xt7mgq6r076d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mgq6r076d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19600511  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 11, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 11, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7mgq6r076d section xt7mgq6r076d High School Study
To Benefit Slate;
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Today's Weather:

University of Kentucky
Vol. LI

LEXINGTON,

KY., WEDNESDAY, MAY

jj

said centuries ago In Ecclesia'sti-cu- s.
'For in much wisdom is much
grief; and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow."
College of Arts and Sciences-seni- ors:
Nancy E. Bidwell, Alice
Broadbent,
Chou, Lloyd
s,
Cress, Katherine Oard, Anne
Bruce Mayhew, Whayne
Priest, Sara Riley, James Rutledge,
Judith Schrim, Helen Stephens,
Jane Walsh. Judith Williams.
.Juniors: William Arnatt, Marion
Bell. Geri Denbo, Martha Frasier,
Barbour Perry, Nancy Pigg. Jerald
Richards, Evelyn Rupard, Roberta
Sherlock. Cecily Sparks, Nellie
Taylor, Charles Woodward.
Sophomores: Steadman Bagby,
Robert Carey. William Crain. William Creech, Reuben Garnett, Mary
LeBach. Sue McCauley, David
fraternity.
Linda Meyers, Betty
He is a member of the Little
Kentucky Derby Committee,
Council, Lances, Junior
men's honorary. Scabbard and
Blade. Honors Day Committee,
and Peta Alpha Psi, national accounting honorary.
The firot "Distinguished Teacher
Award" went to Dr. Charles E.
An Associated Press story from
Snow, professor of anthropology,
Frankfort yesterday quoted the
u ho spoke to the assembled faculty
and students on "Higher Educa- state audit as saying the Universition and Hare." Awards were made ty's new Medical Center cost the
state over half a million dollars
by President Frank G. Dickey.
More than 200 distinguished in "improper and unnecessary"
students were honored for aca- architect's fees.
The charge made by a state
demic excellence.
"Race is biology and nothing audit, prepared under the direction
else," Dr. Snow told the assembly. of State Auditor Joseph Schneider,
"A man's social behavior is in an called the procedure used by three
entirely different category," he finance commissioners under forsaid. He emphasized the need to mer Gov. A. B. Chandler, "highly
study race as "a need to study irregular."
genetic population, and all evidence today confirms the fact that
LKD Tickets
all race are gifted with whatever
it takes to learn."
Tickets for the Paul Hahn
"There Is no racial supremacy," Coif Show, the Little Kentucky
Dr. Snow said, defining it as "only Derby, and the Brubeck-Bosti- c
a social concept. Just look at the Jazz Concert, all Saturday, May
people being honored today," he 14, may be purchased at the
said, "and you will see representaSl'R ticket booth today through
tives of all races.
Friday from 12 noon to 4 p.m.
"The okl baying, 'ignorance is All members of the LKD Combliss Is really just the opposite," mittee must pick up their tickets
he said, "the better education you at the SUB ticket booth before
have, the bigger responsibility you 4 p.m. Thursday.
have to tociety. This was well
Ju-H- sl

Le-Bu-

Mc-Crack-

Partly Clouily, Cold ;
High 54, Low 39

A

II, 19f0

No. 107

Creech., White Win
ullivam Medallions

Two UK graduating seniors. Sidney Crouch and Robert W. White,
were honored yesterday as recipients of Sullivan Medallions.
The award were presented at
the annual Honors Day program In
Memorial Hall.
Miss Crouch, Carlisle, has been
president of Delta Delta Delta
sorority.
She has alo been a member of
Junior and trniov Tanhellenir,
Greek Wetk Committee, Cwens,
sophomore women's honorary,
junior women's honorary,
Link
Mortar Board, senior women's
honorary, the Little Kentucky
Derby Committee, and served as
rush counselor.
Wh'te, a native of Cadiz, is a
member cf the Sigma Alpha Epsi-lo- n

TT

i

'

5'

Mitchell, Michael Morgan, Linda
Mount, James Pearson, Adelbert
Roark, Jackie Robinson, Irene
Rose, William Smith, Gertrude
Webb.

