xt7fqz22ct2h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fqz22ct2h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19480702  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, July  2, 1948 text The Kentucky Kernel, July  2, 1948 1948 2013 true xt7fqz22ct2h section xt7fqz22ct2h The Kentucky ECernei

Read Cat Game
Play - By - Play;
Page Four

Sunny And Warm;
High Of 88

Beat The Oilers!

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXXVIII

LEXINGTON,

2246

NUMBER 31

KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1948

Seek Revenge
After Tulsa Setback

University Awaits
Budget Decision
$4,526,000 Asked
For New Buildings

Certs

Cast Rehearses
For First Play

University
today awaited
word from the powerful State
Building Commission to get the
answer to UK's
million dollar resuest for new buildings.
The Commission, meeting for the
first time, is to decide whether the
state will build the planned structures on the campus.
According to Comptroller Prank
D. Peterson, who expressed hope
that the commission would grant
UK's request, the University is ask-ilor the following amounts: "
For a new science building,

The

In

Parking Permits Ready
Those who applied for parking
permits should pick them up i the
office of the Dean of Men st once,
Dean A. B. Kirwan announced.
spaces
There are still sixty-fiv- e
that are unassigned. Students who
live on the outskirts of Lexington
.
should apply for these spaces no--

NewTheater

Reherarsals for the Gutgnol play
"John Loves Mary" are now going
on at the temporary theater building on Euclid Avenue, with Conrad
Richardson and Marianna Look
playing the lead parts of John and

"

Mary McKinley.

Others in the cast are Joe Dress
as Fred Taylor, Allan Watson as
Oscar Dugan, Kenneth Scott as
Senator McKinley, Maxine Perrine
as Mrs. McKinley. Tom Perkins as
new College of Pharmacy Lt. Victor O'Leary, Beth Caddy as
For a
building in Lexington, (400.000.
Lily Herbish. Jewell Doyle as Mr.
For half the cost of a new men' Beechwood. and Arthur Viehman
dormitory. $950,000.
as Gen. Bid die.
For half the cost or a new womAlthough some positions have
en's dormitory. $375,000.
been filled, the staff is not yet
For half the cost of a second complete, Wallace N. Briggs, Guig-n-

V)

n;

ol

women's dormitory. $400,000.
For a central dining room and
kitchen to feed the 1200 girls in the
four dormitories. $600,000.
For a new boiler and heating
mains and general enlargement of
the power plant, $500,000.
will
How much the University
pet of its request will be decided
at the Commission meeting.
If it receives the entire amount,
UK will have more money being
spent on its behalf than ever before.
UK's biggest budget. $6,888,377.26
went into effect yesterday.
The budget, voted by the Board
of Trustees Friday, does not include
the nearly five million dollars sought
by the University from the .State
Building Commission.
Lost year's budget, calling for
$6,888,129.23, was a record one up to
now, and appears about the same
as the new budget.
But the new outlay actually tops
the old one by $784,248.03. because
the 1947-4- 8 budget included $784,000
in building funds.
Most of the money in the new
setup. $426.750.81, will go to the
Division of Colleges.
Outside Agriculture work not directly connected with University
courses proper will take the next
liiehest sum.
services,
Agriculture
Extension
including county agents and home
demonstration agents, will require

director, said.
Bill O'Bannon win be the stage
manager and Mary Lyons the business manger. The electrician .will
be James Sterner. Laura Lyons will
serve as property manager, and
John Mar low will be the house
manager. Claude Jackson will design the sets.
The play is scheduled for a week's
run beginning July 26. It will be

presented in the temporary

play-

Ays

A

All--

'Carmen' Trip
To Be Offered

"

r-M-

m,

.

nt

ington.

Gloria Garner and Ruth Vest
were among ten college students
chosen from throughout the country by the Henry Street Settlement
to take training at its Play School
in New York City.

