xt7t4b2x4m6w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7t4b2x4m6w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19591215  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December 15, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 15, 1959 1959 2013 true xt7t4b2x4m6w section xt7t4b2x4m6w Today's Weather:
Cloudy And Cool;
High 54, Low 33

J

University of Kentucky
Vol. L

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, DEC.

Crad Dean Choice
Draws Comment:
See Editorial Page

15, 1959

No. 47

Ten To Be Initiated
By Phi Beta Kappa
Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal
arts honorary, will initiate 10 new
members Into the. Alpha Kentucky
chapter in ceremonies today.
Two students who were elected
to membership at the fall meeting
will be unable to attend the initla- tlon. The following students will be
initiated:

1

art;

Chow,

Ju-H- si

Katherlne

Cress, arts-lapsychology;

w;

A.

Oard,

e;

Whayne

Scabbard And Blade Initiates

Trustees May Name

'

GraduateHeadToday

political

SUB Activities

Hospital Administration Meet-

ing, Room 128, 4 p.m.
In a survey conducted by the
Jr. IFC, Room 12S, 7 p.m.
Kernel the faculty Indicated pre-in- g
Meeting,
Home ' Education
sent UK personnel as Its choice,
"Room 204, 7 p.m.
but none of the names mentioned
Patterson Literary Society,
have been released.
Room 204, 7 p.m.
At that time, the faculty was
American Society of Metals,
divided as to the field from which Room 205, 7:30 p-Dean Spivey' .successor should.
SU Boanf'Moeting, Room 205,
come.
6
p.m.
There is still speculation as to
Board of Trustees Luncheon,
whether he will be a scientist, edRoom 205, 12 noon.
ucator etc., and whether or not
Committee on Evaluation, Stuhe will come from the UK camdent- Congress,
Room 206, 5
pus.
p.m.
y
Cosmopolitan Club, Room 206,
Dean Spivey came to UK ln
8:30 p.m.
7:30
August, 1948, as head of the DeKentucky Food Retailers Aspartment of English. Two years
sociation Dinner, Ballroom, 6:30
later he was named head of the p.m.
Graduate School.
Phalanx, Ballroom, 12-- 1 p.m.
Phi Beta Kappa Initiation,
The educator will assume the
Ballroom, 5 p.m.
position of vice president at the
SuKy Tryouts, Social Room"
University of Tennessee in
6
p.m.

A new Graduate School dean is
expected to be named at the meet- of the University Board of
Trustees today.
President Dickey' will recommend one man to fill the position
vacated when Dean Herman E.

vv. "- i-

2--

--

Following

Dean Spivey's anDickey
nouncement. President
asked the Graduate School faculty for recommendations for his

5--

-

3--

successor.

'

:

Psychology Cluh
The Psychology Club will present Dr. Albert Lott, social
psychologist, at 4 p.m. tomorrow in room 205 at SI B. Dr.
Lott will lead a panel discussion on "Perceptions aud
In Interracial Behavior."

faculty.

Coed Escapes Injury
In Elevator Mishap

science; Sara Jean Riley, topical;
Evangeline L. Taylor, English;
Jane Ann Walsh, social work; and A UK coed escaped serious1 in- jury Sunday afternoon when her
Judith M. Williams, zoology.
Mary Eileen McClure, English, right foot was caught between a
and George K. Oberhausen will be freight elevator and the second
floor of Boyd Hall.
initiated at a later date.

Initiated Into Scabbard and Blade, military honorary, Friday nlfht
were, from left, Robert W. White, 8am Guy, and Charles S. Casals.
Back row, from left, William C. Parka,' Gerald Silvers, William L.
Qulaenberry, and Jerry Elsaman.

.vuuvju

Priest,

C.

Alpha Kentucky chapter was
founded In 1926 and is the only
one In the state,
Phi Beta Kappa was established
In 1776 and is the oldest honorary
in the U, S.
There are 75 members of Phi
Beta Kappa on campus at present.
most of whom are members of the

Lloyd R.