Freshmen: June Bohanan, Ann
Evans, Doris Haynes, Linda Hoffman, Philip Hutchinson, Janet
Lloyd, Linda McDowell, Michael
Maloney, Vanda Marcum, Janice
Mitts, Charlotte Montgomery, Mo-re- ll
Mullins, Lenoref Newland, William Powers, Rita Ray, Patricia
Shiarella, Lora Shirley, Donald
Velkley, Carita White, Elizabeth
Wright.
College of Agriculture and Home
Economies Agriculture seniors:
Jefferson Brother, Charles Cornett,
Larry Montgomery, Bruce Helm,
Gilbert Mathis, Earl Wilson.
Continued On Page 3

-

I,

v'-

)

-

3

,

Inter-fraterni- ty

Medical Center Cost
Claimed 'Improper9

Medallion Recipients

"

According to the audit, the work
could have been done for $1,033,-78instead of the $1,554,051 which
the center cost the state as of
March 8. 1960.
The audit said that two contracts to perform the work for the
lesser figure were canceled without explanation and a new contract was given to the Lexington
firm of Meriwether, Marye and
Associates for the higher figure.
It claimed that on March 15.
ivoq, a uuiuruti was given Dy ine
Finance Department to Meriwether
and Marye, and on March 20. 1956,
an agreement was signed by the
University with Ellerbe and Co., St.
Paul, Minn.
Portions of the architectual work
for the center were to be done by
both firms at a total cost of $1,033,-786.

Sidney Crouch and Robert White received the Sullivan Medallion
Awards at the Honors Day program yesterday. The awards are
given annually to the outstanding senior woman and man.

COSTUME PARADE
TO BEGIN LKD
The itinerary for the Little Kentucky Derby Weekend May
13 and 14 was released by the Steering Committee last week.

The weekend will begin with a costume parade at 7:30 p.m.
Friday in Memorial Coliseum. Following the parade there
will besix preliminary heats for the Debutante Stakes, pre- sentation of the queen candidates, presentation of the 10 fina
lists in the queen contest, and six more preliminary heats for
the Debutante Stakes.
There will be the presentation of This year's stall decoration theme
the five finalists in the queen con- is scholarship.
test, followed by the Debutante
Paul Hahn, comic golfer, will
Stakes. Presentation of trophies to give a trick exhibition at 10:39
Debutante Stakes winner, costume a.m. on St oil' Field. The prelimi-

parade winner, and preliminary nary heats of the LKD will begin
at 3 p.m. on the intramural field.
heat winners will follow.
The presentation of the Little A faculty race and presentation of
Later the Finance Department,
acting through Dr. James W. Mar- Kentucky Derby queen, who will the heat winner trophies will foltin, who was then finance com- reign as Miss University of Ken- low immediately.
The Little Derby race will start
missioner, voided the contract with tucky and go to the statewide Miss
Kentucky pageant, will climax ac- at 4:30 p.m. on the intramural
Meriwether and Marye and the
tivities In the Coliseum that night. field.
argreement with Ellerbe.
Earl Bostic's jazz concert will beAt 10 p.m. there will be a fireA new contract was then given
works display on Euclid Avenue gin at 8:30 p.m. in the Coliseum.
to the Lexington firm for all the
followed by a street dance. The Red Presentation of the trophies to the
architectural services at a cost as Coats will play at the dance.
LKD winner will follow the Bostic
of March 8, 1960, of $1,544,051.
The new intramural field will be concert. Dave Brubeck's quartet
Hugh Meriwether said the audit opened at 6:30 a.m. on Saturday. will present its conceit. Immedioverlooks the fact that his firm Flat bed trucks will start a shuttle ately folowing the concert, Earl
saved the state $3,500,000 in con- service riding students from dorms Bostic will play for a dance in the
Neel also received the Kentucky
duction of the buildings by obtainCouncil on Pharmaceutical Edu- ing them at much less than similar to the field and back at 7 a.m. All SUB for all University students.
All proceeds from the weekend
cation senior award for the high- structures are costing elsewhere in stalls must be completely set up by
9 o'clock that morning and judging events will be used to set up schoest general average In his class, the country.
of the stalls will begin at 9:30 a.m. larship funds.
and the Lehn and Fink award for
the highest general average in
6.

Pharmacy College

.