Free Tour Is Planned
A free

Wednesday

tour of Bluegrass farms
is being sponsored

by

the Student Union. Miss Margaret

Bruce Cruise announced.
All students who whish to make
the tour must sign up at the information desk in the Student Union
Building before Tuesday noon.
Those who are making the tour
will meet at 1:15 pjn. Wednesday
in the Student Union Building.

i....:,.,

L

-

"

...

Reach

-

60-5- 2.

Health Workshop
To Begin Monday
Health Workshop will
Monday, sponsored by the
healdepartments of hygiene-publ- ic
th and physical education, in
with the Kentucky Tuberculosis Association.
A

two-we-

ek

Teachers from at least
tucky counties will attend.

50 Ken-

Nationally known persons from
Kentucky health departments, colleges, and the Tuberculosis Association will take part in the workshop,
according to Dr. C. W. Hackensmith,
workshop supervisor and associate
physical education professor.
The Association is granting scholarship aid to teachers in various
districts throughout the state. Dr.
Don Cash Sea ton, physical education
department head, stated.
Dr. Sea ton and Dr. J. S. Chambers
head the departments sponsoring
the meeting.
Assisting in directing the workshop will be Miss Martha Van
Meter, of the State Department of
Public Health, and E. B. Whalen
of the State Department of Public

Instruction.

138

Mark

Seventeen all-students from
the College of Education brought
the spring quarter's perfect standing
total to 138.
All other colleges announced their
3.0 standings last week, except the
College of Pharmacy which is on the
semester system and has not yet
listed its students with perfect
"