Edward N. Humston,
Robert M. Odear
Jr., political science.
arts-medicin-

All Initiates have standings, ac- quired over seven semesters, which
range from 3.5 to 3.96.
The Initiation ceremony will be
neld ln tn Music Room of the
Student Union Building at 4 p.m.
Dr. Alberta Server, president of
the Kentucky chapter, will con- duc the ceremonies with the aid
of other officers of the society.

Nancy Jo Thomas,
Education major from Paducah,
rescued by members of the
Lexington Fire Department rescue
squad. Hydraulic jacks were used
free the student.
Dr. Frank G. Dickey, UK pres- Ident, said that Miss Thomas tuf- cut and bruises on the
fered
foot, but that an
exam In- atlon showed no broken bones.
She was treated at the Good
Samaritan Hospital and later
.transferred to the UKJrlrmary,
where her condition is listed as
X-r- ay

residence hall and was returning
when the mishap occurred.
Dr. Dickey reported that the

student stepped from the elevator
as it neared the second floor level.
Her foot was caught between the
elevator and wall as the lift con-wtinued.to rise to the second floor.
CapL Jess Hulett of the fire
department said he and two fire-t- o
men, with the help of several city
raity policemen. , were
nd
bl to ,re Miss Thomas after
as

wn " f,Bute ...
CfP? "P0
of
Jevator an
ih nrwere
building
almost even and
foot
o,. about waa
that Mlss
and
b her
e

of her lMte

good.

Dr. Dickey said that the coed
was trapped only a few minutes
in a 'freight elevator that had no
safety door and was not used generally to transport passengers.
Miss Thomas, with permission,
had used the elevator to take a
guest and luggage from an upper
floor to the ground level of the

Panel Discussion
male panel win discuss
"What to Buy Your Boyfriend
For Christmas" at a meeting of
the Home Economics Club tonight at 6:30 In the Home
Economics Building Lounge. The
public is invited to attend.
A

-

4--

Attitudes

5--

i

.

I

yA-

-

S

V

;

'

Eleven Candidates To Compete
For Five SC Seats Tomorrow
Eleven candidates are competing
for five open stats in tomorrow's
Student Ccnrtss general election.
Candidates for the College of
are Gerri
Arts and Sciences
Ranch. Students' Party, and Jonn
.
Stewart. Campus Party.
Miss Ranch is a Mphomore from
I
111..
u.t..XH lM fjsjiuu-.
itiiaiui, n4., iiijviiiig iu ....... U . logy. She has a 3.1 overall stand- iug ana is a nwiDorr 01 iwrus, ri
Delta Phi, Blue Marlins, Kappa
Kappa Gamma, and the Studentunion uoarn necreauon omrau- -

son. Campus Party, and Henry
Bennett, Campus Party.
Colt, a junior with a 2.6 stand- Ing, is a member of Alpha Gamma
Rho
fraternity, Phalanx, the
American Society of Civil Engi- liters, and the Greek Week com- -

mittee.
TT
j.o
nciiucrsuii, a senior wilii a ft
overall standing, is a member of
oigma Aipna tpsuon iraiernuy,
Phi Beta Tau, and Chi Epsilbn.
Bennett is a member of Triangle
fraternity, Keys, and the Greek
wees committee, lie is president
Miss Stewart, a Junior with a of the sophomore Civil Engineer-3.- 0
standing, is a member of Zeta ing Assembly and nas a 3.7 stand-Ta- u
Alpha, Phi Sigma Iota, and jng
Is ln training lor Panhellenic presi
V1

1

-

,

dency.
Competing for the seat in the
College of Education are Debby
Daniel, Campus Party, and Paula

Judd, Students' Party.
Miss Daniel is a sophomore with
a 3.8 standing. She is a member
of Cwens, Alpha Lambda Delta,
and Chi Omega.
Misa Judd, an elementary educa- tioa major, is a member of the
Newman Club, Future Teachers of
America, Women's Athletic
soclation, and the Young Demo- crats Club. She is an Alpha Gam- ma Delta and has a 2.6 standing,
Col- Running for the seat to
Jege of Engineer in'K are BUI Gott,
Students' Party, Ronnie Render- As-tat-

ed

Kenny Martin, Campus
and Bob Smith, Students'
are competing for the seat
College of Agriculture and

Party,
Party,
in the

'

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V

v

im

-

'fm

.