Gives 12 Awards
Twelve

received awards

at the first annual Pharmacy

School Honors Day Banquet last
night in the Lafayette Hotel.
Jay Jacobson received the Rex-a- ll
Drug Co. award for outstanding
achievement.
The Rexall Drug Co. award,
given to a graduating senior for
outstanding achievement and contributing most to the pharmacy
profession, was presented to Jay
Jacobson.
Donald Neel, Pharmacy senior,
received five awards at the banquet.
Neil, Carol Wishnla, Fred Schul-teand Joseph Young tied for
n.

the Central Pharmaceutical Journ-

al Pharmacy Administration
award, hponsored by Joseph J.
Schine, editor and publisher of the

Central Pharmaceutical Journal.
This award is for the best
grades in pharmaceutical administration.
Mis j Wishnia and Neel again
tied for the Oscar C. Dilly Me-

morial award, a U.S. dispensatory,
awarded fur the highest grades In
all coupes olfered by the College
of Pharmacy exclusive of pharmacy administration.

For 'Crucifixion'

grade in all branches of chemistry Huiiiiiux
throughout his entire college
course.
A copy of the newest edition of
Howard's Modern Drug EncycloBy REX BAILEY
pedia, presented by the Bristol
Wednesday Associate Editor
Inc., was also preLaboratories,
A candidate for President of the United States,
sented to Neel in recognition of
outstanding achievement in courses who said he "would be like Jesus Christ" if elected
offered by the Materia Medrca De- to office, visited the University campus yesterday.
partment.
Thomas Jerome Hamlin, from London, who is
Charles Beckmann received the also running for U. S. senator from Kentucky, said
Kentucky Council on Pharmaceut- "instead of crucifying me they will elect me to public
ical Education junior award, given office."
to a junior who has made the
"I
greatest scholastic improvement being will be crucified in spending the rest of my life
a public servant," Hamlin continued.
over his sophomore year.
"The Holy Bible is my platform and will be my
The Kappa 1M Kentucky Graduate Chapter award, given to the guide as well as the United States Constitution and
outstanding junior on the basis of the Christian religion," Hamlin said.
The presidential aspirant said he was a candidate
scholarship, character, and activities, was presented to Thomas for governor last year and was in his first race for
public office in 1951 when he was a graduate stuGrimes.
Bill Stover received the Gould's, dent at UK.
He said 20,000 people voted for him for lieutenant
Inc. award for scholarship, activgovernor in 1951, although he was not old enough
ity, and character.
Carole Mobley was presented the to hold that office under Kentucky law.
Hamlin, who said his chances for being our next
Continued On Page 8
.

Presidential Candidate Visits UK
president was "excellent," thinks a

Hamlin-Rocke-fell-

er

ticket would be good.
"Rockefeller would furnish the money and Hamlin
would furnish the brains," the candidate added.
When asked if he had held a public office in the
past, Hamlin pointed out that he had be? n a school
teacher and that was "as much a public office as
you can obtain."
Hamlin said that a test he had taken "rated him
in the top 1 percent of people in the world in
intelligence."
Hamlin says he Is a direct descendent of Hannibal
Hamlin, who was vice president under Abraham Lincoln. Although he would piefer to run on the Republican ticket, he said he would be the Democratic
candidate if nominated by that party.
He said he would go to the national convention to
ask them to nominate him. Hamlin added that
"217 people could elect me president," referring to
the electoral college.
Hamlin, who said he graduated from the University in 1947, visited the campus to see admission
in the new UK Medical School.

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, May 11, 190(7

Student Schedule Abbreviations
Listed For Preclassitication

y

!
J

'

-

I

BAC. BIL. and BOT!
No, this isn't a new

r

i

ha
I

.

-

-

'-

t. ' V.

)

;

j"

M7

V--v

-.

I

V-

':

-

1

Ills-trie-

rock-and-ro-

ll

trio. It's Just a sample of the
abbreviations which will be on UK
student schedules during preclassl-ncatlo- n
for the 1960 fall semester.
BAC refers to bacteriology
courses; BIL to courses In the biology department; and BOT signifies botany courses.
These abbreviations and others
are to be used on the orange IBM
student schedule cards during
which began Monday and will continue for two

-

I

weeks.

was an outdemands by students
growth of
that the confusion and tiresome
waiting encountered during the
registration at
former week-lon- g

I

reclassification

I

m.mtd mm

Picasso Painting

Dr. Albert Elsen, professor of art at Illinois University, examines the
Ficasso painting: in the Guggenheim art exhibit. The exhibit is
from the Guggenheim Museum in New York and is loaned to UK as
part of its Fine Arts Festival. Dr. Elsen spoke at the opening of the
exhibit Sunday.

