xt7qv97zmm94 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qv97zmm94/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19600519  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May 19, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 19, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7qv97zmm94 section xt7qv97zmm94 Acting In 'Ah, Wilderness9 Termed Mediocre
By Gl'RNEY NORMAN

NOTE This review
m written after the author taw
Tuesday's dress rehearsal
Gulgnol
for
The program
Theatre's production of "Ah, Wilderness," a comedy by Eugene
which opened last night, admits that this is not a great play.
And neither is the acting "great."
But became greatness Is missing
from both levels does not mean
that "Ah, Wilderness" Is not good
theater and good entertainment.
EDITOR'S

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The first art Is the weakest point
has
of. the whole play
Interpreted it. There are several
reasons for this.
One Is that Mr. O'Neill has
simply presented a hard problem
for actors to handle, that of a large
family
beginning
Connecticut
another day together, which in this
case happens to be July 4, 1906.
O'Neill has called upon the actors to bo excited about the holiday, each member with his own
personal reaction to the day and,

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Nat Miller, portrayed by Phillips Brooks, sinks
learning of his son's escapades through an
Sid Davis, the black sheep of the family played
director cf the Guignol Theatre, examines the
ness!" cprmd last night and will run through
time is 8:30 o'clock nightly.

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to his chair upon
anonymous letter.
by Wallace Briggs,
note. "Ah, WilderSaturday. Curtain

Med School To Offer
Behavioral Sciences
Included in the UK Medical
School's recently announced first
year curiiculum are 48 hours devoted to .tudy under a Department
of Behavioral Science.
Although many of the over 80
medical schools throughout the
United States have been active in
the behavioral scineces for the
past 10 years, UK's Medical Center is one of only four or five
schools that actually have a department devoted to such study,
according to Dr. Robert Straus.
Dr. Straus is a professor of Medical Sociology and chairman of the
Department of Behavioral Science.
According to the first year curriculum, the
unit on behavioral science "will provide a
48-ho- ur

snythesis of concepts and principles from the social and psychological sciences essential for an integral study of human behavior in
general and of human response to
Illness specifically."
In a pap" published In The
Journal of Medical Education, Dr.
Straus outlines the application of
a general program of a Department of Behavioral Science as
follows:
1. Behavior In relation to the
natural course of disease.
2. Health needs of society.
3. Understanding the basic structure of a society and the nature
of human relationships.
Dr. Straus said that some
On Page 3
ques-Continu-

LEXINGTON,

ed

Before 2,000 newsmen from East
and West, Khrushchev suggested it
might be well to take alleged
American aggressors "by the scruff
of the neck . . . and give them a
little shaking."
Khrushchev blamed the President for the summit collapse, blasted his policy on intelligence flights,
accused him of deceit, and called
him a fishy friend.
He asserted that the U2 spy
plane incident, on which Eisenhower ignored his demands for an
apology and punishment of the
responsible Americans, convinced
the Russians the Berlin problem
must be approached with "resolve
and urgency."
He threatened new efforts to
squeeze the Western powers out
of West Berlin. He said a Soviet-EaGerman peace treaty depriving the United States. Britain, and
France of their garrison rights will
be signed "when we consider the
time is ripe."
Khrushchev was booed by hostile
Frenchmen in Paris streets as he
made his farewell calls on British
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
and French President Charles de
Gaulle.
He met a mixed reaction later at
the news conference in the summit
press center at the Palais de Chail-lo- t.
st

and lies."

the writteu report sayinr
convinced that the report was "merely
he vas
wrong."
Meriwether claimed in the report that his firm
saved the state $68,000 instead of costing it the unnecessary fits charged by Schneider.
He bated his reasoning for this savings on a contract revision which lowered the original overall bid
on the Medical Center from $20,274,72 to $20,206,- He modified his ire in

I0

No. 112

a worldwide forum for his argu-

SUB Activities
Welcome Week guides, Social
Room, 5 p.m.
Student Union Recreation
committee, Room 206, 5 p.m.
Tau Sigma (dance meeting),
Room 205, 4:30 p.m.
Lamp and Cross, Room 204,
4--

4--

5 p.m.