..J

Home

Economics.

Martin is a Junior with a 2.6
cnritmr Hp u vi nrpsi.
dent of the Agronomy Club and
js ipq representative from the
Farmhouse fraternity.
Smith is a member of SuKy,
Phalanx, YCA, and Alpha Gamma Rho. He is a sophomore with
a 2.6 standing.
Running for the seat In the
of Commerce are Jerry Strick- Continued On Page 8

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Group Savings Winners

Bob Matlock, Sigma Nu, left, and Becky Carloss, AD Pi, accept
first and second prizes, respectively, which their chapters won
in the Phillip Morris Group Savings contest Jim Boiling, campus
representative of the cigarette company, makes the award. Sigma
Nu won first place ln the contest last year and was awarded a hi-- fi
set. Prizes go to the organizations saving the most empty
'
cigarette packs.

Medical Staff Begins Trek To New Home
i

Although

(earlier

plans

have

slated units of the Medical Center
to move from the campus to the
new Medical Science Building in
the trek of staff
and equipment will begin tomor- row.
Pressing need for space has die- the premature moving to the
A. B. Chandler Medical Center.
Arrangements were made with
the building contractor to permit
occupancy of the lower floors while
workmen are icompieting upper
levels.
mid-Januar-

y,

.

the Medical
provides per- manent quarters for personnel and
equipment now housed ln borrow- ed facilities across the campus, ln- eluding a basement, an old farm
A number of other departments, house, a converted classroom, a
not yet established at UK chiefly livestock pavilion, and storage
in the College of Medicine, will areas.
also occupy the upper floors.
Mdving next Wednesday and
Members of the Medical Center Tnursday wlll
personnel and of- staff will occupy the ground floor, nce
lulDment. Most, research
first and second floors, and-haequipment will be ordered new and
the third floor of the
structure.
installed directly in the Medical
Upper floors are to be complet- ed by Jan. 8. At thai time, two
of the departments presently in
existence, medicene and biochem- lstry, will move again to higher
floors.

lf

six-sto- ry

Completion
of
Science Building

Building. Research work
presently being conducted by mem- bera of the Medical Center faculty
is being done at other laboratories.
Tne Ubrary gtaff moved its of- -

Science

nce"

.
eruer na

WUI 09

transoort- -

books and other materials
nf
to the center during the coming
weeks.
The Health Service wUl remain
in its old quarters until the cen- ter's outpatient wing Is completed
ln about two years.

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Dec.

15, 1959

Publish Survey
Of 190 Mountain Counties

IITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

UK Press To

The University will publish the
Southern Appalachian Studies, a
social, cultural, and economic survey of 190 mountain .Counties in
seven states.
Th selection of UK was announced yesterday by Dr. Frank
O. Uickey, UK president, and
Bruce F. Denbo, director of the
UK Press.
.Research for the project wa financed by a 1200,000 Ford Foundation grant. The publication, which

will probably be composed of .one

ther scholars from
universities In the rrfloa have
been at work for several years on
sixteen topics covering life In the
region.
The mountain area Includes
counties In Kentucky, Alabama,
Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Virginia.
President Dickey said UK will
provide editorial assistance for Dr.
Ford, who has begun preparation
of the material. He is expected to
complete the work during DecemEighteen

