xt7bg7371n70 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bg7371n70/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19600517  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 17, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 17, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7bg7371n70 section xt7bg7371n70 LKI) Weekend

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In Pictures;
See Page 5

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON,

Vol. LI

Today's Weather:

Partly Cloudy, Warm;
High a i, Low 61

KY., TUESDAY, MAY, 17, 19M)

No. 110

SAE Is Derby Winner:

Moore Selected Queen
"Sputniks" won the first place
Chi Omega won first prize for
trophy in the costume parade pre- their stall, based on the theme:
ceding the Debutante Stakes.
land"Will you make a three-poiSecond prize in the costume ing or a four-poistanding?"
Judging was awarded to girls from Boyd Hall third floor won second
Patterson Hall first floor disguised prize with the theme "Scholarship
as the "Keystone Cops."
time with odds on the favorite."
About 5,000 persons attended the
AH proceeds from LKD will go
Saturday night by June Moore, Earl Bostic-Dav- e
Brubeck Jazz to the UK Scholarship Fund. No
queen of the Little Kentucky Concert in Memorial Coliseum financial report is available yet on
Derby.
Saturday night.
the outcome of the weekend.
of the trophy
Presentation
This year is the first time there
brought
Brubeck
prolonged
marked the high point in what cheers and applause when he have been no Injuries reported to
has been called "America's most commented that he "couldn't play the UK infirmary after the LKD
spectacular college weekend." any more counterpoint or lyrical bicycle race.
Members of the SAE team were numbers, because the piano was
Anne Brown, Chief Nurse of the
Allen Lips, Ronnie Henderson, Jim out of tune."
UK Health Service, said that she
May, Jrre Pigue, and Buck Teater.
Each of the decorated stalls was "delighted but surprised" that
Second place in the Derby went which lined the new UK athletic there were no serious injuries. Last
to the Phi Delta Theta team, and field during the LKD was based year about 15 battered cyclists rethe show position was captured on a theme of scholarship.
ported to the infirmary.
SAE cyclists pedaled to victory

Little Kentucky Derby
in the
Saturday afternoon in a record
time of 11 minutes, 36.4 seconds.
The LKD trophy was presented
to the winning team during ceremonies in Memorial Coliseum
1960

,A7J

irmien

MrmWrs of the SAE relay tram accept LKII trophy. From left to
right: Ronnie Henderson, Dark Teater, AUrn Lips. Jere Pigue, and
Jim May.

Incident Blamed
For Summit Failure
U2

by Pi Kappa Alpha.

The first summit conference in five
vears foundered todav on Ki si. in bitterness over tin U2 in- cident.
I). Kist nhower and Premier Nikita S.
I'lesident Dwi-l- it
Khrushchev traded c harm s tayim; this meetine, on which so
with all the chill of the cold much of the hopes of the world
I

'AMIS, May lfi (AT)

war's bleakest days.
There wa only a glimmer of
hope tonight that Eisenhower and
Kliruslu hev might be reconciled
sufficiently to permit continuance
of the Hie Four meeting, railed to
consider the big issues menacing
world peace.
of the
At today'. first met-tinBig Four, Khrushchev tensely refused to negotiate with the U. S.
chief executive unless the President irt,(;t;)?('d lor the flight of
the intelligence plane .shot down
May 1 over the Soviet. Union.
He withdrew his invitation to
Eisenhower to visit Moscow June
10, saying the Russians might not
now be able "to receive the President with proper cordiality."
Khrushchev railed for a delay of
fix or eight months in the Hi?
Four session a delay which would
convene it near or beyond the end
of Elsenhower's second four-yeterm.
Eisenhower primly accused
Khrushchev of coming to Paris
armed with an ultimatum and
v.'ith "the bcle intention of sabo- s

ar

have rested."
He promised there would be no
more U.S. spy flights over the
Soviet Union, but announced he
came to Paris to seek agreements
to end all forms of espionage.
He said if it proved impossible to
come to grips here with that and

ether

issues

threatening

world

peace, he planned to submit to the
United Nations soon a proposal for
creation of a U.N. aerial surveillance to detect preparations for

attack.
The President challenged Khruy
shchev to private
talks
to save the conference.
A meeting which was to have
dealt with tensions threatening the
very existence of civilization never
really got under way. Indeed, a
Soviet spokesman denied that today's gathering of Khrushchev,
Eisenhower. President Charles de
Gaulle of France, and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Britain
was a summit meeting at all.
When it was all over, there seemed little left of the hopes for the
Continued On Page. 8
two-wa-