Army ROTC (Company B),
ments.
Room 204, 9 p.m.
A gigantic room, longer than a
football field, was jammed with
correspondents of many different hower met with Macmillan and De
nationalities. Klieg lights poured Gaulle in a quiet final session at
fierce incandescence on the raised Elysee Palace.
stage. TV cameras relayed every
White House Press Secretary
nuance of Khrushchev's face and
James C. Hagerty said the Presivoice.
Boos and applause, cheers and dent will have no comment in
Paris on Khrushchev's remarks but
groans punctuated his
appearance before the Eisenhower will address the nation
on TV and radio on his return.
newsmen.
Eisenhower will fly tomorrow to
Khrushchev had the stage all to
Lisbon, advancing the state visit
himself as the Western leaders reContinued On Page 3
mained in the background. Eisen- 7--

ute

1960 Kentuckian
Available Tuesday
The 1960 Kentuckians will be
available Tuesday. They can be
picked up in the Journalism builda.m. and 4
ing from 9:30-11:p.m. daily beginning Tuesday.
One table will be set up for
graduating seniors and another for
2--

30

Plastic covers for the book will
be sold by Theta Sigma Phi, women's professional journalism fra-

ternity.

'

Sigma Delta Chi, men's professional journalism fraternity, will
have a machine to put the stuundergraduates.
Graduating seniors must have dent's name on the front of the
paid their senior fees before they yearbook.
can get their yearbooks because
Extra copies will be available
price of the Kentuckian is in- for those who did not purchase a
Khrushchev called it to give his the
yearbook in advance.
cluded in the senior fee.

Medical Center Architects
Say Firm Being Underpaid
Architects for the V" Medical Center say the
state legally owes them $i50,000 more for their work
than they're being paid.
Hugh Meriwether, head of Meriwether. Marye
and Associates, personally delivered to Frankfort a
10,000. word report concerning the claimed fees.
Ctpies vere delivered to offices of Gov. Bert
Coml.s, Atty. Gen. John Breckinridge. Auditor Joseph
Schneider and Finance Commissioner Robert K.
Martin. None of them coninunted on the report.
Auditor Schneider charged in an audit report on
May 9 that the Jxington firm vas being improperly
paid $520. 2G5 in fees.
This etiew quick fire from Meriwether who charged the audit was motivated by a "mass of innuendo

ce

,

KV., THURSDAY, MAY 19,

S. Khrushchev denounced
TAR IS, May 18 (AP)-Nik- ita
Piesident Eisenhower anew today on the issue of aerial s)ing
and snubhed the American leader in a round of Paris farewells.
Likening Eisenhower to a thief, the Soviet Premier scowled
and thundered about the dead version of the reasons for the sumSummit Conference, the Berlin mit fiasco.
problem, the U2 incident, and other
And, expectably. he saw in this
issues.
a gigantic propaganda' platform,

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long-distan-

Khrush Denounces
Eisenhower As 'Thief

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...

doors as If he were afraid of them.
Phillips Brooks laughed as if he
felt obligated to.
Conversation earlier between Ol
lie Morgan as Mrs. Miller and
Ruth Barrett as her sister-in-laLily was like a
phone call, each waiting unnecessary seconds after one had spoken
before the other spoke her next
line.
But the mood and tempo of the
action is lifted quite nicely when
Continued On Page 2

University of Kentucky

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in particular, all the family's re- place the blame for this scene's
upon the author.
action to son Richard's rebellious
From the audience It appeared that
attitude toward everything.
Scene tw of act one was espec- - the cast was admitting the scene
lally difficult, in which an extend-- ;' was" difficult, too hard to become
ed evening meal Is eaten, inter, enthusiastic about, which resulttupted by the drunken oratory of) ed in poor timing of lines and less
Uncle Sid Davis, the loveable black than convincing movements about
sheep of an otherwise morally-Victoria- n the set.
family. The scene reNone of the family seemed at
quired that the actors be highly home on the set. The actors moved
amused for several minutes at Sid's as If they were In a china she p.
They were tense at the dining
antics.
Though difficult, we cannot table. Don Oalloway approached

'