-

major book and a supplementary
to be made
volume. Is expected
ber.
early In 1961.
"I am happy that the Univer
Arrangements for publication of
the Studies were made with Dr.
W. D. Weatsherford, director of
administration for the central staff
of the studies.
Dr. Thomas R. Ford, associate
professor of sociology at the University of Kentucky, is general ediThe Southern Regional Training
tor of the studies.
Program in Public Administration
is offering 10 ' fellowships to graduate students Interested in public
Four From UK
affairs and public service ca-

by Dick Diblci
ENROU. tlKEl

iArwore WinCim ccuzee
,

sity of Kentucky ran lend its assistance to this Immensely important surrey," Dr. Dickey said. "On
my recent trip abroad, scholars all
ver the world mentioned the Appalachian area as ewnprfoing ne
pf the great social and cnltaral
problems of th world.

GROUND

N WOK LP HlSTOffy

UTEgAWE

rPTC

Will

6CStknYXX
PE WEEKLY

A fi HI
Yr

TCl

.

"A thorough and accurate knowledge of the nature and extent of
a problem is the, first step toward
its solutibn, and I feel that the
distinguished staff of the Southern
Appalachian Studies will provide
our nation with this knowledge,"
he added.
.

10 Fellowships Offered

In Public Administration

tAre Contributors
To Encyclopedia
Four UK faculty members are
listed as academic contributors to
the 1959 edition of the

reers.

The fellowships, which amount to
approximately $2,200... will be for
use at UK and the Universities
f Alabama and Tennessee. '
The completion""' of a twelvemonth training period entitles
fellows to a certificate in . public
administration.
The program is designed to encourage the training of skilled administrators for the public service.

Collier's Enclyclopedia.
They are Dr. Leo M. Chamberlain, University vice president, who
who has written a section on college entrance; Dr. Arthur L. Cooke,
professor of English, a section on
Richard Bentley; Dr. Thomas B.
Stroup, ' professor of . English, a
section on articles .and biographies;
and pr. Amry Vandenbosch, director of the Patterson School of
By HENRY HUBERT
Diplomacy and International ComThe University Choristers, dimerce, who
sections
on Vietnam and Malaya, and rected by Mildred Lewis with Arwrote parts of the sections on nold Blackburn, organist, gave
their annual Christmas program
Thailand and the Republic of
at Memorial Hall SCinday.
The quality of the musical selections themselves varied widely.
The gamut ran, from the sublime
utterances of Bach in his "Christmas Oratorio" to the sugary banalities of Edmundson's "Love
Came Down At Christmas" (even
the title makes me cringe) with
FREE
GET
every level of musical worth berepreDATE BOOKS tween these two extremes
sented.
But the Choristers sang all o'
them with equal fervor and musi-calitAt
although Bach's "Glory Tc
God in the Highest," with its elaborate contrapuntal lines, seemed
rather muddy.
Near the close of the program
the Choristers sang a group of
four traditional carols. Perhaps it
90S S. Lime
is my reactionary nature, but it
Across From
seemed to me that these were

To be eligible for a fellowship
a student must have received a
BA. from an acredlted college
have a high scholastic average,
have shown leadership in campus
activities, and must be recommended by his professors.
In the program, a student begins his twelve-mont- h
training
period by serving three months
with a public ageney or a department In a city or state government.
The program begins In Alabama
ahd then goes o the University of
Tennessee for the winter session
and to UK in the spring.

ACTUAllV-AW- LY

L&-A-

Believe In Signs
LAFAYETTE. Ind. (AP) Onlookers gawked in amazement as
a motorcyclist stopped his machine

YOUR

1960

y

Hales
Pharmacy

Town House Motel

director or engineer"walk" light went on, dismounted, ing for the Warner it Swasey
walked his cycle across the inter- Company, Cleveland. Ohio, will
section, mounted and rode off.
speak to the UK chapter of the
American Society of Mechanical

BRING THIS AD

FREE PARKING
,

REAR

OF STORE

Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

e
worthwhile than the
more recent additions to the genre
represented on the program.
The four carols were simple,
reverent, and unpretentious. None
of these adjectives would apply to maudlin.
most of the other works.
After this group of carols the
Choristers were Joined by soprano
Patricia Herren and Daniel
who performed obligato
passages on the English horn. The
work was "The Shepherds Had An
AngeP by Besley.
It was performed excellently by
all concerned, although Miss Herren had one or two uncertain moments when her voice did not respond,
apparently because of
still-mor-