Library Workshop
Begins Third Week

records.
No Classes Tomorrow
stuCollege of Education all-dents are Victor Bruner, Mildred
Any student who cuts a class toCooper, Marie
Haick, Margaret
day or Monday will have one
The Library Workshop for begin- Hartley, Wanda Hodge, Alvis Hunt,
a quality point ning librarians finished its second Flem Justice, Helen Kemp, JoseSemester hour and
added to his requirements for week with Miss Mary Routh Buch- phine King, Nina McLaughlin, John
graduation.
anan of the Enoch Pratt Library, Carlisle Myers.
Marjorie Norfleet, William Padon,
The recorder's office stated that Baltimore, as director.
a student might petition in the
Consultants this week are Miss William Ralph. Ruby Riddle. Carita
office of the dean of his college Frances Jane Torter, director of the Roach, and Margaret Wright.
for an excuse in case of his illness Kentucky State Library Extension
or a death in the family.
Service, and Miss Elizabeth Gilbert,
All classes will be dismissed and librarian at Berea College.
all offices closed tomorrow, Dr.
Other speakers of the week are
H. L. Donovan announced.
Mr. Gordon C. Godbey, of the
Aids section of the UK
The University will soon inaug
extension department. Dr. Howard urate a broad program of community
Beers, rural sociology department, improvement as a result of the
and Miss Azile Wofford of the De- merger yesterday of the community
Library Science.
service department of the Committee
The University ROTC rifle team partment of
for Kentucky and the University's
recently amassed a tot of 7,711
Social Research Consultation Ser
points out of a possible 8,000xto win
vice.
the National Army ROTC champThe project, financed by a $20
ionship. Col G. T. MacKenzie anThe social director's office has 000 allottment by the University
nounced.
bee,n moved from room 121 of the Board of Trustees and a similar
All college and university senior
Building to room 122. grant from the General Education
ROTC units in the United States Student Union
were represented in the nations.! Miss Margaret Bruce Cruise, social Board, will be directed by Dr. Irwin
T. Sanders, head of the Department
match, either in direct competition director, said.
The YWCA office which formerly of Sociology, and Dr. Howard Beers.
or by virtue of their defeat in army
occupied room 122 has been moved head of the Department of Rural
area elimination matches.
Sociology.
Competition was organized on the to room 119.
Dr. Sanders said today that the
basis of a
These changes are permanent
team with the
new project offers an opportunity
10 highest scores being counted.
beginning yesterday.
for advanced students in the University to do field work in Kentucky
communities and get an understand
ing of the forces which influence
Kentucky life.
"It is a chance for internship, and
offers valuable training for people
interested in going into a number
of lines of work", he said.
Dr. Sanders pointed out that the
The University library, recently'
renamed the Margaret I. King Li- the Department of Library Science. new program will enable the University to be of even greater service
brary, is one of the few buildings in
1929, ground to every community in the state,
In the summer
the history of the University to be was finally broken of for
new and in this way fulfill one of the
the
named for a living person.
Same year,
The Board of Trustees, in a re- building. That New York CityMiss major purposes of the University.
to The new project will continue and
King left for
cent meeting announced the renamone-ye-ar
graduate course at expand services previously offered
ing of the library and "of the Bio- take a
logical Sciences Building, which the Columbia University School of by the two agencies, including:
1. Consultation with residents of
from now on will be known as the Library Service, from which she
received her bachelor of science de local communities on methods in
William D. Funkhouser Biological gree.
community Improvement.
Sciences Building.
2. Conducting workshops in comWhen she returned to Lexington,
In requesting the renaming of
On
the library. Dr. H. L Don)vai the library was well under way. was munity organization.
3. Teaching community
leaders
October 23, 1931, the building
said Miss King had almost
built it into one of the finally dedicated. All the books were methods of community
4. Establishing
a clearing house
best in the South, now having over moved from the old building to their
present sbode. It had been so of information on Kentucky com400,000 books.
crowded before that even the base munity development.
Served Since 1912
'
ment was packed with books.
Miss King, who is to relinquish
During her time here. Miss King
her post as chief librarian in Sep- was president of the Kentucky Li
tember, has been on the campus brary Association from 1926 to 1927,
longer than any other person, and and
of the rame or
has served in her present official ganization in 1917. She is a member
capacity since 1912.
of Phi Beta Kappa, Mortar Boaro,
A native Kentuckian. Miss King the American Library Associati"n,
was born in Lexington in 1879. and and the Kentucky Education Assoraised in the midst of the recon- ciation.
By Helen Deiss
struction period after the war beCampus Grows
The University won't be hit too
tween the states. "There wasn't
The University has grown quite a hard by the peacetime draft.
much money around then." she re- bit since she was a student, says
"No major shock is expected."
calls.
Miss King. But. she adds, the cam- President H. L Donovan said, "esShe received her bachelor of aits pus has grown faster in the pi.i ten pecially in the coming school
degree here in 1898, at the age of years than ever before.
After that, the president said lie
19. In 1905 she was appointed regisWhen she was a student, the expects
slight leveling-ofin entrar of the University and secretary campus consisted o f White Hall, rollment, a but still no realf ill elects.
to the president.
Frazee Hall, the Anthropology MuOther University officials fcpreed
seum, Miller Hall, and Neville Hall. that the draft's effect on UK would
Patterson President
Buiding was probably be slight.
Dr. Kennedy Patterson was Uni- The Administration
versity president at that time, sie the only other building around, with
For one reason, inductions will
remembers, and he asked her to the exception of a few smaller not start until Sept. 22, or 90 days
structures.
organize the library, which was then
from the signing dates Juno 25.
The president at that time lived Since the University opens Sept. 14.
housed in the building where the
where the Faculty Club is now, and school will already be in session, and
anthropology museum is now.
Dr. Henry S. Barker, the new Stoll Field was somewhat of a the act lets college students finish
president succeeding Dr. Patterson, botanical garden. There was a pond a current school year if called.
preferred to have her remain as where the Student Union Building
Large Veteran Enrollment
secretary to the president. So, from now Is located.
A major cushion against any posNaturally, in this time. Miss King
1910 to 1912, Miss King worked in
the president's office and at . tha has seen quite a few students pass sible shock from the draft is the
same time helped to get the library through this school. But as far as heavy veteran enrollment. Of the
she is concerned, they have changed approximately 5600 men who regison its feet.
and flap- tered in an average quarter Ian
In 1912, she was appointed chief very little. Bobby-soxeyear, the Veterans AdmmisU ation
librarian, a post she has held ever pers are one and the same to her.
said about 4200 were veterans. Most
since. In those days she had all of
Students Praised
of these won' be touched by the new
two people to help her with her
She does believe, however, that law.
duties, both students. The.e was today's students do "have their feet
Many a UK eligible was said to
a girl for day duty, and a boy dur- on the ground more." She pays paring the evening.
ticular tribute to veterans' wives have taken advantage of the last
Little by little the library grew for ' the helpful work they have minute rush for the NationaKGuard.
Besides that. President Truman
under Miss King's guiding hand. done on the campus.
By the time the "roaring twenties'
Miss King will leave her job in may set up special deferments fi r
rolled their noisy way in, the library September to make room for Dr. students in some fields of scientific
had expanded until the building it Lawrence S. Thompson, head li- study.
was in could no longer contain it. brarian at Western Michigan ColEventual Increase
New Bufiding Started
Dr. Donovan said he even exlege. She will serve as assistant
Plans were drawn up for a new librarian until her retirement ntxt pected the act to cause a slight upswing in enrollment eventually, in
building to house the library and year.
A