The claim for the $330,000 was based on what
Meriwether called "fair and legal" entitlement to
an Increase in fees of more than 100 per cent due to
additional work and expenses.
"Therefore," the report outlined, "the state under
the increased fees Is actually paying us approximately $330,000 less than we are entitled to, and approximately $175,000 less than we requested instead
of the approximately $500,000 more than the audit
states we are entitled to."
Claiming his firm would only get about four
per cent of the construction cost of the Medical Center, the report pointed out that the American Institute of Architects sets a minimum fee of six per
cent plus the cost of all consultants and fulltime
supervision or inspection.
Had these recommendations been followed, the
report said, the firm's fee would have been close to
10 per rent of construction costs.
Meriwether said his firm had nothing to do with
cost estimates of the Medical Center, claiming they
were written Into the contract by the University
the contract wus presented to the architect.
The architect said he would l:ke to meet with
Gov. Combs soon and discuss all details concerning
,
the Medical Center.
be-fo- ie

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MiianaIMBMaiaaaMBaBManaaaiMaaaiaiaM

Lances Initiates

initiates of Lances, junior men's leadership fraternity, are
front row from left, Roy Roberts, Bill Feiler, and Thomas Scott.
Second row from left are Jim Trammcll, Billy Mitchell, Bob Stovall,
and Boyd Hurst. Not present when the picture was taken were
Norman lUrued. Robert II. White Jr., Jack Isaacs, John Baiter,
and Bill Scale.

New

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, May 19,

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Guignol Play Entertaining

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Continued From Taje 1
bet two opens with Carole Martin
fM Delle. a prostitute, attempting to
Dlv her trade on voun
Richard
tOon Galloway), who is drinking
la a bar in reaction to a troubled
romance.
Miss Martin's manner with her
hands and eyes is honest and believable, and when she registers
anger, she docs it well, though
some of her other lines sound
memorized. She is too heavily
made-ueven for her particular
role.
She and Galloway work well together through this scene, lie as
an innocent trying to ronceal his
innocence, she showing just enough
sympathy for Richard to keep her
from being a stereotype.
Ollie Morgan begins to redeem
herself in act two after the slow
first act. Miss Morgan has a natural inflection in her voice that
is most appealing and that fits well
with the character of Mrs. Miller.
As the play progresses, the range
of the Mrs. Miller character extends and requires more extremes
of mood, such as worry or positive
contentment, and Miss Morgan

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Sociology Club

Dr. J. W. Gladden, left, professor of Sociology, has been elected
adviser to the Sociology Club. New officers are Bill Jett, president;
Helen Herndon, secretary; and Ilruce II. Ma j hew Jr., program

chairman.

Russia To Be Topic
Of S UB Program
.

"Listening to and Looking at Russia" will be the SUB Topics program narrated by Robert P. Moore, instructor of Russian, at 4 pjn.
Monday In the SUB Music Room.
Mr. Moore said the program will have two purposes: to acquaint
people with what is involved in the study of the Russian language
and to familiarize them with other aspects of Russia.
He added that he wants to make known to students the pleasure
that can be derived from studying Russian language and literature.
Claude Sullivan, announcer for radio station WVLK, will show
color slides taken in Russia during his recent trip to the country. Mr.
Moore will play recorded Russian folk music and answer questions
from the audience concerning the study of Russian.

Welcome Week Guides
Students interested in being
guides during Welcome Week
Week next fall are invited to
meet at 4 p.m. today in the
Social Room of the Student
Union Building.
Procedures to be used by
guides during Welcome Week
will be discussed, according to
Dr. Kenneth Harper, assistant
dean of men.

Only Time Will Tell Winner
Of Summit That Barely Started
By WILLIAN L. RYAN

PARIS. May 18 (AP) It may be
months before the West can make
an adequate assessment of the factors behind the explosion as the
summit in Paris. And only time
may tell whether East or West
if either is a winner over the

other.