Phi Delts Elect
Farra President

Awarded UK Students
Grants totaling more than

$72,-00-

0

have been received for graduate work at UK under the National Defense Act.
Eleven fellowships have been
awarded for study over a three
year period to students in history,
physics, mathematics, world affairs.
and mathematical economics.
UK students received four of the
awards.
Each winner will receive $2,003
in the. first year, $2,000 in the second year, and $2,400 in the third
year, "plus $400 a year for each de-

pendent.
The institution awarding the

fel-

Jean Anthony Powell, a UK senior, graduating in August, will
study physics.
Jesse R. Raine, a senior at UK
who will graduate in August was
awarded a fellowship for study in

.

.

,.,

Richard C. Mullikin. Georgetown,
,m

W1" olovJ

n,nthomoMoc
"-"-

A UK senior, he will

-

Three fellowships .were awarded
to Lexington students for graduate
study in world affairs at UK's Patterson School of Diplomacy and
International Commerce. The stu-

SU Social Committee, 4 p.m..

Room 128.
SUB Topics, 4 p.m.. Room 204.
U High Pep Club Banquet, 6
p.m.. Ballroom.

LAW STUDENT WINS AWARD
UK law student, George W.
Shrdoan, has been awarded a fellowship to do graduate work in
tnal advocacy at the Georgetown
University Law Center, Washington. D. C.
Only 10 such awards, known as
A

UK Agronomy Club
Wins Judging Award
The UK Agronomy Club soil
judging team placed first in the
Southeastern Soil Judging District,
at Virginia Polytechnic Institute

Saturday.

Team members Lewis Perkins,
Ronald Morgan, Paul Quiggins.
Cledith Rowe and David Coffey
teams
out pointed
representing
North Carolina State, Tennessee
Tech, University of Tennessee, and
University of Georgia.
Perkins also received a special
award for scoring the highest individual point total.
The UK team was coached by
graduate student Dan Amos and
Dr. Thomas Hutchenson, associate
agronomist.

' It

Pays To Advertise In
The Kentucky Kernel

ill

...all

of Bergman's
skills are on view in

'The Magician' which
all in all is a superb
motion picture."
Jncjmar Ikrgman's

Do It Y on r self
(AP

E.

po-

linht-finser-

ed

of a manifold, dishis law decree May 30, will receive various owners
cap, air cleaner,
S4.C00 plus full tuition and fees tributor, radintor
transmission, four hub caps, two
under the one year Erant.
The holders of the fellowsmps,
in addition to graduate work, parAIR CONDITIONED
.s
ticipate in extensive training
advocacy in the Disin trial
trict of Columbia Federal Courts.
liuciid Avmut fchy that
Shadoan received a bachelor's
TODAY AND THURSDAY
decree in commerce from UK in
"FUNNY FACE"
1957. He is a member of the KenAudrey HepbtirrvFred Asif
tucky Law Journal staff, the Phi
"THE NAKED MAJA"
Delta Phi legal fraternity, and the
y
Franciota
Ava
Student Bar Association.
pro-g'air-

mm
sy

i.--

r

It's here at last. The Central Kentucky Frcmiere Showing
STARTS TODAY. MAY

lllh-14t- h

GLENN THEATRE
Georgetown, Kentucky

Gardner-Anthon-

i

1

I

n

Now 1st Run!
Notice Cinema Connoisseurs:

?

HERE IS THE EPITOME IDF FINE ART IN

MOTION PICTURES

EXTRAORDINARY

..

THE SURPRISE OF 1960!
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S HOST

INTRIGUING

FILMS !' VNEwswffKl

7vYd
m: m

WW-

-

w

mm

m

"A masterpiece . . . nothing short of miraculous

The New Yorfcer

Local
MARION," Ind.
Barrett Prettyman Fellowlice strongly suspect some
ship, are made each year. They
citizen is out to build his
are made to graduates of leading
own automobile. ' Thefts cm sucAmerican law schools.
reported from
Shadoan, who will be awarded cessive uiehts were

the

j

m

SUIi Meetings

dents are:

Barbara Nan Williams, Transyllowships will receive up to $2,500
per year for each fellow, bringing vania College; Joseph M. Gilliam
the grant total to around $100,000. Jr., UK; and Thomas M. T. Niles,
The UK fellowship winnrrs are: Harvard University.

on

V

i

Caeier.

graduate in

June.