Service Program

Audio-

Result Of Merger

-Visual

ROTC Wins Title

Offices Are Moved

an

r

UK Library Renamed
To Honor Miss King

single-handed-

yes-fess- or

Eleven students from the Jepvt-meof social work will take pert
in summer camp activities. Prof.
Harold E. Wetzel, head of the department, announced.
Specialists in group work at the
summer camp of the Henry Street
Settlement, New York City, ii elude
Mary Lee Stamper, Marjorie Hall.
Patricia Williams, and Katherine
Webb.
Nell Martin will be at Hull House
Camp, near Chicago; Dolores Shai-- k
u n at Tall Trees Camp. Rock
Haven. Ky.; Sam Huey at Camp
Michigan; and Helen Marcus at the South Carolina Girl
Scout Camp. Ruth Allison is serving as day camp director in Lex-

rvaL

Three members of the United States Olympic basketball squad get into this fast action shot taken at
series Wednesday night. Cliff Barker (23) and Kenny Rollins (26), of
the first game of the
Kentucky, try to stop Lew Beck, speedy Phillips forward, from coming in for a fast 'crip' shot. The national AAU champs from Bartlesville, Okla. defeatsd the Wildcats, national NCAA titleholders,

Dean Edward Wiest. retiring dean
of the College of Commerece. was
presented with a portable radio by
the colege at a dinner given in his
honor Tuesday night.
Dr. Frank L McVey, president
emeritus, and President H. L Donovan each gave a short testimonial

Social Work Students
To Assist At Camps

Standings

A

College Presents
Radio To Wiest

charge of the dinner's program and
served as master cf ceremonies.

A

For Spring Term
ZrsZ-- .kn--

ly

is.

i

-

1-

-

J

& v if v" I

Prof. Elvis J. Stahr

Dr. Louis A. Pardue

Stahr And Pardue Appointed
Law, Graduate School Deans
Dr. Louis A. Pardue and Elvis J.
Stahr, professor of law, were chosen
the new deans of the Graduate
School and College of Law at a
Board of Trustees meeting Friday.
Dr. Pardue,

professor

of physics

and atomic research specialist, was
appointed to succeed the late Dr.
William

D. Funkhouser,

who died'

last month. His appointment became effective July 1.
Prof. Stahr succeeds Dean Alvin
E. Evans, who will assume a change
of work status in accordance with
the University age and service policy. The appointment is scheduled
to take effect on September 16.
Dr. Pardue was graduated from
the University with an A.B. degree
in 1925 and received a master's degree two years later. The new Grad- uate School dean attended Yale
University and received the doctorate degree in 1931.
He later specialized i n atomic
science while studying advanced
physics at the California Institute
of Technology and University of