Nikita Khrushchev's violent diatribe before the "world's press to

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day presented a frightening spectacle for an already jittery world.
It suggested that the Soviet
Premier felt an urgent need to
lower the cold war temperature.
It suggested also that
crises, edging to the
brink of disaster and then easin?
off, may be expected over a long
period.
There was more than a hint of
a return to Stalinist foreign policy
in Khrushchev's performance. This
would augur a fortress of world
Communism, furiously building its
power and using dangerous tensions as political weapons elsewhere in the world.
Glowering down at massed rep- Soviet-Americ-

FLOWERS
For Any

an

resentatives

of the world's press,
Khrushchev fired a fistful of verbal thunderbolts. He waved his arms
as he poured a torrent of insults
upon U.S. leaders. He grinned and

grimaced and scowled meanacing-ly- .
like a man given an assignment
to carry out and determined to
give the utmost satisfaction.
There was nothing essentially
new in what Khrushchev said. But
the way he said it was menacing.
And all together, it strengthened
the impression that he had been
prodded into this unprecedented,
supei truculent posture.
Those in the Kremlin doing the
prodding and the finger of suspicion points to old line Stalinists
supported by resentful army officersapparently still do not
want to turn the cold war into a
hot one.

seems better at either extreme
tnan on the mlddleground of a
woman routinely running a house- hold.
Here, too, Phil Brook
seems
4
more at home In his role as a
post middle-ag- e
newspaper editor
who must as another duty function
as head of the Miller household.
Brooks handles his part satisfactorily. He makes few slight mistakes and no flagrant ones.
Although he very much looks his
part, there seems to be lacking a
decisiveness about his interpretation of Nat Miller that I feel a
Nat Miller would have, some final
air of 190G Victorian family authority that would show through
the human warmness of an essentially good person.
Wallace Briggs. recreating his
role of Sid from the 1942 original
Guignol production of "Ah Wilderness," may have found a
strength in what at first appears
to be a weakness.
Briggs
Without consideration.
may be accused of lacking vitality,
but it is just this quality that
makes Briggs Sid Davis. For Briggs
contributes just enough to his part
withsmt trying t dcxahMte s sreae
with ham," which the part wswld
eaaiiy lend itseir to
His actions and mannerisms, his
open mouth as he drunkenly dozes,
his subdued, intoxicated staggering,
and general consumptive appearance nicely complete one of the
play's most appealing characters.
Don Galloway as Richard almost
destroys the Illusion that he Is only
a high school senior at times,
especially when he appears on stage
g
in an
houserobe.
But his delivery of the endless
quotes of romantic poetry is full
of admirable comic seriousness,
and the fluctuation of his character between simple boy and Intelligent rebel is natural, enhanced
by an appealing teen-ag- e
klouch
and occasional stammer.
Ruth Barrett has to spend many
minutes on stage without speaking,
but she manages to effectively appear natural in her silent sitting.
Lamar Herrin as Richard's older
brother. Arthur, achieves an ausmugness
thentic pseudo-matur- e
which the part calls for. John
adult-lookin-

CALL

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at Kennedy Book Store

LARRY'S TENNIS
SERVICE

MIQILER FLORIST

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The Kentucky Kernel
1 1 rI r
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prwcuon

NOW
ENDS SAT.
Begins 8 p.m.
Aim. 75c

FOOTBALL
COMEDY
CLASSES
DRAMA

Tennis Special

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Prltchard looks exactly like David
McComber should look, and he Is
genuinely funny Just walking onts
the stage. But his vocal delivery
hurts his effectiveness because he
does not seem in full control of
what he is trying to say.
as the
riilllip Cox Is mii-casalesman In the bar, and his monotone speech makes him sound hypnotized.
Daniel liowe.l. as eleven year-ol- d
Tommy Miller, handles himself on stage nicely, but he needs
laughing lessons, as does most of
the cast.
I was sorry Muriel McComber
was not more prominent in the plot
so we could have seen more tf
Lucy House's actine. and the same
can be said for Thelma Burton as
Norah, the maid.
One w 111 remember Doug Roberts'
brief appearance as Uint Shelby,
the college sport, because, as always, there is no reluctance on the
part of Roberts to get his job done.
M " another rehears
But
al or two on a few minor words
and actions.
I wish Mary Warner Ford could
have the benefit of an adult role
now and then, such as in "Cross
Purposes" last year, because it
seems that she is the same young
girl every play. She played Richold sister Milard's fifteen-yea- r
dred in "Ah Wilderness."
As for the set designs, liiey were
real once the curtain was open,
but sometimes I wondered If there
had been a stage scrike as the
minutes between scenes crept by.
Summing up: good Guignol entertainment, in spite of limitations.
The light, nostalgic humor of the
play is contagious.

ca

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..

