xt7d7w674j5z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d7w674j5z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19570801  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, August  1, 1957 text The Kentucky Kernel, August  1, 1957 1957 2013 true xt7d7w674j5z section xt7d7w674j5z Commencement Will Be Tomorrow
More Than 400
Will Get Degrees

Science Institute
Is To Meet Here
ence teachers in elementary and
secondary schools and colleges.
Specific objectives of the institute are to develop a more effec
tive understanding of appropriate
subject matter for science instruction on the elementary, secondary,
and collegiate levels; to develop
basic concepts of science desirable
in the curriculum for
and science majors, and to encourage active interest in science.
Fire outstanding persons in science education will appear as
guest lecturers at the Institute.
The lecturers, and sections they
will discuss are:
Dr. Beth Schultz, Pennsylvania
State Teachers College in Lock
Haven, elementary science section;
Dr. William C. Forbes, Williman-ti- c
(Conn.) State Teachers College, elementary education; Dr.
Julian Greenlee, Florida State
University, Junior high science;
Dr. Theodore Benjamin, Columbia
University, physical science; and
Dr. Cecil Hamann, Asbury College,

UK Awards

Scholarships
A total of 107 scholarships have
been awarded by the University
for participation in the National
Sciences Institute, to be held Augon the UK campus.
ust
Directing' the summer Institute
will be Dr. Erland Ritchie, professor of physics at Centre College.
Dr. Lyman V. Ginger, dean of the
University College of Education,
will serve as campus coordinator.
study was made
The
possible by a $35,000 grant awarded
the University by the National
Science Foundation. In addition
to UK, the sponsoring groups Include the Kentucky Science Teachers Association, Kentucky Council
on Public Higher Education and
5--

non-scien- ce

30

26-d- ay

the State Department of Education.
Scholarship

Dr. Hawkins
Is Speaker

recipients are sci

biological science.

Dr. Earle T. Hawkins, president
of State Teachers College, Tow-soMd., will be the speaker at the
University of Kentucky's Summer
Session Commencement, set for 7
p.m. Central Standard Time (8
p.m. Daylight Saving Time) tomorrow, in Memorial Coliseum.
More than 400 graduates will receive degree at the ceremony, UK
President Frank G. Dickey has
announced. Like all University
commencement exercises, the program will be open to the public.
n.

DR. EARLE T. HAWKINS

Editor's Note
The editors of the Kernel wish
to express appreciation for the cooperation of our news sources
throughout the summer session.
And we hope Kernel readers have
and
some enjoyment
received
benefit from reading the summer
edition.

Vol. XLVIII University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky., Thursday, August 1, 1957

Number 35

The principal speaker has been
president of State Teachers College since 1947. Previously he was
both director of instruction for the
State of Maryland and supervisor
of high schools for the State Department of Education.
Dr. Hawkins also served as a
high school teacher and principal
of various Maryland high schools.
He holds an undergraduate degree
from Western Maryland College, a

master's degree from Columbia
University and the Ph.D. degree?
from Yale University.
The Maryland educator ha been
active In various civic community
projrcti In hi home Mate. He ha
held the presidency of the Maryland State Teachers Association
and for a period was vice president
of the National Education Association.
As a result of his national educational interests. Dr. Hawkins was
appointed as the first chairman of
the National Conference on Citizenship. In the field of conservation he is currently chairman of
the Maryland Commission on Research and education.
President Dickey will preside at
the commencement ceremony, and
the charge to the graduates will bo
given by Dr. Leo M. Chamberlain,
vice president of the University.
The Invocation will be asked by
the Rev. E. C. Cartrell, pastor of
the Hunter Presbyterian Church.
Pronouncing the benediction will
be the Rev. William A. Ilolladay,
pastor of the Chevy Chase Baptist
Church.
Music will be presented for the
affair by the UK Summer School
Chorus,

Education College
Gives New Degree
program in education
The University now otters a
leading to the degree of Specialist in Education (Ed.S.).
Adopted within the College of Education, the new graduate
degree represents a year of planned study beyond the master's
six-ye- ar

Dr. Hite Inaugurates
New UK Department
One of the youngest departments on campus and its head
came to Lexington about the same time. Dr. Sam C. Hite came
here from Purdue University on Feb. 1, the approximate starting
date of the Department of Chemical Engineering.
Born in Fort Wayne, Ind., Dr. Hite received both his graduate and undergraduate training at Purdue, earning B.S., Ch.E.,

and Ph.D. decrees. He also met some of his students were from
his wife, Harriet, at Purdue, where five to 10 years older than he was.
she was a chemistry major.
Very active in professional and
Dr. Hite began teaching as a honorary trroups. Dr. Hite was a
college senior, in 1943. He says member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma
that when he started teaching, XI, Alpha Chi Sigma, and Phi
Lambda Upsilon, honoraries, and
is a member of the American So-