Pre-Olym-

pic

Still looking for a Victory against the towering,
Phillips 66'ers, the Kentucky Wildcats tangle
"Worht-Serie- s
with the Oilers in the second of the three-gam- e
of Basketball," as it is being hailed in the West, tonight at 8 o'clock in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium.
In the opener, night before last, the Oilers trimmed the
2
before 7,000 fans in Tulsa.
Cats
60-5-

A

V

begin

house.

The Student Union and the Music
Department will be
of
a special bus to Cincinnati on July
23 for persons wishing to attend
the opera "Carmen" in the Cincinn
ati Zoological Garden.
Principal roles of the opera will
be sung by Charles Kullman and
Lucia Evangelista of the Metro
politan Opera Company.
Those who will make the trip
must sign up and pay $2.50 for
round trip transportation at room
122 in the Student Union Buoilding
before noon July 10. Tickets to the
opera range from $1.50 to $3.50.
The capacity of the bus will de
termine the number of persons who
may attend, so only those who sign
$1,439,096.54.
up first will be able to make the
The Agricultural Experiment Sta- trip.
tion gets $922,529.81.
The bus will leave Lexington at
The next major item in the program calls for $60,000 for research. 2:00 pjn. and return after the
performance.
Half of the amount will be used
for the study of coal in the Engineering Experiment Station, and
half will apply to general research.

address.
Aimo Kivinieml and Miss Ruth
Plnnell of the Department of Music
sang.
Dr. Wiest was named dean when
the College of Commerece was formed in 1925. He was succeeded
in the College of Commerce,
lessor in the Colege of Commerece.
When asked about his future
plans. Dr. Wiest said that he tentatively plans to travel and write.
Prof. R. D. Mclntyre was in

To Meet Phillips Oilers Tonight
Game
In Second

-

the site of one of the largest collections of radioactive materials.
Dr. Pardue has been associated
with the University since 1924, when
he was appointed a student assistant in the Department of Physics.
He was the central figure in a
test suit that ended In a decision
by the Court of Appeals that University professors do not come under the Constitutional salary limitation.
Stahr OuLstardin; Student
Professor Stahr, a native of Hickman, was graduated from the University in 1936 with high distincrection. He maintained an all-ord for his four years in the University and was awarded the Balfour National Award. Sullivan Medallion, and Rhodes Scholarship.
He attended Oxford University in
England as a Rhodes Scholar and
received the degrees of bachelor of
arts In jurisprudence, bachelor of
civil law, and master of arts.
Following graduation, he accepted
a position with a
Wall
Street law firm. He spent four years
during the war as an infantry officer and received four decorations
from the American and Chinese
governments for his service as a
A

well-kno-

California.
Nationally Recognized
His achievements in the field of
physics has gained considerable
national attention. When war broke
out, he was made research associate combat liaison officer in China.
at the University of Chicago and Dr. Donovan paid tribute to Dean
later became a senior physicist on Evans, and thanked him for the
the Manhattan Project.
good work he has done in making
He rose to the position of physi- the Law College one of the betser
cist in charge of all natural radio- schools of its kind in the United
active sources at Chicago, which was States."