I!y-fusl-

i

Jack Farra was elected president
by Phi Delta Theta for the 1960
fall semester.
Other new officers are Bob
Fraser, vice president; Dave Graham, treasurer; Harold Hicks, secretary; Jim Wilkerson, alumni
secretary; Bill Mischel. pledge
trainer; Jerry Ozier, warden; Dick
Taylor, chaplain; Bob Ducan, historian; Julian Murphey, chorister;
Dave Mahan, librarian; and Bob
Owen, house manager.
Bill Mischel, steward; Doug Sut- -'
.
terim. rusn cnairman. Jim itr:ll
son. scholarship chairman; Den
social
Cram and Ed
rhairmpn: John Provlne. intra
murals chairman; John Provine
and Bill Jones. IFC representatives; and Bill Jones, SC representative.

Four Fellowships

'
GEO. Oeograpny; ui-x- .
Memorial Coliseum be eliminated.
d
was HE, Home Economics HIS.
classification plan
The
here for the first time last lory: and HOR 'iculture.
HUM HumaUe.: irkO
fall and resulted In much con- LAW.
when some 2.000 students giene; JOU. Journalism.
Library Science.
failed to observe preclasslflcallon LaW; and LS,
MA, Mathematics and Astron-Th- e
rulfS.
omy; ME. Mechanical Englnecr- departmental abbreviations
n Ho .pH ore directed at reducing ing; MET, Metallurgy tngineerroreign lanthe number of scheduling errors ing; MFL, Modern Mining Engiguages; and MIN.
fall.
which occurred last
neering.
Following is a list of alphabetMM. Materia Medlca; MS. Milized departmental abbreviations
seeing itary Science; MUS. Music; NUR.
which UK students will be
during the preclasslflcatlon pro- Nursing; and PCH, Pharmaceutical Chemistry.
cedure.
PHI. Philosophy; PHR. PharmEngineering;
AE. Architectural
Economics; acy; and PHY. Physics.
AEC, Agricultural
PS. Political Science; PSY. PsyEngineering;
AEN. Agricultural
chology; ITY, Poultry Science;
AEX. Agricultural Extension; and
and RA, Radio Arts.
AGE. Agricultural Entomology.
RS, Rural Sociology; SOC. SoAnimal
AGR. Agronomy: AH.
Husbandry;
AL. Ancient Lan- ciology: SW, Social Work; and
guages; ANT, Anthropology; and ZOO. Zoology.
AP. Anatomy and Physiology.
APY, Animal Pathology; ART,
Art; AS, Air Science; BAC, Bacteriology: and BIL, Biology.
I n Ml
r-- 1
BOT. Botany; CE, Civil Engineering; CHE. Chemistry; CME.,
HELD OVER!
Chemical Engineering; and COM.j
Commerce.
DEAnV JANET I
I TONY
DIP. Diplomacy: DRY. Dairy!
EDU,!
Science; ECO. Economics,
CURTIS' MARTIN UIGH
Education; and EE. Electrical En- -j
glneerlng.
ENG. English; FPS. Fire Pro-- 1
tectlon and Safety; FOR. Forestry;
"TALL STORY"
FRIDAY!
and
GE. General Engineering;
Wild Tony ftrkin And Jane Fenda
GEN. General Agriculture.

Nigel

Patrick-Yvonn-

e

Mitchell

2nd FEATURE
'WRITTEN ON THE WIND'

TIMES:
"SAPPHIRE" at

7:55

&

11:35
4

NOWSAT.
STARTS SUNDAY
Dick Clark

1st Run!

Cary Grant

Tony Curtis

"Operation Petticoat"
Paul Newman

'Because They're Young" "The Left Honded Gun"

DOB II EHS DON SKIP T AY LOU

...