The Debutante Stakes tricycle
race Friday Night was-- won by
coeds from Patterson Hall second
floor, with a time of one minute.
39.3 seconds. The Alpha Gamma
Delta team placed second with a
time of one minute, 41.1 seconds.
June Moore was chosen queen
of the Little Kentucky Derby from
among 30 candidates. The queen
co'ittst judging followed the Debutante Stakes.
The queen's court included Carolyn Heed, first attendant, Ann
Wright, second attendant. Marsha
DeWitt. ' third attendant, and
Lane Hill, fourth attendant.
Dillard House coeds dressed as

Today's Activities
Mortar Board, Room

203, 7:30

p.m.

Fraternity

Room 205,

10

housemothers,

a.m.

Phalanx initiation. Room

206,

8 p.m.

Student Union Board, Room
206. 4

p.m.

I'K Woman's Club luncheon,
Ballroom, 12:30 p.m.
Blue Marlin dinner. Ballroom,
6 p.m.

Freshman Civil Engineers,
cial Room,

1

So-

p.m.

Church of Christ devotional,
7

p.m.

Old Superstitions Offer Help
To Moderns In Love Lives
By TON I LENNOS

Psssst! You there! Want to
know who really loves you?
It's quite easy to find out, you
know, if you just follow the inwho
structions of the
all about basic Kentucky
know
superstitions.
To find out the name of your
lover, they will tell you, Just name
each corner of your bedroom for
those persons you believe (or
hope) love you. Do this at bedtime. In the morning-- all you have
to do is remember which corner
you gazed at first to know who
loves you best.
Details of the many Kentucky
superstitions can be found in the
Margaret I. King library in the
Fuson collection, and In "Kentucky Superstitions" written by
a late professor of English at
Centre College, Daniel Linsey
Thomas, and his wife.
Now, if you're still fretting over
your unknown lover, other tests
can be tried. For example, merely
light a candle and leave it burning. Supposedly, your Intended
old-time-

,

rs

mate will blow it out. But, if the
oaf doesn't show and blow . . .
you'll be left with a handful of
tallow!
The real test, wise old
ay, Is to have the first
and fourth fingers of your hand
touch over the backs of the others.
If you can do this, you needn't
worry about the rest, for you may
marry anyone you choose.
After you've broken up with
your one and only, and are a
little dubious about what the possibilities for any future relationship between you may be, write
his or her name in full, and then
strike out the common letters.
Rename the remaining letters in
this order: "love, friendship,
hatred, and marriage." Repeat as
many times as necessary. The final
term will answer your question.
If your prediction Is marriage,
your troubles have Just begun. According to the mountain people,
the first of a newly married couple
in bed will be the first to die. (The
only solution is to try a
eous leap).
Ken-tuckia-

--

nt

nt

ns

Traditionally,
a bride should
wear "something old, something
new, something borrowed, something blue, and a four leaf clover
in the heel of her shoe."
Think carefully if you plan to
marry someone sharing the identical last initial. In a poetic fashion, the
warn "a change
of name but not of letter is a
change for the worst not for the
better."
For anyone vexed with unattainable, frustrating dreams, there is
a cure. Go to a strange place and
sleep under strange covers. All
your dreams will come true.
(Hum
).
If your problem is merely the
feat of an unfaithful mate, Just
find yourself the biggest. Juiciest,
reddest apple you can. Hold it in
your armpit until it is warm and
then eat.it. Your sweetheart will
love you, even though you may
become a little 111.
Mysteriously included in the
superstitions on birth and child
life, and inconspicuously placed at
Continued on Page 8
old-time-

rs

Flunked Arain

Faculty Vote Fails
To Elect Trustees
No faculty member received the necessary majority yesterday lor election to the Uoard of Trustees as nonvoting members.
Dr. Robert (;. Lunde, chairman of tfie Election Committee
of the University Faculty, said bal
lots for the election were counted named on the first ballot. Seventy-nin- e