Clark To Teach
In Austrian School
Dr. Thomas ,D. Clark, head ofthe Department of History, will
leave Tuesday. July 13 for Europe
to instruct a summer course at the
Seminary in Salzburg,
Salzburg

Austria.
He has booked passage on the
Lord's Atlantic airline from New
York to Zurich, Switzerland.
The class, which will deal with
the "History of the New South,"
lasts from July 15 to August 31.
It will be composed of only European students, but will be taught in
English.
Both classes and living quarters
for students and teachers will be
situated In Schloss Leopold's Krone,
which means "the Castle of Leopold's Crown," Dr. Clark explained.
"The main objective of this and
other courses in American studies
is to teach and translate as clearly
as possible to European students
and teacher, the meaning, of Ameri- -

rs

tucky could connect for only 17
goals In 67 attempts for 25.3 per
cent average, while the 66'ers were
hitting 21 out of 57, slightly below
37 per cent. For the regular season
both teams hit about 30 per cent of
their shots, so it is obvious that the
Oilers were hot and the Cats cold,
when it came to shooting.
The man who will have to turn
the tide in Kentucky's favor tonight
is Ralph Beard, the lad who notch- -

agamst
m the
Olympics play-off- s.
Beard was held
The plan, under the jurisdiction to a single field goal Wednesday
of the Harvard Student Council, is night.
ic
The Oilers threw up a
in its third year of successful operadefense around him, and on
tion.
top of that Ralph was slowed down
Student WiU Assist
Dr. Clark will have as a compan- a great deal by leg trouble. The
ion and aid a University graduate Oilers will probably find Beard is
student. Will Frank Steely, from one lad you cant beat twice in a
row. for should he be back in top
Hazel. Ky, who ras already left.
completion
Following
of the form tonight, the rest of the Cats
course, they expect to spend a few merely have to match their perweeks travelling in Switzerland. formance in the first game to hruig
France, Italy. Oermany, and Eng- home the victory.
land. Both will return aboard the
The Oilers had a slight psycholog
USS America.
ical advantage in the Tulsa game,
family will for they were playing before a horns
Dr. Clark's wife and
reside in Winnsboro, SC at the crowd, and they were worked up to
home of her parents during his ab- peak form to put in a great show
sence. He will spend a few days before the home crowd. The Kansas .
with them there before his depart- City game will be played before a
ure.
neutral crowd on a neutral floor, so
neither team will have an advantage there.
to revenue thejr
loss in the finals of the Olympic
Is
trials cost the Cats dearly. Excessive
fouling sent Boryla, Jones and HolA constitution and
of the land out of the game in the second
Education Club have been half. Both teams were credited with
Graduate
submitted to the University faculty poor
because of the
for approval. Frank Bean, newly-elect- sticky heat, but the Wildcats made
president of the orginiza-tio- n, far more mistakes than their opannouced Tuesday.
ponents and muffed many
The purpose or t;ie club, accord- opportunities on fast breaks scorin?
by bad
ing to Bean, is to promote personal passes.
and professional growth of graduate
Outstanding for Kentucky in the
students in the College of Education.
Other officers chosen by the first game were Alex Groza, who
Bob Kur-iancharter members were Robert Meyer, outscored the Seven-foand held him on even terms
Miss Julia Williams,
secretary and treasurer, and Dr. in rebounding; Vice Boryla, who in
the minds of most observers counterLeonard E. Maece. advisor.
Meetings will be held in the balanced the presence of Oakland's
the second and fourth Tuesday of Don Barksdale on the Oilers squad;
each month when school is in ses- and Wallace Jones, playing an excelgame.
sion.
lent
Any students enrolled in the
Graduate School with a major or
minor in Education, or who are 155
takin one or more courses in the
College of Education, are eligible
ter-riff-

Graduate Club
Organized

ss

by-la-

ed

ot

d,

ROTC Men"

for membership.

Little Shock Expected
From Peacetime Draft

nt

-

In one sense this is the most important game of the series for should
they lose tonight, they lose the series
regardless of the outcome of the
third game here July 9. If they win.
however, the home game becomes
the rubber game of the series, tied
up at one-al- l.
If the Cats win tonight they will
have to show great improvement
over their performance Wednesday
night. Although every player who
entered the game played a strong
defensive game and did well on the
boards considering the Oilers superior height, the Cats were far below
their regular form in shooting. Ken-

3-

Attending Camps

One hundred and fifty fiv advanced course military s "lnce students of the University have been
attending ROTC suririer ramps at
three different locations since June
20.