Havana"

SATURDAY

'Mouse That Roared"

.

"The Gaxebo"

heDlovin
Tallboys!...

SUNDAY

"The Shaggy Dog"
Olivia U HaviUnd in

"Libel"

With Anthony Perkins
and Jane Fonda

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thurs1a

JL

EH VAN HOOK

If you are looking for summer
rmployment with a railroad company, don't count on the LexinRton
and Ohio, even though It is right
here on the campus. Where?
Well, what there Is of the old
L. & O., is a portion of the original
track, a few feet of iron rail, and
llmrftone. mounted in cement. This
ycu will find in front of the Engineering Building between Neville
Hall Tind the Agriculture Building
cn South Limestone Street.
A plaque mounted on the monument when the trark was placed
there during dedication eeremonles
on May 30, 1916, explains the event
this way.
"The restoration of a portion of
the oiif.i:ial tracic of the Ixlngton

CLASSIFIED
word
Erh Cltfl417
k3 per cent

ATrtlilaf Rate
word mtmlmun.l

.Jc

discount for ada which run

Mill

Tuesday Edition Monday 3:00 p.m.
Wednesday Edition TuMday 1:00 p.m.
Thursday Edition Wednesday 3:00 p.m.
Friday Edition Thursday 1:00 p.m.

nir rdit. tst. tin.
rot

rksnt

SALt

Ton SALE

trailer.

ItStJ Maimolla

cellent condition. Thone

Utwnmower.

FOR SALE E lee trie
foot cord. Call 317.
SALE

FOR

eordltion. Call
FOR

SALE

hour deliver.

13Mtf

paper route. I't
net monthly profit.

Lender

F'horx

100

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Good

lawnmower.

Hand

Ex-

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$113

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OR SALE ltM IietU. Sun roof, leather upholstery. Low mileage, 60 m p g.
Iireilent eandtUcm. Inexpensive. Ed.
18M4t
Qu.gWy (English Dept l.

WANTIO
nt
wishes ride to Yel- lowMone National Park or Idaho about
June 1. Will share expenses. Call Mr.
or
Moore.
altei 0 p m.
WANTED-Stude-

17M4t

CAMP STAFF Men 19 years or older
for 7 to 10 weeks work with buys ramp.
Need counselors, horsemanship and pro-lirsdirectors. Koorn and bo;ird plus
Contact Mr.
tl5l to J4o0 for the senson. phone
KeaTis. Lexington YMCA.
m

17M4t

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to

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3

RENT

;m nt.

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VMNTED-Ri- de
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June

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RENT

Small

I'hone

furnished

private
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LOST

LoT- Piown p!ial ntlxH)k entitled
I.o.t in front of Holme
Ha. I. Mv 3. Return to SUB loft and
lHMlt
-

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or Holmes Hall.

c!.--

raincoat,
Force
m hack, book in one pocket.
Donovan Hall, phone C236. John Linn.
lUMlt
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MISCCiLANEOUS

and Ohio Railroad (now Louisville
and Nashville), laid at Lexington
in 1831, Is dedicated to those men
of forethought and courage who
were pioneers In railroad development in America. Erected Anno
Domini MCMXVI."
This section of the Lexington
and Ohio's rails was unearthed In
July, 1915, by workmen who were
reconstructing the freight yards
of what is now the Louisville and
Nashville railroad.
Believed to be the first steam
line in the West, the Lexington and
Ohio was opened in 1832 from Lexington for a distance of six miles.
Before the steam engine was
commissioned, mules drew thf
first car. Later the line was built
to Frankfort and eventually tapped
Portland.
A booklet describing the history
of the railroad was published in
1916 by Mrs. W. T. Lafferty. A
copy of the book is preserved in
the vertical files of the Margaret
I. King Library Reference Room.
Mrs. Lafferty fives an Insight to
this railroading; venture, "believed
to be the first west of the Allegheny Mountains."
She describes how Lexington
procured its charter for the purpose of building a line "from Lexington to some point on the Ohio
River."
The Kentucky Legislature granted the charter In January, 1830.
On March 6, 1830, Elisha L