Mc-Anin-

Drum" charming and
spite some preciosity
but I imagine that, to
it might have seemed

LAST TIMES TONIGHT
Richard

Burton-Clai- ro

Debbio

Bloom

Reason-Na-

n

Blake's talk. "Streamlining the

Talks activity.

be seen at the

SCENE II COFFEE HOUSE

854 e high street
chevy chase village
and listen to
THE JAZZ HOUR
"from bunk to monk"
fridays 7:20 pm whig 1300

HEATERS
SEATING
inn

ilWfW.111

Crosby

Reynolds-Sin- g

"SAY ONE FOR ME"

"Miracle Of The Hills"
Rx

unusual dein the text,
some tastes,
impudently

ENDS TONIGHT- -

"Look Bock In Anger"

Engineers today.

secular.

mm

1

C. T. Blake,

ch,

hoarseness.
Of the other works on the program I found the "Carol of the

INDOOR

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Carol Lynlay

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BELOVED

Prescription
Service

TOMORROW!

- Now Showing!

1

Block from University

820 S. Limestone St.
i

Fountain Service
and Short Orders
Open 7:30 m, to 9 a.m.

Sandwich

WILL DUNN
DRUG COMPANY
Lime end Maxwell
4-42-

55

STRAND

i

High St. and Cochran

THEATRE

NOW!

I
"ROAD
A.

RACERS"

If

Design Problem." will be made at
I also liked the closing number, 11 a.m. In Memorial Hall.
-The Shepherds' Story," which
The Cornell University graduate
came closest to the simple exube- serves on the ASME Machine Derance of the traditional carols sign Division Committee and is
without becoming pompous or chairman of the Student Branch

R

OPEN DAILY

H

Ohio Engineer
To Speak Today

at an intersection, waited until the

Choristers' Yule Program Reviewed

-- GIRLS-

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944 Winchester Rd.
NOW!
THE "BIG 2"

And
"DADDY-O- "

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* .

I

.

f

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday,

UK Engineering Professor
Gets Research Contract

Dr. Prasad K. Kadaba, UK associate professor of electrical engineering, has been awarded a contract extension for basic research
to study the reaction of materials
to high frequency energy.

The

one-yea-

r,

$5,900

Professor Named
To Coal Group

The project will InvolVj the
study of the electrical Interaction
of molecules when they are
brought together, Dr. Kadaba said.
He added: "During the study we
may be abU to find out why the
properties of some materials are
better for Insulation purposes than
others."
Dr. Kadaba, who did research at
Michigan State University on a
fellowship, indicated
the research might turn up information that would be of value to
the plastics industry. '

National

Science Foundation grant was announced Sunday by Dr. II. Alex
Romanowltz, head of the Department of Electrical Engineering at
UK.
It will
administered by th
Kentucky Research Foundation.
Dr. Kadaba did research on the
project from 1954 through 1957
while at the University.

post-doctor-

al

William H. Roll, associate professor of mining engineering at
the University of Kentucky, has
been named to the Air and Water
Pollution Committee of the coal
divlsiofi of the Society of Mining
Engineers.

The air and water pollution
group is a subcommittee of the
Utilization Committee for 1960.
Kernel

riM

Clilflr4

fmr

A4t bring mm lit.
elatilflc
la tb Kerael

U4y.

Dec. 15,

Indonesian students studying In
the United States under the Bandung arid Bogor Participant Program are making their B plus
averages In American colleges and

mlttre, ahf the Indonesians' record fe even more noteworthy when
the language problem N considered.
None of the work taken by the
universities.
students in the United States la
The group's composite average in their native tongue.
of 3.27 on a 4.0 scale was called
Despite this, he said, "their recremarkable- by Dr. Herman E.
Splvey, dean of the University ord is comparable to that of our
of Kentucky Graduate
School American graduate students and
where most of the students are far superior to that of other
foreign students."
enrolled.
They have averaged 32 hours of
Dr. Splvey, who Is also chairman
Com- - course work for credit.
of UK's Foreign Operations
-

!