These military scieno studrnU
will have sis r.eeks of intensive
field training.
Col. G. T. MacKenzie, cnnniitid-a- nt
of the reserve officer training
case the GI bill was made to apply
units at the University, reported
to peacetime draftees.
69 of tns students were asNo GI Bill provisions were written that
Camp Campbell. Ky, lor
into the present law, however, and signed to training.
the Veterans Administration ha3 re- infantry
. The military students of this unit
ceived no word of an impending are covering
practical wort in nil
action on the matter.
on
theoretical stuaies with emph:r-.At any rate, officials concluded tactics and opeiation of various
that since there would be no whole- weapons.
between 200.100 and
sale drafting
At Camp Campbell, actual demon250,000 the first year
the Uni- strations in terrain iraneuvri are
versity would be lightly hi:.
being shown the students.
ho are
While a few students and num- divided into tactical uruts umIit
ber of would-b- e
students Jut out of student commaiKiei'S to give all
high school will feel the tap on the cadets experience in commanding
shoulder to help fill their local units of various size.
quotes, their absence will be easily
Study of A A F administration,
absorbed by existing numbers secure supply, combat order.?, air intelligence and transportation has been
from the draft.
folDrafting, it was generally be- included in the program
lieved, will be so spread out :hat lowed by 65 Air ROTC cadets at
Hamptm.
UK's ranks will not be very greatly Langley Field. flying w'U Va.
Actual solo
not be unthinned.
by the University students
dertaken
because the course d'
net a'.tei.ipt
to train pilots. Alter receiving t
howeve', the new offurrs
Kernels Please"
may be assigned as ndets to f
training programs.
There's a definite eaU for the
Twenty-on- e
University military
Kentucky Kernel n this camh.
students went nortn to Ft.
pus.
N. J. a s Signal
Corps
To prove it, a woman definitetrainees where they will study field
ly called Wednesday
operation of radio, telephone, telefor 200
type, and radar equipment.
Kernels to put on the campus
- - she was having a picnic
This summer training period U.
required by the Army oi ROTC
and It had just rained!
cadets who expect to receive reserve commissions.

"200

Men-mout-

* THE

Pane Two

The Kentucky Kernel

' CBTIOAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY

rt.

Bowman Hall Problem

Of KENTUCKY

Editor
Sorrelle
,
....
.a
Manaoinir
ill
Dan
rrfiect Helen Deiss
News Editor
ihraMi. ut
the cplnlnk of The Kernel,
Sports Editor
Dudley Saunders
Feature Editor
Stanley Schill
mBIJSHED WEEKLY OTPINQ THE
Allen Terhune .. Business Manager
SCHOOL TEAR EXCEPT
HOLIDAYS
Frank Cassidy
OR CXAUIKATtON
PERIODS
Advertising Marutger
Frool remW
Fillmore Ho wen
Enured at th port Office t Lexington,
COPY DESK
Ktitucty, tt eeeand class matter uudrr
th Act of Mn-hJ- ,
lin.
Sue Warren, Harry Green
Rubye Graham
SPORTS REPORTERS
Boyd R. Keenan, John Marrum
Kectur&y InterrlteSuit Pim Atutocifctlmi
lxlfttori Board cf Commerce
REPORTERS
Rmturky Pre Astx! p ' Un
Kenny Wood, Stanley Schill, Montf
Mitorl&l Anccktcn
NtucuU
R. Tussey. Roger Day, William Mul-lin- s,
CliurUs
William Mariuiout,
mm mr
MMtm o Teu
Oherst. Wiloer Hager, Waller Laniard, Xjta Cochran, Benjamin F.
Iteeves, Otis Perkins, Allen Terhiur-- .
"
M. Y.
Nr.l
20
sso Stanley, A. K. Deaton, John
R. Cox, Jackson flaimr, Frani-it- .
Hellard.
etTBSCMPTTON
RATPS
AU

-

ic

Fitr

f

tr

Yc.