persons received one vote
yesterday afternoon.
rach- - The six highest were selected
Dr. Aubrey J. Brown. Dr. Thomas
D. Clark, and Dr. William Ward on tne second ballot.
Dr. Brown has been head of the
received the highest number of
votes.
Department of Agricultural Econo- Three candidates Dr. Morris mics since 1952. He is chairman of
Scherago, Dr. Ralph Weaver, and the University Faculty Committee
Dr. Stephen Diachun were elimi- on Committees, director of the
Athletic Association, and director
nated in the election.
To be elected, a faculty member of the Federal Reserve Bank of
must receive more than half of the Cleveland.
ballots cast.
Brown is an advisory member of
Dr. Lunde said he would try to the Agricultural Commission of
get another ballot to the faculty the American Bankers Association.
by Wednesday, but that he was not
Dr. Clark, author of several hiscertain whether his committee tory books, has been head of the
History Department since 1942.
could.
He said he didn't think the facHe is a member of the Southern
ulty would get the members elect- - Historical Association and is chair
ed for the May meeting of the man of the Executive Committee
Board of Trustees.
of the Mississippi Valley Historical
bal- - Association. Clark is chairman of
Three hundred seventy-fiv- e
- the Committee of Fifteen.
lots were cast in the election.
A committee was formed to de- Dr. Ward, head of the English
cide upon the nominating proced- - Department, is editor of the Ken- ure last month after the state law tucky English Bulletin. He has
was passed requiring that two fac- published several books and articles
ulty members be on the Board of in literary journals,
Trustees.
lie is chairman of the College
nomi- - Section Committee and the Execu- One hundred fifty-fonees, including three deans, were tive Committee.
ur

Annual Alumni Seminar
Will Feature McMillin
John B. McMillin. executive editor of Sponsor magazine, will be
one of the principal speakers at
UK's third annual Alumni Seminar on May
This year's seminar, entitled
"Communications, 1960 Seeking a
Balance Between Freedom and Responsibility," will Include a discussion of the proposition that mass
media have generally been no freer
nor more responsible than the society they serve has required them
to be.
McMillin formerly was radio-Tvice president and creative director of the Comption Advertising
Agency, New York, and also has
been associated with Mason Advertising, Detroit.
Several UK alumni will be
among the speakers.
They are Don Whitehead. 28.
tw
Prize winner and
27-2- 8.

V

ice-Pulit-

author of "The FBI Story." John
F. Day Jr.. '35. vice president of
CBS News; William Small, news
director, WHAS and WHAS-TLouisville; and Gilbert Kingsbury,
'33, vice president for public relations, Crosley Broadcasting CorpoV,

ration.
Dr. Niel Plummer, director of the
UK School of Journalism, will
moderate one of the seminar discussions and Dr. Amry Vanden-bosc- h,
director of the Patterson
School of Diplomacy, will participate.
Other UK faculty members who
will take part in the seminar are
Dr. John C. Ball, assistant professor of sociology, and Dr. Michael
Adelsteln, instructor in English.
O. Leonard Press, head of the
UK Radio Arts Department and
coordinator of the seminar, said
the seminar Is open to the public.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, May

17, 1900

Many Pitfalls For Unwary
In American Credit System

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

"Then there is the basing of the
The Associated Trt
ays Interest debt on the original inThe American credit system.
is debtedness. In this the customer
Sen. Paul H. Douglas
a mysterious wilderness in which continues to pay the same rate for
there are many pitfalls for the un- the original sum instead of what
By

(MM

m

(D-Ill- ),

he owes. He will pay. for example,
eight percent each month on $3.- The senator has proposed legislation which he says would help 000," Douglas said.
Testimony has disclosed that in
right the wrongs he has found. It
would require agencies extend- auto financing for used cars there
ing credit to disclose the finance is a volume of cases when a man
charges.
bought an automobile and found
percent of the
During 1939, 88

wary consumer.

--

Signup Deadline May 28
For Summer Dairy Course

bankruptcies in the I'nited States
were family bankruptcies.
Sen. Douglas said he and his
supporters are not opposed to consumer credit. "But we do say that
the buyers and borrowers are entitled to know how much they are
paying for the credit," he siid.
Douglas has found that interest
rates as high as 100 to 160 percent
a year are being paid by many
consumers. Many are not aware of
and camouthe
flaged terms In the contract.
"Instead of telling the customer
what he has to pay, he's told only
what he pays a month and how
many .months he must pay it," he
said.