JOUHSAIASM BLDG.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

Receives $41,429
For Student Loans
UlV
An

additional

141.429

hn

hn

received by the Unlvrrrtty for
loans to students under the National Defense Student Loan Fund
program.
Dr. Cecil C. Carpenter, dean of
the College of Commerce and
chairman of the Student Loan
Committee at UK. said the new
funds will be used to make loans
to students enrolling at the University this fall.
The nr-- r grant makes a total of
$151,218 UK received under the
program during the 1959-6- 0
fiscal
rar. The major part of the total
$109.789 was received la.st fall.
I K has made 517 loans to students since entering the program
in March of 1939. Dr. Carpenter
aid $1.5,000 has been loaned to
375 Mudents durlnjr the period.
Under the National Defense
Loan program, students may
tc:row a maximum of $500 a
$1,000 a year, and $5,000
Stu-cW- r.t

er,

duiiii their college career. Average loans at UK run about $250
per se.ne.ster.
They are repayable at the rate
of 10 percent of the loan each year
with payments beginning a year
after a student ceases to attend
school on a full time basis.
Persons who borrow money
under the program to become public school teachers may have 10
percent of their loan canceled for
each year they teach up to a maximum cancellation of 50 percent.
Interest, compiled at the rate of
three percent annually, does not
start until one year after the student graduates or ceases to attend
full time.
Students majoring in education,
engineering, science, mathematics,
and languages are given priority
in that order. However, Dean Carpenter said loans are made to students in other fields.

Wc(!nclM.,y II,

an

La-Fra-

Eight departments In the Col ried students' housing unit, during
strations in the Funkhouser
lege of Arts and Sciences and the both the afternoon and evening.
Sciences Building. The
The Departments of Zoology, other displays will be set Up In
College of Engineering will participate Friday In "Engineers Day Psychology, and Ilacteriology will McVey Hall and the College of
have exhibits and special demon- - Engineering.
cal

Open House."
For the first time, the Departments of Mathematics, Bacteriology, Psychology. Zoology, Chemistry, Physics, Aerospace Science,
and Military Science are holding
open house In conjunction with
Engineers Day, which annually
brings to the UK campus several
hundred visitors. '
Demonstrations of student activities have been planned from 1
to 4:30 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m.
In addition, all' the departments
have planned displays.
Three display routes' through the
College of Engineering laboratories
have been mapped out for the vis- uois who vui toe engineering
rrr'gfrg from th pouring
mcfal to an Internal
rf
coThu.vtion encine test.
The Department of Mathematics
and Astronomy will open iU observatory near Cooperstown, mar
.cs

m'-!'',-

c

a?
r

tittle Kentucky berby Festival Presents
SATURDAY, MAY 14, 8:30 P.M.

JUniversity of Kentucky Coliseum

Lawrence Duffy, Donald Riel,
Mary Cinnamon, Marjory
Schwartz, Elizabeth Scobee, and
Marilyn Stull.
College of Pharmacy seniors:
Donald Ncel and Carol WLshnia.
Juniors: Thomas Grimes and
Gene Thomas.
Ashland Cenie r Sonhomores:
Ruby Hensley, Susia McClanahan,
and Frances Miller.
Freshmen: Hazel Hall, Saundra
Little. Lena Parsons, Joseph Simpson, Bonnie Taylor. Judy Thompson, Patricia Thompson, Jacqueline Walters.
Northern Center Sophomores:
Lucy Kripperistapel
and John
soward.
Freshmen: Frederick Heath and
Charles Hermann.

7.

7

Tickets On Sal

BARNEY

MILLER

STUDENT UNION
'
BUILDING

na,

Jp-ne-

11

BORN TO
TAKE
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT

f

Starts Tonight

' anu mane
frmihltkl

7

t'-

-

nn

mm

in a white car

few

VLADY

ROBERT HOSStLN

0D1E

V

1RS0IS

3rd and Final Week
You're in the Show
in

TODD-AO- !

Evenings Mon. thru Sat. at 8:00 p.m. Sun. 7:30 p.m.
Matinees Wed., Sat. and Sun. at 2:00 p.m. .

t

I

71MH

in

1

1

TODD-A-

pi

1

NOW SHOWING
2 Action Features!