NUIMI.

.50

"

t actum. ere to be

Onr Quarter

.5I

Cue

Yar

lie
Ti Spice Of Life
t

are with our fir
Wtll, here
greet collaboration on the "Lice of
Spire." We hare named ourselves
Room Editor and the
lite
Saloon Editor - - you should be
able to figure that 0;te out!
Last week's Kernel stated that
there were four men to every girl
on the campus. Most of the gals
writ to know where the excess
comes in - - perhaps tt's because

wor

it's the end of the month.
latin ny Able is trying to sret back
In circulation these days. He probably would "break dovn and buy a
felrl A raf fit popcorn If she would
Uuae drtwn to cne of the Schine film
and Shutter .houses with him some
Saturday night.
Sever more winnings to add to
the list: Keith Albright and Kathy
Crwm - - here's cow Triangle
capital T that brolae up a triangle
,
--

.Jliu!.

eiuied

with a
Bowman Hall, the new dormitory for men, is
lounge and playroom which rank among the most beautiful and
hiim.
oi""1 m
I lie only drawback, as far as the great majority of men who
jvf in the dormitory quadrangle are concerned, is the fact that
women, exrent relatives and verv sieii:il
are allowed
to enter these two recreation rooms.
In a xj11 taken during the spring epiarter of 375 Ikvs then living in the dormitories, 350 stated they would prefer to be allowed
to entertain women guests informally, II answered that they
would not prefer to do so, and 21 men did not reply. to the question. To the question as to whether they would list" the lounge
and plavroom as frequently, were women not jxrmitted, lllfi said
"yes," N7 said "no," and 48 failed to answer the question.
Siiue a comparatively new crop of men will le living in the
dorms during the fall quarter another poll on this question will
be taken at that time.
It is veiy likely that the fall residents of the men's dormitories
will answer that poll in the identical manner as did their spring
predet essoi s.
If that le the ase, arrangements should be made now to chajv
erone pioetly these recreation rooms so that dormitory men
may entertain women in the same manner that they are received in lraternity houses about the campus.

.,

ont-sts-

.

The SAE's were having a big time

By SHobrr Graham and
Jack Feierabend
i

KENTUCKY

at the dance al the Maysville Country Club last Friday night.. Lost in
the crowd were Tilly MrCarty and
lave Cheek, Ju Ann Kloecker and
Harold Hunt, Helen Urlss and
Windy Myera, Lucy Dexheimer and
Somr Cannrlt, Bud MrCarty, John- t y Crockett, Chuck Gorham. t'hinny
Everett, and Lucian liinsolvinff.
Seen together here and there:
Rill Cvwhfil and Lois Bicknell, Bob
Stamper and Jenny Link, MiUi
Ncheer and Jim Brady.
Which Sig Ep thinks he's a bird?
around
He'd do better to putt-pu- tt

Letters To The Editor
UK

Again I make an appertl. Would
someone in authority please give
an appropriate name to UK's beau- tiful little amphitheater. It is a
shame to so often designate it is
the amphitheater BEHIND. Xt rates
a name of its own. So thinks a
PATRON

ka

,

Miss Juliet Lee Galloway of the
Lexington Herald, was awarded
first prize In a national news story
contest held by the National Federation of Press Women.
reporter
Miss Galloway, city-ha- ll
for the local paper, won the award
for her story on civil service and
the Lexington city administration,
published March 17.

Please do not publish my na'e
in the event the subject rrif.tter of
this note is utilized. I do pot v.lsn
to engage in public debate cn the
topic but
It has oceuTed to me
that If the world stale of affairs
is as reported by the president of
our University, it might be advis- umc as one ui me uuuui roues iu
co,,fider , remaining on the quarter
,
.
&iiriii