Reservations for A.I. 127, Survey
of Dairy Industry, in summer
school, should be made with Dr.
Arthur W. Rudnick. assistant professor of dairying, on or before
May 28th.
The summer dairy course will be
offered from June 14 to July 1. and
will be a three credit course for
undergraduate or graduate students. Staff members in both Dairy
Production and Dairy Manufacturing will teach the course.

es

'&U

SHOULPA BEEN HEKE VE6TeEC?Y WHEN THIS
GUY PlNCHEP TH POt-- t NEm TO HIM.

Ag Honorary Names

Outstanding Senior

According to preregistration statistics, the following classes
are closed:
COM 119-EC'ON 505-tX OS 251-COM 573-COM 263--

Charles M. Cornett. Clay County,
named the College of Agriculture's outstanding senior at the annual banquet of Gamma Sigma
Delta, agriculture honor society,

last week.
Gerald L. Meyer, Crestwood. was
named the outstanding ruor and
Gene T. Harris, Frankli:.-- the outstanding sophomore.
The 2.1 members initiated into
the society at the banquet are:
Seniors: Clyde T. Bates. Jefferson D. Brother Jr.. Charles M. Cor-rct- t.
Bruce L. Helm. Gilbert L.
Mathis. Larry W. Montgomery,
Hcbcrt W. nosers nn1 Eail D.
,

WjI.sou.

Grai:i:ac studt'-- : Ch:i!'i' V.
Hay A. Fid.l. Ilowr.rd
Cajiii.-::A. L. Cn i , r.a:.da!l D. Grooms,
M;.
Ch v.l-.Jc ph F. V.rvi

2.

2.

ticular!)' tomatoes, by the means
of foliar sprays.
Gamma Sigma Delta was organized to promote and recognize
outstanding scholarship and service in the agriculture industry.
Seniors accepted for membership must rank in the top 25 percent if their class and have at
least a B average. Graduate (students, faculty, and alumni members mut have demonstrated outstanding ability in agriculture or
related fields.
New officers for next year are
O. M. Davenport, president; Joe I".
I'liqua, vice prcsidrnt; Dr. Donahl
11. J;K'fi!);o:i, treasurer: Dr. DonaU
W. Ala I. uiry. secretary; ami Dr.
Kolu-r- t
li. Grainier, historian.

wa.s

Are Closed

74 Classes
2.

2,

4G3-1-

4G3-1- 1.

4.

1st Run!

Now

1.

3.

2.

2.

3.

2,

1.

2.

3.

5.

568-1-

3.

3.

1.

1.

Students will tour western Ken
tucky, southern Illinois, and southern Indiana, visiting the various
dairy operations, farms, and plants.
Visits to the Ohio State Experimental Farm, as well as the various farms at UK. will bm be included In the course.
Students will be given the opportunity to observe management
practices, reading programs, and
building arrangements of the dairy
farms, and to talk to owners and
operators of the farms.
Participants will also observe
and
manufacturing operations
learn the problems involved in
manufacturing the various dairy
products.

2.

1.

1,

EE
EE
EE
EE 461-HE 111, EE 414-ENC, 102-C.E 331-ME 400-GE 313-EE 568-1EE 371-EDI C 510.
EDIT 444-ENG 102-1EDl'C 324-ENG 10J-202-MA 421. MA 431. and AS 301-THY 212-PHY 211-EDUC
The only 1st semester English Courses open are: ENG 101,
sections 25, 28, and, 39.
291-- 1
ENG
are: ENG 203-Other classes closed
201-221-IH'M
M 201-203-HUM 201-HI
lll'M
ENG
ENG
2,

out later he al.no bought life in
surance.
"The rates are heavy. And not
only Is he buying life Insurance
against his will or knowledge but
also accident Insurance.
"Service charges here there has
been a big source of abuse. These
accumulations of finance charges.
which are often in excess or the
interest rates, place a burden on
the purchaser.

7Sc

OPEN 4:4

3.

200--

HI

3,

IU'M
109--

1.

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3.

lll'M

1,

316--

200--

201--

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4.

GLY

1.

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211--

100--

202--

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GLY

1.

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201--

203--

HI

2.

1IYG

104-- 3.

MEL

221--

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201--

1.

