HE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, April 27, 1900

Preclassification Plans Released SC Will Be Asked

Continued From rage 1
make sure there are no schedule
conflict. These courses should be
fisted in alphabetical order to
avoid delay in the Coliseum.
If the pencil copy of the schedule appears satisfactory, the student will complete the IBM schedule In ink, a copy of the college
schedule in ink for the dean's office, and any other schedule cards
or forms required by his college.
Veterans should complete a
schedule card for the Veteran's Office. This card will be left In the
dean's office after it is completed.
Schedule cards will be checked
by the adviser to see that all required information has been supplied.
The Registrar's Office, to insure
that the student takes only courses
approved by his adviser, will not

CLASSIFIED
Aaertlitnf Rmtei
(17
mimlmun.)

Classified

.Sc.
word
per rent discount for a da which run
full week.
Dradllnei:
Tuesday Editiorv Monday 3:00 p.m.

Each word

25

Wednesday

Tuesday 1:00 p.m.

Edition

Thursday Edition Wednesday 3:00 p.m.
Friday Edition Thursday 1:00 p.m.
I'bone Beverly Prdlfo. ext. flit.
FOR SALE
y
sports
FOR SALE 1957
car. Red, radio, heater, overdrive, low
mileage. Excellent condition. $2,295.
21A4t
Phone
Austin-lle;ile-

FOR SALE 1959 Volkswagen convertible, light blue. Very good condition.
Coopers-towPhone
after 5 p.m.
C-2-

n.

26A4t

accept chances made on the IDM
card. All changes made In the
schedule ofter the original is completed will be made on a new drop-ad- d
form and must have the dean's
approval.
After obtaining the adviser's approval, the student will return to
his college dean's office where his
schedule will be checked and
signed.
The student will go then to the
west concourse of the Coliseum so
the Registrar's Office may fill his
schedule.
In the Coliseum, clerical personnel from the Registrar's Office
will take students' IBM cards and
ask students to go to the north
end of the concourse and wait until their names are called.
If all courses in a student's
schedule are available, he will be
called to the check station and
told his classification Is completed.
Here, the student will also obtain
a fee payment schedule for next
fall.
If one or more of the scheduled
courses are closed, the student will
be called to a problem station
where he will be given an explanation of what Is wrong and what
he can do about it.
If another section of the same
course can be fitted into his
schedule, the problem station will
accept all copies of a drop-ad- d
form without the adviser's or
dean's approval.
Blackboards located in a restricted area will indicate closed
sections.

To Sponsor Study

If It is necessary to change a
course, rather than a section, the
problem station will allow this
change on a drop-ad- d
form if the
students Involved In It -- recognlied
Continued From Tare 1
college dean's sigform has the
state student councils should be their own Inadequacies and the
nature.
f their fellow stu-th- e
to make contributions to adequacies
Advisers may authorize some
dents."
study.
students to have in their posDaniel said the committee
He added that a grant from a
form alsession a blAnk drop-ad- d
might be ask- - should not be hindered with fiscal
ready signed by the dean's office. national foundation
and political matters.
program.
These students may change courses ed for to finance the
No estimate of how much the
Members of the SC committee
at the Coliseum.
study would cost has been made, meeting with Dr. Dickey said they
If a student doesn't have this
believed Student Congress will
signed form, he must see his ad- Daniel said.
First public announcement of agree to sponsor the study wlth- to obtain approval for a
viser
course change. After obtaining ap- the plan was made at last week's out much opposition at tomorrow
proval from the adviser and the Kentucky Education Association night's meeting,
vVainscott said last night that
college dean, the student should convention by House Majority
Leader Thomas Ray of Falrdale.
Coliimmediately return to the
ap- Ray commended Daniel for be- -. Dean of Men Leslie L. Martin
seum to complete his scheduling
proved the plan.
ginning the study and said the IK
process.
Krllen Dunn, director of the
evening: classes program, said students cannot preclassify for evewith
ning classes because they aren't
scheduled yet for the fall semester.
Full-tim- e
students may sign up
for evening classes during regis(Author of "I Wat a Tern-aDwarf', "Ths Many
tration next fall. Extra fees are
Love of Dobie (JiUit", tic.)
not required for fall classes if a
student is full time.
gt

Engineer Exam
ExThe Engineer-in-Trainin- g
amination, sponsored by the
State Board of Registration for

Professional Engineers, will be
given today in the Engineering
Annex.
The exam will last from 8 a.m.
until 5 p.m. It will be given only
to seniors.

