

gal.

FARMER MOTOR Co.

WEALTH OF OPPORTUNITY

AT MARTIN

'U

eta"c)

0

g,

FOR ENGINEERS & SCIENTISTS
COMPANY IN FLORIDA!

3

If

94

I

One Of Hours

A

You Can Pay More ...
Can You Buy Better?

J
J

ft

I

w

ONE DAY SERVICE

CARE DRY CLEANING

CHECKS

i

100 COUPONS

116 W, Maxwell

Ethyl

in')"lii,T lUti

i

CROlLEY'S

Regular

in

OFFER LIMITED!

START NOW!

COLOR

"

I

FREE Van Hcuscn SHIRTS
WITH

- "n'mnT'n
Trt irimtiiKi mm
imi
.r.
n..lt, j
WHITE HALL: One Of First Three Buildings
tcrson. Walter, being fond of anthe house was made into thedean
imals, enfenced an area in the of Arts and Sciences' Office. Patback yard where he kept hogs terson House was vacated this
and other such animals. This year.
A third building, Carnegie Liprovided a lovely, niral view
for those people visiting the adbrary, constructed in 1906 will
also meet the end of its hisjoining library.
White Hall, named afterjames tory this year. This building was
Garrard White, was further re- the first library on campus and
modeled, in 1929, to accommo- was built through the funds of
date commerce and economic Andrew Carnegie, the steel magcourses.
These classes were nate and philanthropist. It was
taught there until 1964 when the completed in 1909 and housed
building was converted to oilice over 3,500 volumns. It has conuse and the College of Com- tinued to remain a storehouse
merce moved to its own building. for records and a substitute liPatterson House also under- brary through the years and has
went a face lifting about this same recently served as an anthropotime to house "the center of all logy museum.
These buildings now stand
coed activitieson campus." However, this project ended in 1939 ready to be leveled to make way
when the old house again for progress the unavoidable fuchanged roles to provide housing ture of all buildings in a growfor the University of Kentucky ing society.
Club.
The "Faculty Club," as it
BOOKED BY
IV ENTERPRISES
was better known, offered
dining, kitchen facilities
and a lounge for any member
of the faculty who could manage
277-743- 0
277-662- 0
the $10 per year fee. This continued until the early I960' s when

in

p

PATTERSON HOUSE: First President's Home

GET A COUPON

r

ORLANDO

FLORIDA

An Equal Opportunity

Employer (M&F)

* The Kentucky Kernel
Mi?

TAD LIS II ED 1894
I'.dilorials

The Smith's Outstanding ('ollege Daily
Umu hmiy of Ki mi c kv

represent tfic opinions of the I'.ditors, not of the
Wai

Sum Homo,

I'.ditorinl

ti

h M.

Cluwr,

l'.ditur-l-

Voe Editor

n

The Kernel remains unconvinced on the question of women's
hours despite the
vote
of women living in University hous"
ing that they oppose any
policy.
six-to-o-

"no-hour-

We maintain, as we have in
the past, that the University should
view the woman student in the
same light as the male as a grown
up person who can set her own
hours and govern her own life.
This, unfortunately, is not the
case. And the AWS poll would indicate that the women themselves
do not want to be treated in this
manner.
The reasons they give, both publicly and privately, are interesting.
The most overwhelming female response is that hours provide security. Coeds argue that if they
are out with some "clod" they
can be secure in the knowledge
that they have to be in at a given
hour and need not suffer longer.
In addition, they argue that Lexington is not a safe place for a
young woman to be at night.
The first reason and as we said
it is amazingly widely held is a
sign of gross immaturity.
The University, we maintain,
does not have the responsibility
to provide this type of security
for the coed who wishes to be relieved of the management of her
life.

The very fact that over 200
women believe there should be no
hours for women does, we feel,
indicate that AWS should, in fact,

I

'niu

isity.

Chi( f

William

The Liltle Girls

...

FEH. 6. Iffi7

MONDAY,

Knai-c-

,

Htisiness Manager

...

lift the hours. The two thousand
women who feel there should be
hours would then be free to come
and go when they like, just as
the 200 who want no hours would
be free to set their own schedule.
In addition, we fail to see how
the AWS poll can be said to be
entirely va