Words For Thought
I"he
TUCSON, Ariz. AP
at the new office of a bank
includes these comments:
By a Greenwich Village, N. Y.,
vlstor 'Cool, man, cool."
By a little girl "If mama lets
mc make an investment, I would."

,

fcco;;

Free Run
LONDON. Dec. 10 AP Slippery Sue is a handsome hen pheasant who prefers to live in a zoo.
She flew Into the London Zoological Gardens three months ago
and won't leave. She can't be
luted into a cage so officials are
letting her have the run of the
place.

while you're home on vacation,

invest a few minutes in your future...

Stcwardcsscss

SEE IBM

United Air Lines

'If you're a Senior or Graduate StudentTmake 'this a productive holiday as well as a happy one.
Take time to investigate career opportunities at IBM. You'll receive a warm welcome at any
of nearly 200 branch offices. Just call the manager and ask for an appointment. I Ie is expecting you.
He will tell you what sort of company we are . . . what the people are like . . . what we do . . .
how rapidly the data processing industry has been expanding., And he will tell you what we
offer qualified college graduates in career training, job satisfactions, prestige, earnings, and
'
opportunities for promotion.
We need men and women for a variety of careers in direct and indirect sales, applied science,
develbusiness administration, programming, manufacturing, engineering research and product
opment. We want men and women with imagination, ambition, and unusual ability.

now interviewing

for
Spring & Summer
Classes
Qualifications:
Age, 20 to 26
Height, 5'2" to 5'8"
Weight, under 138

Please call me for the location of the office nearest your home:
Mr. S. Parrish, Branch Manager
International Business Machines Corporation
'
628 E. Maii St., Lexington, Ky.

Apply during Holidays in
person or by letter to:

Telephone: Lexington

J.

If circumstances prevent you from accepting .this invitation,
please ask me or your College Placement Officer I of the
date of the next IBM interview on campus.

D. MAXTED

Manager
5959 S. Ckcro Ave.
Chicago 38, Illinois

Employment

'DATA PROCESSINGi

HUBS.

have a merry Christmas and a happy new yearl

Nobody Can Launder A Shirt Like

in

I

a

95?-2

Special Foreign Students
Making Grades In U.S.

UK Debaters
Tie In Meet
Superior speaking
points won
victory for the Notre Dame debate team which tied UK last Saturday at a meet In Chicago sponsored by the University of Illinois.
The UK debate team, nosed out
by Notre Dame, placed second
among 60 teams In the meet.
Speaking for L'K were:
Affirmitive:
Sharon Chenault,
Lruisville; Gary Wright. Bedford.
Negative: Kathleen Cannon, Madi- Koville; and Deno Curris, Lexing- ton.
The debaters were accompanied
in the trip by the a.wtatant debate
conch Joe Mainous.

--

SAVE 15

ON CASH AND CARRY

SOUTH LIMESTONE AND EUCLID AVE.

* The Kentucky Kernel

The Readers' Form

"

Entered at the Pxt Office at
Published four time
,
.