Underwood
Is Archivist

Appointment of Mrs. Thomas R.
Underwood as an assistant archivist of the Margaret I. King Library was approved at the regular
meeting of the Board of Trustees.
- One of the duties of the new
archivist will be to organize and
catalogue the Barkley papers, according to Dr. Lawrence S. Thompson, director of UK libraries. These
private papers were deposited at
the University about nine months
ago by the family of the late Alben
W. Barkley.
Dr. Thompson said it is hoped
the collection will be organized for
the general use of qualified scholars by the end of the 1957-5- 8
.
vRchoLy.ear.
jr . x,
Concerning Mrs. Underwood's
appointment, he said, "We are exceptionally fortunate to have a
person of her background and
native ability to handle a collection of this type."
Mrs. Underwood, former state
editor of the Lexington Herald
and widow of former Herald editor
and US. Senator Thomas Underwood, began her library duties
July 1 under a temporary appointment. She holds an A.B. degree
in Journalism from UK, and is
working toward a master's degree
in library science.
,

Kainpus Kaleiular
Kentuckian distribution will continue today and tomorrow at the
main office of the Journalism
Building from 10 a.m. to 12 noon,
and from 2 to 4 p.m.
The Campus Book Store will be
open for approximately one hour
following commencement tomorrow night so that graduates may
return their caps and gowns.
September 15 President's reception for all new students, 4 to 6
p.m.
Sunday through
1
Sept.
Saturday, orientation week for all
new students.
Registration and
1
Sept.
classification of all students except
freshmen.
Sept. 23 Class work begins.
Opening Kentucky
Sept 21
football game at Georgia Tech.
Sept. 27 Next issue of the Kentucky Kernel.
Sept. 28 First home football
game with Mississippi.
15-2-

19-2-

ciety on Engineering Education,
the American Institute oi unem-ic- al
Engineers, and the American
Chemical Society.
Dr. Hite's primary professional
interests are in the fields of petroleum, plastics, synthetic fibers,
and synthetic rubber. He has University Football
worked for two summers in the
petroleum field, one summer with Schedule Announced
Shell Refinery, Wood River, 111.,
The 1957 Kentucky Wildcat footand one summer at Shell Chemball schedule, consisting of six
icals, Ventura, Cal.
home games and four away games,
Dr. Hite came to Kentucky be- is as follows:
cause he considered it a fine opportunity and because he considSept. 21 Georgia Tech .. Away
ered it a challenge to start a new
Home
Sept. 28 Mississippi
department in one of the last
Home
remaining major engineering Oct. 5 Florida
Away
Oct. 12 Auburn
one. His
schools to be without
Away
activities right now consist mostly
Oct. 19 L.S.U
of publicizing the new department
Home
Oct. 26 Georgia
and staffing it.
Nov. 2 Mmphis St. .... Home
Hobbywise, Dr. Hite enjoys bowlAiy, .
ing ' ana air vidntis of ui umc, 2tu C r
Home
Nov. 16 Xavier
especially classical. He also plays
Home
Nov. 23 Tennessee
tennis.
The Memorial Coliseum ticket
Dr. Hite has always been very
interested in his students, having
been faculty sponsor in Purdue office has $3.50 tickets for all
residence halls for six years. At games except Tennessee. Only two
Kentucky, he has started a Chem- or three hundred $3.00 bleacher
ical Club for his 22 students, which seats remain for the Tennessee
will be the pilot group for a stu- game.
dent branch of the American InThe Coliseum ticket office is
stitute of Chemical Engineers open every day except Saturday
dewhen there is a
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, it
partment here.
is open from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. All
Dr. and Mrs. Hite live at 1202 times are Central Daylight Saving
E. Cooper Dr.
Time.
full-fledg-

ed

level. Candidates will be screened College of Education in the Tay
more closely than master's candi- lor Education Building, or the
dates, Dean Lyman V. Ginger said, Graduate School office In Pence

with emphasis placed upon ability Hall.
and achievement.
Before being accepted to work
on an Ed.S. degree, a student must
have a master's degree, a teaching
certificate (or appropriate credentials), have completed 30 semester
hours of education courses (undergraduate and graduate), and have
a 3.4 standing or higher on all

Infirmary
Says Health

graduate work.

