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Page 27 text:
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CLASSES
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Page 26 text:
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ed by students with sore thumbs and haggard faces? The first go to the Hygiene Clinic, the latter go on upstairs to the Psychology Depart- ment and Bureau of Personnel. It is Neville Hall, once a dormitory, now a body and brain hospital. Across the campus is another of the old dormitories and one of the original build- ings. White Hall, from which emerge shrewd business men. If we go back of the building we will find blossoming botanists slipping out that way to visit the botanical garden. Look- ing down upon the lower campus, we note the Memorial Stadium and in the place where the old campus lake once rippled we see the Men’s Gymnasium. Who are these aesthetic men we discern wandering among the athletes? Oh. they are future futuristic artists who have strayed from their Art Center, perhaps in search of the girls' dormitories which lie beside it. As an artist enters the art building we wonder if he could be an actor in the little theater. Re- crossing the campus, a grotesque figure catches our eye. It is the replica of an old iron monger’s sign in Assisi and is hung before the entrance to Wendt Forge Shop. Future engineers, but pres- ent dirty faced lads, run through its rooms and those of Mechanical Hall and other associated buildings. In the vicinity are shops which manufacture miners, physicists, civil engineers, chemists, mathematicians, journalists, and nov- elists. We pause for tea at Maxwell Place, the president’s residence, and then pass on to the home of blessed sleep, the men's dormitories. This spire rising before us is that of Memorial Hall, a tribute to those men who turned from intellectual training to answer the call of the NEW EDUCATION BUILDING WENDT HALL nation in the World War. Nearby is that part of the plant which turns out the sons of the soil which have made Kentucky so famous, the Agri- cultural building. As a by-product we have wives who can cook. Opposite the Administra- tion building is land that was once a work- house quarry, and in turn a dump, but has now evoluted far enough to turn out tillers of the fertile brain. Here stands the beautiful new Teachers’ Training building. Returning to the heart of the campus, we stop to look again at that little gem, the old library. Beyond it we see rising, immense, the new library, the latest triumph of President McVey. When this first half of the million-volume library is completed, the old building will be transformed into a museum, keeping alive by-gone days just as the campus will always treasure and keep alive by-gone memories. old library building [ Page 18
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