When things get too close for comfort
your best friends won't tell you...
but your opponents will!
Old Spice Stick Deodorant brings you safe,
sure, y
protection.
s
Better than
that skip.
Better than sprays that drip.
Better than wrestling with creams that
NFW
ore greasy ond messy.
1.00

70

MAN

CRA1N

PLUS

'

ftr

-

riASTIC CASf

roi

LADD
I

L

roll-on-

fST
INSTANT

fHONI

J

all-da-

r:

O

"The Rise and Fall of
Legs Diamond"

-3

8 Departments Contribute To Engineers Day

Crouch, White Win Medallions

From Page 1
Marsh. Arloc Mayne. and Jack
Jimmy Robinson and Simpson.
IConti
College of Law seniors: John
nliomoris: fipnp Il.irris nnrl Bondurant, and Carl Clontz.
Juniors: William Logan.
R'f" Roberts.
Sophomores: Jackson White.
Freshmen: Jerald Becker. Gene
College of Education seniors:
E ..7.11th. and Benjamin Taylor.
Shirley Browder, Marshall Chilton,
Home Economics seniors: Wil-m- ;i Jane Evans, Nancy
Garriott. PaBascham. Rebecca Carloss, tricia Harris, Sonja Lancaster, Bil-li- e
Martha Hurt, and Betty Renaker.
Petty, Althea Skelley, Polly Vicars, Theresa Nantz.
Juniors: Myra Tobin.
Sophomores: Ann Fitts, and
Juniors: Ida Lee Baxter, MarM.irtha Schneider.
garet Brumleve. Carol Byron,
Fieshmen: Jane Bennett, and Geneva Faw, Dorothy Jenkins,
Carolyn Reid.
Grace Leonard, Lois Shryock, Sam('Allege
of Engineering sen- uel Stevens, and Patricia Sumner.
iors: William Alverson. Ay-hSophomores: Judith Beetem,
Aydogdu. Paul Francis, Hever Jacquline Cain, Judith Howell.
Godsey. James Greene, Kenneth Marilyn Mclntire, Helen Paver,
Hanson. Norma Rundle, George and Sandra Tattershall.
Slaughter, Carl Smith, and Charles
Freshmen: Joyce Cunningham,
White.
Barbara Johnson, William
Juniors: Robert Berry, Victor Van
Patricia Pringle, and BarFunderburk. Gene Gabbard, and bara Taylor.
s
Gibbs.
College of Commerce seniors:
Hrr.ry Bennett. Anne Armstrong, Barbara Beach,
Fa.i.ue. Lcrry. Lyhaii Coe, Conrad Donald Cook, Glenn Epperson,
FeVner. John Oib.'in, Denis Lowry, Lois Goodrich, Jerry Harp, Carol
J In McC
W l"a u Mcrary, Honeycutt, and Isaac Manis.
Cv.tl San Jet j, Ji..u liainmell,
Juniors: James Finch, Mavis
James Young.
Guffey. Charles Mays, George
f reshmen: David Bam .v Robert Mills'. Tanner Ottley, Anna Maria.
Carpenter. Edward Force, Michael David Redding, and Thomas
F( on. Louis Furlong, Marshall Truempy.
G.i.h.im, David MacDulfee. John
Sophomores: Joseph Diehl,

1900-

STICK DEODORANT

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* The Prcclassificalion Chaos
A

Hypocritical Analysis
ny nonm E MASON

There's a new instruction lxMklct
things.
out one of those
You will get a copy when you
how-to-do-- it

pre-classi- fy

:

.

.

this week.
You must approach these instructions cautiously. They are tricky, as
any fool can tell by looking at the
first paragraph. Not only that, they
are loaded with symbolism, and unless you are adept at explanation, you
will find yourself caught between the
lines.
For instance, unless you read
ultracomprehensivcly, you will come
to a line that says, "the University
does not have an ROTC course." You
couldn't find it anyway, because every
course has a new number.

.

"To be honored at next year's Honors Day program are .

.