HYG
and GLY

IT'S ALL ABOUT YOU

109-- 1.

BECAUSE

YOU'RE YOUNG!

6.

221--

200--

201--

HIST

2,

101--

M

2.

5.

4.

1,

GLY

101--

ENG

ENG 101-1MS 201--

1.

ENG
ENG

5.

181--

4.

ENG

1,

PHI

50!".

and AS

2.

1101--

181
231--

1,

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K.

1.

ENG 573,
ENG 291-MA 427. ENG
GLY 100-PHY
ART 170, PHY 211-3,

2.

2.

200--

2,

3.

4.

ENG
181--

212--

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very: Tli
Th'Hi came this ci:
:vt KicharJ C. Mill'-rbloody at all.
Y. bloody battle wa-nAlumni: John W. Kuon. and
had
Somehow a botlle of cat
C. Moi.t'Jinri'v.
.;' tten mixed up in the brawl.
The UK chap'er nomir.'i'cd Dr.
1. M. Eprncrt, I roli'ssor of horticulture, to compete with nominees from chr.pt e:s in other states
loi a national award given for distinguished service to agriculture.
Dr. Emmcrt has gained wide
leiognition for research uo:k with
plastics in vegetable production
college
and the feeding of vegetables, par- -

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Alec

"Our Man In Havana"

mm

IN

LAFF LAFF!-"Th- c
Mouse That Roared'

fsvqamT-

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Kili-.vmpe-

story of

A stirring

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Peter Seller - Jean Seberg
"WIND ACROSS EVERGLADES"
Burl lve - Cypty Res Lea
(Both feature in color)

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Seniors!

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INVITATIONS and

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STARTS TONIGHT

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SUSAH

HAYVARD
htr newest
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In

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Campus Book Store

Play BANKO Tonight, Jockpo $150.00
ALSO

Howard Keel

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Anno Heywood

'FLOODS OF FEAR

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, May

Some Extension Classes
Will Not Receive Credit

l0-- 3

17,

Can't Throw Bull
LARAMIE.

Wyo.

(AP

DicIC

Ballinger, University of Wyoming?
senior, finds it's a little toucher
t0 wrrstle steers than humans,
Ballinger won the
national collegiate wrestling
PlnhP this spring. But in an
intercollegiate rodeo at Bowman.
Mont tne best he CQuld dQ
finish second in the steer wrestling
event.

The proposed UK extension take
of their college
classes at Madisonviile will not be work by extension, Dr. .Albright
given resjclrnce credit. Dr. A. D. pointed out.
executive dean of the
A mcetl n
h,,ch Dr' Albricht
University's Extended Programs
llP,d Wi,h lnt
arsons at
"WMadisonviUe recently was termed
"A number of people have vbked
for extension credit for jears "exploratory," by the UK dean.
throughout the state," Dr. Albright
said.
"The proposal to concentrate all!
of the extension classes in the
MadisonviUe area at Madisomille
Incorporated
High School, instead of scattering '
them about, would result in greater
eeonorr.y, he aaid.
ii COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE"
"This will be a joint undertaking
for the University, and other colPHONE 27
leges wishing to participate. West- Kentucky State College offers1
em
400 E. VINE
LEXINGTON
cxtcr icn classes in the MadisonviUe
School bull.iing at the
24-Ho- ur
AAA Road Service
Fic'-ei.tme," he said.
r.ie permitted to
one-four-

th

167-pou-

nd

chant-Albrig-

-

--

TAYLOR

Eitffincvrs' Day

CO.

2-71-

Visitors to the annual Englnrrs' Day open house atch L'K students pour molten metal for an internal combustion test. This exhibit was one of three in the College of Engineering laboratories.

t

2000 Students Attend
Annual Engineers Day
An

0
estimated
high that had displays were Mechanical.
and grade school students Metallurgical, Mining, Chemical,
and their parents attended th an- Electrical, Architectural, Civil, and
nual Engineers Day festival Friday, Agricultural.
Prcf. Staley Adams, chairman of
Also three display routes through
the event, said yesterday.
the College of Engineering laboraThe day's activities were divided tories were mapped oat so visitors
into afternoon and night sessions. could see engineering activities
Prof. Adams termed the afternoon ranging from the pouring of molcrowd excellent while he said the ten metal to an Internal combustion test
night crowd was average.
The program included demonstrations of student artivities and
departmental displays. The display
highlight was a "Talking Dummy"
in front of Anderson Hall.
This year's festivities marked the
first time the College of Arts and
Sciences had taken part and the
Prompt
Mathematics and Astronomy.
Reliable
Psychology, Phy.sics,
Chemistry, Aerospace
Prescription
and Military Science Depart
ments all had displays.
Service
The Engineering departments
2.000-3.00-

Dunn

Drugs 1

Bac-terit.lof-

Zo-clc-

y.