Islington, Kentucky at aecond clam matter

nnoVr tV Art .of March 8, 1879.
a wrrk during the rrgulrir nchool year except holiday! and eiama.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL. YEAR

Bill Neixirk, Editor
s
Bob Anderson, Managing Editor
Stewart Hedcer, Sports Editor
Zimmbrman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editors
Faul
Dick Ware and John Mitchell, Fhotographer$
Alice Akin, Society Editor
Stuart Coldfarb and Paul Dykes, Advertising Managers
Perry Ashley, Business Manager
Beverly Cardwell, Circulation
Bob Herndon, Hank Chapman, and Lew King, Cartoonists
Phillips, Bobbie Maaon, Linda Hockenamlth. Robert Wenninger,
Staff Wrltera: Jerry Ringo.-JIm

George Smith. Robert Perklna, Edward Van Hook, Rod Tabb, Lawrence Lynch. June Byera, Ann
Harria, Beverly Cardwell, Diane Capehart, Al Royater, Jan Berry man. Bob Jobe, Mary
Miller. Herb Steely. Norria Johnaon. Bob Fraaer, Emajo Cocanougher, Michele rearing. Pat Hulker,
Curtiaa Smith, John FiUwater, Gamett Brown, Richard Hedlund. Christ Finley, Allen Travla,
Sue McCauley, Phil Cox, Robert Radford, Beverly Pcdigo, and Maxlne Catea.

TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF

Palmer Wells, Newt Editor

Warren Wheat, Associate

For Graduate Dean

Select A Liberal
vises and instructs a wide assortment
of students in a wider assortment of
fields. His day may include counsel-

The chances are excellent that the
University Board of Trustees will select a new dean for the Graduate
School today to replace Dean Herman Spivey, who will accept a position at another institution in February.

ing students from physical education
majors to art students to science majors'. It is variety at its worst.
The position obviously requires a
man with liberal training and a universal outlook on the arts and
sciences. The demands are such that
a specialist, such as a physicist, chemist, psychologist etc., would not adequately be able to handle them. A
more desirable selection would come
from the man disciplined in the liberal arts or education.
The decision of the Board of Trus-- ,
tees today could be a monumental
one in the progress of the University.
Perhaps the effect that a competent
Graduate dean would have never
been measured in terms of prestige
and academic advancement; but if
an incompent one is chosen, it will
be easier for UK to measure the loss
of prestige and descent of academics.
What is most important is to select
a competent one now, pay him well,
encourage him to stay, and then not
worry about replacing him.

Although it is not ' often that the
Kernel sticks its nose, in the business
of the Board of Trustees, the selection of a dean for the Graduate School
holds more than just passing interest
for UK students; it is a decision that
could, in some measure, shape the
destiny of the University and add (or
detract) considerable prestige.
Background and personal achievement are prominent tenets for the
appointment of a new dean and we
suspect that much of the consideration will center around these topics
when the dean vacancy is brought
before the board. No one will doubt
that personal achievement is indeed
an important qualification, as it is in
every job. But background is equally
.

important.
The' graduate dean in any university is admittedly a person who ad

A Directory Arrives
Despite the late planning of Student Congress for the student directory, the long and tedious hours spent
on the book by the SC committee will
materialize in the circulation of the
directory this week at a nominal
charge Jto UK students.
Although the decision to appoint
a committee for putting out the book
was made too late for earlier production of the book, the coed in charge
of the committee deserves commendation for her effort in supervising
and advising the printing of the directory. The job requires more time and
effort than one student could hardly
afford to consume in one semester.
But, although the committee certainly worked nobly in producing
the book, the delay has contributed
to a degradation in the usefulness of
the directory; many of the students'
addresses and phone numbers will
be changed at the beginning of the
second semester. The University operators have been flooded with informational calls which are difficult
to answer without a telephone directory.
Professional typists, the committee
claims, were hired so that each student's name, address, and phone numprintber could be typed. The cost-oing by a professional company would
have been too great. SC could not
afford the easier way out.
But fhe fact remains that SC machinery on the directory did not begin
to operate until after school was well
under way; the committee selected
,

f

'

Catholics do not interpret church doctrine, they merely obey it. They have
confidence that the fathers of the
church arc better qualified in this respect.
I need no documentation to assert
that most adults, be they "Chinese,"
"Indian," or even friends of yours,
understand the possible consequences
of sexual intercourse. They must also
realize that abstinence from the sex
act is the most unequivocal remedy for
overpopulation.
You, Martin judging from your insevtrrfty, would also
fantile fear
advocate a compr(misw(lh a more apparent threat: commuftistn. You aro
bully-baiHowever, the Catholic
Church will not le oppressed; it will
not condone communism; it will not
sponsor artificial birth control, or any
other human improvisation opposed to
its precepts.
I am not adverse to naming myself.