1959
Renault Dauphine.
like new. Call
ask
for David Pollitt. Owner needs money.

FOR

SALE

15.730 miles,

26A4t

CLASSIFIED

SALE Refrigerator and apartment sire gas range. Can see at 125
Zanedale- - Drive. Apt. H or phone
FOR

ADventures

26A4t

PRINCESS
MARGARET'S
MAN
His grades at Eton were
and he later
flunked out of Cambridge.
(College men take note! This
is not a prerequisite for marrying; a Princt'ss.)
Margaret, on the other hand,
has always been a beautiful,

charming; rebel . . . with less
chance of falling in love than
any girl who hasever dreamed
of being a princess could
possibly imagine.
That they found each other
in spite of themselves is the
basis for the most exciting
romance of this decade. Read,
for the first ti me, the real
story behind Princess Mar-

COLLEGE: THE FOE OF EDUCATION
In your quest fur a college dcgno, are you lieconiing a narrow
specialist, or are you
educated in the broad, classical
sense of the word? This question is lieing asked tod.iy by many
wri us (M'ople including my harU-rmy XHliatri.--t, and my
little dog SjHit and it would lie well to seek an answer.
us examine our souls. Arc we becoming exjwrts only in
the confined area of our majors, or does our knowledge range
far and wide? Do we, for example, know who fought in the
battle of Salamis, or Kant's cpistemology, or Planck's constant,
or the voyage of the llmylr, or l'alestrina's cantatas, or what
Wordsworth was doing ten miles ulmve Tintern Ahliey?
If we do not, we are turning, alas, into specialists. What,
then, can we do to escajie this strait jacket, to broaden our
vistas, lengthen our horizons, to
in short, educated?
Well sir, the first tiling w e must do is throw aw ay our curricula.
Tomorrow, instead of going to the same old classes, let us try
something new.
us think of college, not as a rigid discipline,
but as a kind of vast smorg:isUird, with all kinds of tempting
intellectual tidbits to sample and savor. Let tin dive in. 11
our jient-u- p apjietites roam and snatch where they will.
In-in- g

,

I--

It

Don't worry,
wc can
always get

jS

II

In the May issue of

Redbook
fr

The Macs line
Young AdulU
How on sale at all newsstands

c

j)JlPfcYr

"if'

!

C"'fsfc

M

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Irs

1

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of...

garet's marriage.

yT-g- u

jOj

another
P,ano
from the
classified
columns

fclv

yf-n- f

3v

let at emtie m
'e will start the day with a stimulating seminar in Hittite
artifacts. Then we will go over to marine biology and a;iend a
happy hour with the mollunk. Then we will oien our ptiren by
drilling w ith the UOTC for a njiell. Thn we'll go over to juurnai-nand scramble a font of liodoni. Then we'll go to tbemWictJ
school and palate a few efJeens. The we'll o to buui
m

IE WIS IL

economics and have lunch.
And between clasw we'll smoke Marllmro Cigarettes. Thia,
let me emphasize, is not an added fillip to the broadening of our
education; it is an essential. To learn to live richly and well ia
an imtMirtant part of education, and Marllxirosarean important
part of living richly and well. ) you think flavor went out
when filters came in? Well,
the joke is on you. Marllmro,
with its Selectrate filter, delivers flavor in full measure, flavor
without stint or compromise, flavor that w rinkled care derid. sr
flavor holding lioth its sides. This triumph of the tobacconist's
art comes to you in soft pack or
lox and can lie lighUnl
with match, lighter, candle, Welshach mantle, or by rubbing
two small Indians together.
When we have embarked on this new regimen or, more accurately, lark of regimen we will soon U studded with culture
like a ham with cloves. When strangers accost us on the street
and say, "What was Wordsworth doing ten miles a Hive Tintern
Abley?" we will no longer slink away in silent abashment. We
will reply loud and clear:
"As any truly educated person knows, Wordsworth, Shelley,
and Keats used to go the Widdicombe Fair every year for tli
jxietry-writiii- g
contests and
d
races, both of which
they enjoyed wildly. Well sir, imagine their chagrin when they
arrived at the Fair in 177i and learned that Oliver Cromwell,
jittery
C.uy Fawkes had just invented the spinning
jenny, had caneehnl all public gatherings, including the Widdi-comFair and I.iverMM. Shelley was so ujiset that he
drowned himself in the Hay of Naples, Keats went to Umdoti
and U'came Samuel Johnson, and Wordsworth ran blindly into
the forest until he collapsed in a heap ten miles above Tintern
AbU'y. There he lay for several years, sobbing and kicking bin
little fat legs. At length, jnace returned to him. He comimeed
himself and, noticing for the first time the beauty of the forest
around him, he wrote Joyce Kilmer's immortal
. . . Arid
that, smartypants, is what Wonk worth waa doing ten mile
above Tintern Abbey."
iixw mm shyii
ha-h- a,

Aittljetttir

GHy

Sttttmiiunuu
in short sleeves

iVoir .

'Two iJeas to keep warm weather
in the fashion front: a soft
batiste with University styling . . .
and luxurious hopsack oxford,
in pullover model. The button-'dow- n
collar with the perfect
arched flare looks smart
with or without a tic. Both $3.00.

--ARROIPtf

hok

bttr in on Arrow Wiif

f!i-t-

op

I

three-legge-

U'

7e

PoeU andpeasant$ alike knoa that if you like mlldnets but
you don't like fitter, you can't do better than, Murlboru't
companion cigarette Philip Morris.

*