Winters was elected president of
the proposed corporation, and
Henry Clay was made chairman
of the board of stockholders.
q
one year to lay the first
It took
six miles of the track from Lexington to Villa Grove, now Yarn-alltoThe top of the hill at
Frankfort was reached by January,
n.

1834.

the next January, experimental runs were being made with
By

an "elegant new locomotive." imported from the East, according
to Mrs. Laffcrty's booklet.
The first engine used by the
Lexington and Ohio was built in
1835 by Joseph Uruen of Lexington.
The L and O rails were made
of iron, and unlike today's method
of laying the rails on wooden
crossties, they were Imbedded in

l.mrftore.
T!.c

;

c;ent--

d

;y Louisville and

almost the
same route which the original L
rvi O ciincs used between Lexington and Frankfort.
The city of Louisville was to construct the lines from the other end,
and eventually did complete its
portion of the road. After construction of a bridge over the Kentucky
River, the two lines were connected

tracks

fo'.lo-.-

v

at Frankfort.
Financial difficulties atrvck the
Lexington and Ohio company after
some years of operation, and in
1881" the railroad became a par of
the Louisville and Nashville system.

Book On Fruit Growing
By Schneider
Co-Author-

ed

Dr O W. Schneider, head of the
UK. U
hortlcuUurt dep
of a book Just pub- the
Inc.
lished by Prentice-Hal- l,
Dr Schneider wrote the work on
"Fruit Growing" in collaboration
with Dr. C. C. Scarborough, head
of agricultural education at North
Carolina State College, Raliegh.
Its primary use will be In agricultural education but Dr. Sehnel- i
u , win n it . .
tier aiu i ...ill nuA mab.ua a . a
work for fruit growers
Interested in understanding the
principles of fruit production and
ihe application of the principles
to their own problems.
s,
...
I'itri one oi uij
describes why and how certain
factors affect plant growth and
fruit development. Botany ana
physiology of fruit crops, flower
bud formation, and pollination are
aiVo explained.
Each major fruit crop is dis
cussed in the second part of the
book, with special consideration
Biven to the basic problems in- volved in producing each of the
crops.
Dr. Schneider became head of
or

1

1

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years as professor of horticulture

X-S-t

Ohio

gtate University witn a bachelor of
science and master of science de- grees. He was awarded the PhD.
degree from Rutgers University.

Continued From Page 1
tions may arise concerning possible "overlap" of functions of the
, .. :
"epanmeni o.
frequently
"d certain functions
Performed by other departments,
especially psychiatry, psychology

Continued From Tate 1
to Portugal h had expected to
make next week.
Khrushchev is going to East Berlin to talk with Communist chiefs
and address a rally.
Khrushchev hit hard at Eisenhower on the plane incident.
Referring to Elsenhower's promise that the U.S. would send
no more Intelligence planes over the
Soviet I'nion , Khrushchev declared
the pledge was meaningless on the
ground it would apply only through
the closing months of Eisenhower's
term.
He stressed that Eisenhower had
stated he could make no undertaking binding beyond January. 1961.
' Can such a statement by the
President satisfy anyone but the
aggressor himself?" Khrushchev
asked. "International relations cannot be based on the term of office
of this or that responsible person
is
. . .11 the logic of the President
to be followed, it would be impossible to negotiate, for instance, on

disarmament."

.

.

.

r- -i

--

ever, to Macmillan for the zeal he
displayed in trying to arrange the
Summit Conference. He also said
he had high regard for De GaUlle
and believed relations between
France and the Soviet Union
would be

strengthened rather than

weakened.