The Directory Delay

University of Kentucky

not only was overburdened with
work, but with a lack of time. The
reason for the delay then really stems
back to SC.
It would have been ideal if the
SC committee were selected during
the Spring and then given the entire
summer to plan and supervise the
printing of the book; a station in
registration line for students to report for getting their names in the
student directory would cut the delay
possibly by a month or so. The
typists could do the majority of their
work during the first two day$ of the
semester, and the responsible students would have the excess time to
devote to studies.
And, remembering that an ounce
of prevention is worth a pound of
cure, we might have directories when
they are more useful.

To The Editor:
Concerning your article alxiut the
Student Directory, I would like to clear
up some false statements.
As for last year, the directory came
out before Thanksgiving. Where were
you all when the IxxAs hit the stands,
about Nov. 13?
Why didn't it come out sooner? First
of all our big, old IBM machine in
the Administration Building, last year
war just too busy and small and the
big operators jtist didn't have the time to
print anything as insignificant as a little,
old Student Directory. Oh they would
have, hut it would have taken until
Christmas.
We wanted to give the students a
good book, with home addresses so we
looked into a Lexington company to
print it. Too had we couldn't afford
$2,(XK), for that is the lowest price offer
we had.
Finally in the year of 1938 with IBM
machines etc., we had to hire four
women typists to type out the entire
book. (The addresses were not inserted
later, another error in a recent news
article, but all were typed at the same
time). The .women worked in the Administration Building so they could have
access to the dean's files for addresses.
They did finish in two weeks! The book
was in the hands of our printing de- -'
partment by Oct. 15; A whole month
it took to print the book? That's a
laughl Again, lack of equipment, time,
and people and of course who would
print a little Student Directory before
the big important Kernel or the football
booklets?
Then also, we were told that the University was too poor to finance the
book, so students would have to pay.
Haven't we all heard that liefore? To
top it all off, we heard so many gripes,
and yet several hundred bM)ks were
thrown away.
I would also like to add that if it
wasn't for the influence of Dean Martin,
we wouldn't have leen able to see
the necessary wheels to get things done.
We were just students, you know!
Now I ask you, why don't you all
stop fussing about things and start finding out the "why" about them? The
big Kernel might le able to help students for a change, instead of continually depressing us or making gripers
out of us, too!

nt

Michael Mohon

Inherit The Earth
To The. Editor:
I was so amused the. other day to
read the concern of your young correspondent, "Luther Martin," for the
world's millions, starving for lack of
birth control.
so idealistic,
His concern was so
how you say? naive.
so
With us Catholics now, the situation
is much more practical. We have, indeed, learned how to have our moral
cake and enjoy it too. After all, it is
best for the church.
So. If a man would have fewer children, why then he has only Jo take
the vow of chastity. And what, then, if
he break his vow? (We Catholics are
men.) Why, for him there
is absolution, and for the church, another soul.
Now, you Protestant idealists go right
on practicing your birth control. In
fifty years, maybe a hundred, how you
za!
We Catholics inherit the
earth.
No, we were not born yesterday,
"Luthei Martin." We were, as a matter
of fact, well established a thousand years
before you were born, and we'll bury
you yet!
Papa Ciovwm

...

red-blood-

-

say?-bonan-

Other Ways

Donna Lawson
Chairman, 1938-3- 9 Student Directory.
(Football game booklets or the Kernel
did not came a delay in the Student
Directory. They were all printed on dif'
ferent presses. As to your last question,
perliaps that is the way we help students. They lowered the price of the
directory by 10 cents, you know.

The Editor)

Communist Bait

To The Editor:
To Luther Martin:
My objection in replying to your
trite letter is, as you