Sci-tr.e- e.

Sir Isaac Newton is struck
by another great ideal
VIA. Ml-

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i

WAT'S

IT'S

!

tt III

"

IIP FriQNT

3:

1

THAT

Ei: vbt c rr Society

Fh'cts Ollfcors

Fountain Service

i.' IT !;.:c. .v. o anford,
elected president of Pi Tau
Fi;.na. national mechanical
honorary.
Tlie other officers include Wil- liam Edward Dunning, Eudyville,
s.
vice president; Leslie Hayes
Vine Grove. recording sec-- 1
lttary: Richard Barber Watkins.
Ft. Thomas, corresponding secie-- ;
taiy; Marvin Frederick Schmidt,:
Ft. Mitchell, treasurer.
D r .el

v:i- -

Ad-kii-

Sandwiches and Short Orders
Open 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
-

WILL DUNN

if

DRUG COMPANY

.'.

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* Outmoded Testing
Cheating in the nation's colleges
and universities is becoming such an
issue these days that our institutions
are responding with more stringed
rules against it. UCLA, for example,
now suspends any student found
guilty for dishonesty.
Most people have passed off the
cheating incidents as being in tune
with the times. The deception in the
television quiz and in the drug industry, they say, are representative
of the public's morals. Why should
anyone expect students to be different? Won't mere punishment of
thm be enough to stop cheating as
in the TV cases?
But we do think students should
be different, and we don't think mere
punishment is enough to stop cheating at UK.
A University with high ideals of
scholarship should expect a relationship between the student and teacher
honest, and perthat is
fectly frank at all times. Any tend-end- y
toward dishonesty will snap
that relationship and destroy the
proper atmosphere of learning.
As one UK professor put it, "I
should hate to think that when I go
into a classroom that one student in
my class would want to cheat. I can
think of nothing more detrimental
to learning."
And why doesn't simple punishment stop cheating? If the system still
invites cheating, students will take
the chance and cheat, regardless of
the punishment.
The main trouble lies in UK's (and
other colleges' and universities' as
well) outmoded testing system. The
emphasis here is on grades, grades,
grades. The University's
report showed that competition for
grades here is "intense."
open-minde- d,

self-stud-

y

.

saying "I want our poets to be de-- .
clared equal to what shall I say?
the scientists? No, to big business."
And again, The great thing, you see,
would be the recognition that (the
Academy) would give." These notions
raise some uneasy questions.
Are "our poets," or anybody's poets
for that matter, an undifferentiated
group to be granted blanket recognition? If "our poets" are declared
"equal to business men," does that
imply also that all poets are equal
among themselves? Is the recognition
which poets seek individually something that can be bestowed by an act
of Congress and a new national institution? Is the public "awareness"

.

-

-.

..

.-

dent's ability to think and learn. The
rule for them is to gush out piles of
information during lectures and then
ask for the same information from
the student on a test.
A good IBM machine could do

the same thing.
This is how cheating flourishes at
UK. If professors insist on giving
tests which require rote memorization of facts, a student might be
considered intelligent if he circumvented the requirement and actually
sneaked in the class with cheating
notes. He would be at least more
creative than a machine.
During one class period, a professor giving a test said, "I'm leaving
the room. You're on your honor. And
I don't think you can cheat, anyway, on this test." He was right. The
test was entirely essay and required
memorization, evaluation, and some
creativity. There was no opportunity
to cheat.
UK needs to revamp its required
courses, such as basic HOTC, hygiene,
and psychology, so that "machine"
tests will not be given and so that
cheating will be almost impossible.
It needs to encourage tests which
give the student a chance to evaluate
and create.
Grades should always Ik? secondary. Students will not always set
high standards for themselves. If
professors are lazy and give tests
easy to grade but not designed to
measure the student's breadth of
learning, we can always expect this
overemphasis on making an "A" or
"B". We can always expect cheating, too.