Khrushchev wrapped up one of
his attacks on Eisenhower in

praising De Gaulle. He said De
Gaulle "did all he could so the
conference would be a success.'.'
"He knew It was necessary to
condemn a thief when he Is
caught," the Russian said. "But
the problem was that the thief was
not only an ally of France but
If one of
leader of the West
our allies had acted in this way we
would have condemned him."
Flanked by his inseparable companion, Marshal Rodion Y.
Khrushchev seemed to be
exhilarated by the spectacle the
brilliant lights, the huge,
room, even the boos which
mingled with the applause.
He made these main points:
L He intends to sign a separate
peace treaty with Communist East
Germany when he is ready. But
there was no hint that any action
is imminent.
2. The Soviet Union Is ready to
continue the Geneva talks on nuclear tests, but will resume testing
if the United States does. Khrysh-che- v
accused the United States of
procrastination and said If this
continues the Soviet Union will
toss the question back to the
United Nations.
3. The Soviet Union has no intention to mix in U.S. domestic
politics. If the next president is
one who cannot negotiate with
Moscow, the Russians are prepared to wait for another. Franklin D. Roosevelt was a worthy
representative of capitalistic society, Khrushchev said, but his
policy died with him.

...

Mal-inovs-

Jam-pack- ed

Any

-

ever, that a basic objective of the
tepartrnent wiM b(; t0 encourage
dcVclon collaborative effort
,lH
hn,rvpr mutual
be defined.
interests can
The Department of Behavioral
Sciences should provide excellent
irilLKll iV'l uui(i.vuih
l"
grants and other support for the
Medical Center and the University
at jarpe, Dr. Straus said,
stil another potential develop- -ment, he said, is a graduate edu-

cation program offering opportun- the I'K horticulture department Ities for doctoral candidates in any
in 1958 after serving for eight of the behaioral sciences.

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agreement reached under
such conditions he said, might be
"thrown in the waste basket" by
the President's successor.
One newsman recalled that
Khrushchev said he had known of
U. S. intelligence flights over the
Soviet Union before his visit to
the United States last September.
Why had he not asked Eisenhower
about it at Camp David ?
Khrushchev replied that he became apprehensive after the President had called him "my friend."
and suggested that Khrushchev
also address him In the same way.
"I thought there was something
fishy about this friend of mine,
and I didn't approach the subject,
and it turned out that I was right,
because when we caught them
.redhanded. They said that they are
not thieves. It Is Just their thieflike policy. That is all."
Khrushchev criticized both Macmillan and De Gaulle for not
showing more will power when it
To
came to the question of getting
FAIRPLAY, Colo. CAP) Ad in
Eisenhower to apologize for the
the Fairplay Flume:
spy plane.
"Eggs laid while you wait."
He expressed his gratitude, how

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* Wait Til Next Year
Faculty members at the University, it must he admitted, are just
as erudite and intelligent as those
of any other institution. UK professors, on the whole, have established
a good reputation for themselves in
academic circles.
Notice ve said academic circles.
But when it comes to jx)litics, we
can't give the faculty too much applause. Nay, we doubt whether any
of our professors could be considered
experts except the theorists in the
Political Science Department in the
field of the glowing oration and
shaking of hands.
Not that our professors are stupid.
No. They just aren't politicians, that's
all.
Around a month ago, the State
Legislature passed a bill requiring
that two faculty members be put on
the 'Board of Trustees as nonvoting
members. In a mass faculty meeting at
Memorial Hall, the confusion was so
great that a nominating committee
had to be chosen.
Then the faculty did not like the
committee's nominating recommendations, and they had to be changed.
Next, on the first ballot, 154 nominations, including three deans, were
made. (Seventy-ninpersons received
one vote each.)
A second ballot was required, the
list being reduced to six professors.
A third, and now there are only three
candidates left in the race. There is
quite a bit of hope (and amazement),
e

we understand,

will

The Kentucky Kernel

that one of the tluce

be eliminated

on the fourth

ballot.'
.:.
What this prove a1out faculty
members may outwardly seem facetious, because they arc so normally
individualistic that they can get nothing accomplished in a short amount
of time and in an organized manner.
But the problem is of a wider seoje
at UK.
There is too much disorganization,
petty bickering, confusion, and plain
buncombe over the mos