A Study Of Studies
The House report on education
touched off probably the biggest controversy over the, state of education
in Kentucky history. The committee
which prepared it did not spare anyone or anything, ( but leveled barbs
at elementary, secondary, and higher
education.
It attached the epithet of "soft"
education to Kentucky schools and
singled out many phases of training
in which students were lacking.
What was pleasing (although disturbingly so) about the report was
its nearness to the truth. High school
students in the state, it said, simply
aren't getting the educational training needed to prepare them for the
rigors and comprehensiveness of college. And the colleges are hampered
because of this.
The House committee created
heated debates, denials, and some
firm avowals from Kentucky educators to improve and meet the standards that the legislators were seeking.
Now another, and we think more
tangible, report will be forthcoming
in a study of Kentucky high school
curriculums by a statewide committee organized by a group of UK
students and sponsored by Student

presidents. The SC committee organizing it has contacted Kentucky
citizens fervently interested in education rather than a group of apathetic incompetents who usually get on
such committees.
It is a credit of the University that
the study began here and that the
original idea came from a UK student. It should carry more impact
with those conducting the study and
with those high schools which will
be studied.
Consider that 50 percent of the
freshmen here are usually on probation (and many of those failing go
to other state colleges and pass with
ease) and one receives full in the
face the reason why the study is
direly needed Yet there is little
effort being made by Kentucky high
schools to change their curriculums.
Many of them are loaded with courses
which should be learned at the grade-school

level.
Add to that the fact that Ken-

tucky is idling somewhere near 50th
jn education and has one of the highest illiteracy rates, and the study's
purpose becomes magnified.
For if high school curriculums are
improved, the state colleges will be
able to teach and challenge better
Congress.
The study will be supervised by prepared students, and Kentucky's
a statewide committee of Kentucky school system should take a noticeable leap in national rankings, enough
college educators, prominent businessmen, legislators, and student council to make any study worthwhile.

One of the secretaries in charge
of the University noticed with sterling alacrity that students will have
a real problem this year. "They can't
read four words, 'Please print in ink,' "
she said. "I low can they possibly read
four pages of this material?
Actually it is very simple. The
preponderating essence of it is evident
in any UK official's face that look of
mingled delight and disgust with student stupidity.
reclassification 101, a course in
understanding the Great New System,
will be offered next fall, but in the
meantime, as a public service, here
is a concise travelogue of preclassifica-tion- .
First of all, the student is given
a blue card and four orange cards if
he is a girl and four purple cards
if he is a boy, plus an IBM schedule;
card which must be filled out on lx)th
sides in alphalctical order.
He takes the cards to his adviser
who plays an outstanding role. He
knows what he reads in the mimeographed material, and he is able to
help the student fill his schedule with
beneficial courses. That is what advisers are for, to lend friendly helping hands toward the exit signs out
of this mess.

After signing all the cards and
wishing the student would drop dead,
the adviser sends the student to the

Swine Ham to be stamped and approved (cards, that is). The student
then makes six carl Kin copies of eac h
and takes them to the Coliseum to
1k approved. If he is a veteran, ho
fills out an extra card for the Veterans' Office, and if he is a incinlwr
of the Hasketweaving Club, likewise.
Not to mention the Skindivcrs' Association, the Holmes Hall Discipline
Council, and the Little Kentucky

Derby.
He keeps the blue card for pos-

terity.
At the Coliseum the student stops

at various stations where his schedule
is meditated and processed. He is oblivious to all this red tape (too), and
when his schedule is returned to him,
he finds that in half his courses all
the sections arc closed. He can't
change them lccause his advis Jias
signed his cards, a loyalty oath gesture, meaning that he. must ake, the
subjects he lias signed up for.
Next he goes to a problem station
where his problems are explained to
him.
Then he stops at Station 4. This
is a lunch counter. The University
is determined to derive some value
from preclassification.
He returns to his adviser for an-

other schedule and returns happily to
the Coliseum some days later, when,
if he is lucky, he will get some classes.
He wanders through half a dozen
more stations, dropping and adding
cards, tossing around approvals and
rejection slips, anil becoming acquainted with the University per
sonnel.
At station 10 he registers his car,
but first he has to say, "May I At

f

station 11, he doesn't say, "May I"
they say, "You uillV and he gets his
fee slip.
Then he goes to station 12. Here
he finds a sign. It says, "No parking
except between 4 p.m. and 6:36 p.m.
on alternate Sundays, with the exception of Palm Sunday that is, if you
are an upper division student and
your standing is between 2.00 and
2.90."

University Soapbox

Student Censures College Of Education
By SUZY HORN

could term the College of
Education as a last resort for all
those who want a college degree
an