a poet desires the kind that might
conceivably be aroused by producing
him on a par with the industrialist,
the banker, the shop keeper?
Mr. Frost may be suspected of
pulling his hearers' legs a little. He
knows that he himself, for example,
occupies a place a good deal better

recognized and more widely recognized than that of the average business man. And he knows too that the
product of his genius will live a good
deal longer than manufactured things
he does not need to be reminded
that the Bust outlives the Citadel and
that great poems are remembered
when good laws are forgotten. If he
affects an amusing humility in Washington it is because that is a game he
enjoys.
"I want

you

to

declare

our

equality," he said, "not our superiority
but our equality. We can take care of
the rest." Of course it is only "the
rest" that counts for the poet. And
it is "the rest" which lies wholly beyond the best efforts of Congress or
any of its creations. The Baltimore
Sun.

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

Entered at the Post Office at Lrxinirtun, Kentucky at ietond cUi matter under the Act of March 3, 1879.
holiday and eiaiut.
week during the reKuUr school year eitt-o-t
Fublulied lour timei
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAH

Dill Neikirk, Editor
Stewart Hedcer, Sports Editor
Managing Editor
Bob Anderson.
Zimmikman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editois
Paul
Dick. Wami: asd John Mitchell, 1'hotographert
Alice Akin, Society Editor
Stuart Coldfahb and Pavl Dikes, Advertising Managers
Beverly Cardyull, Circulation
Firry AsiaEY, Business Manager
Chapman, and Skip Taylom, Cartoonists
Bob JIerndon, Hank
TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
Sczy Horn, Keus Editor

ZZi f

-i

Many UK professors feel that a
test with true and false and fill-i- n
answers adequately judges a stu-

Equality For Poets?
Mr. Robert Frost is. a venerable
and greatly respected writer, and his
support of the proposal to found a
National Academy of Culture may
well move some congressmen to favor
such a measure.
But the chief reason he gave for
his support is touching rather than
impressive unless he spoke with
gentle irony. Mr. Frost is quoted as

i

Warren Wheat,

Associate

l want a holiday, too, but

...

The Readers' Form
Priority
To The Editor:
Wednesday's Kernel carried several items concerning our College
of Education. Particularly interesting
was the story alout the additional
sum received by the University for
loans to students under the National
Defense student loan fund program.
Dean Carpenter, chairman of the
Student Loan Committee, was (noted
as reporting that "students majoring
in education, enginec ring, mathematics, and languages ;uc given priority in that order."
Since the National Defense Educastates
tion Act (Public Law
that the fundamental purpose of the
defense act is to "correct as rapidly as possible the existing imbalances in our educational programs
which have led to an iiiMrilicient
proportion of our population educated
in science, mathematics, and modern
foreign languages and trained in technology," and since Title II of the act,
establishing the student loan fund,
provides "that in the selection of students to receive loans from such student loan fund special consideration
shall be given to (1) students with
a superior academic background who
express a desire to teach in elementary
or secondary schools, and (2) students whose academic background
indicates a 'superior capacity of preparation in science, mathematics, engineering, or a foreign language," it
would be more accurate, and more in
keeping with the letter of the law, to
give top priority to students registered
in the Colleges of Arts and Scinces
and of Engineering, majoring in science, mathematics, modern foreign
languages, or engineering, and concurrently registered for the necessary
education courses.
NOHMAN II. BlNCEH
President, KEA Foreign Language
Teachers Section

front door of the Administration
Building. We were told, in warm,
positive tones, that this spring all
would go smoothly. We were informed that little loopholes would le
ironed out and that errors would
cease altogether. We were happy.

Tuesday all seemed to go well.
My heart gladdened for we had the
beginning of a new era on campus.
I had the classes I wanted, when I
wanted thein, and it only took an
hour!

Thursdav brought the nei
here were errors in the
schedule book whiVh made my
scludule conflict. We had a big ole
d
loophole, too. It seems that our
planners had made no provision for correcting these enors until
next fall.
I know the system was intended
to save me time and trouble; therefore, I shouldn't criticize. However,
I am in need of reassurance that
things will go lntter next time because
right now I'm mad.
ring new

s.

"