The purpose of the
degree is to offer opportunities for
further graduate work by emphasizing the professional and personal needs and growth of the
student, the dean pointed out. Dr.
Ginger added that the new program also is aimed at broadening
the educational background of the
individual.
Interested persons may receive
additional Information and application forms by contacting the
sixth-ye-

ar

Is Improved

"The health of the student Is
improving," says Dr. J. 8, Chambers, head of the Health Service.
Dr. Chambers said the Infirmary
has less student patients now than
when the University had a smaller
enrollment.
In explaining tnis. Dr. Chambers
said "We think we have made our
contribution here at the outpatient
clinic. We see so many things
early and treat them with antibiotics and new drugs."

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f,

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1

Kernel Kutie
up? This Kutie's name Is
Sue Hamilton, from Owensboro. She is a aenior in Medical Technology, and a member of Kappa Delta sorority. The dog refused
comment.

If this is a dog's life, where do

we aign

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, August 1, 1957

Contrary Machines Cause
Writers Slow Starvation

OneWomai
Influences
Many Lives
Dj LAURA SUE GLENN

r(

How many lives do you influence
every day and every year? Mrs.

Walter P. Clemmons, assistant
professor of Ifome Economics at
UK has a quick answer to this
question. "Hundreds " she declares.
for she's been helping people,
young ana oia, lor years.
Whether It's facing a class of
men Students Of homo ppnnnmlrn
each day, advising students and
prospective parents on tne cost of
having babies, or visiting the
homes of the destitute, she's always ready with a sympathetic ear
and a helping hand.
Retracing her experiences with
students, she remembers the funniest when, I once took a trip to
the jeweler's with a boy to help
him select an engagement ring for
his fiancee.
"After the selection was made,
he turned and said, 'Thank you for
taking your time. You can go back
to school now and I will stay and
consummate the sale.'"
A Kentuckian through and
through, Mrs. Clemmons was born,
reared and educated in Lexington.
As a high school student she chose
home economics for her vocation
because, as she explains, "I expected to - get married and if I
didn't I knew I could get a job.
Everything you learn In home economics you use."
Mrs. Clemmons now teaches two
courses at the University. They are
Community Nutrition and Nutrition for education majors. In addition, she is coordinator of a home
economics course for men. In this,
she says, "We can't teach men to
be perfect husbands, but we can
give them a better-- understanding
and help them realize marriage is
0
a
proposition. This classroom is usually filled with fifty to
seventy-fiv- e
boys 53SIr semester.
Before becoming a teacher of
home economics, Airs. Clemmons
had some practical experience
working for the Kentucky State
Board of Charities and Corrections.
She was employed as dietitian for
two prisons, two mental hospitals,
a re ronn school, and an institution
50-5-

:

4

':

V

.

Please tell me the secret. Do
I have to be Initiated into a secret
society, learn a magic formula or
what? How do you make a machine work?
In this mechanical age I may
slowlv starve to death unless some
body tells me how to operate a
vending machine. I ve spent nours
in the Grill watching people put
quarters in the cigarette machine
and getting back a pack of cigarettes. Finally I get up courage
to try. Either the darn thing Just
sits there and glowers at me refusing to discoree either a pack
of cigarettes or my quarter, or it
spits out a pack or cigarettes oi
the one brand I can t stand.
.Everybody else in the dorm
the nice new coffee machine
in the lower lounge. Not me.
Either I brew my own or I go over
to Jerry's. Like the cigarette machine the coffee machine Just
won't work for me. When I put
in my nickel and press the button
marked "Black Coffee" that monstrous mess of metal refuses to
rumble, even, until I've fed it
three more nickels. Just when I'm
about to give up on the whole
deal it lights up . like a pinball
machine, makes sounds like a
wounded bull and disgorges a cup
of coffee with double cream and
double sugar.
Excuse me. I've got to run
en-Jo- ys

Gerald Deatherage consults Mrs. Walter Clemmons
mons has spent Innumerable hours
visiting homes of the needy and
destitute "because it's just people."
Mrs. Clemmons makes home visits, often to straighten out nutrition problems or to help a woman
who is ill find someone to take care
of the family.
One of her most rewarding experiences was when she bought
and delivered a birthday cake to
an expectant mother with several
small children. It was the first
birthday cake that the family had
ever known.
Somehow, these distressed people
even make their way to the front
door of Mrs. Clemmon's home. She
answered the door one day to dis
cover an expectant mother who
was asking for old shirts to make
baby clothes. Somehow Mrs. Clem-mons- 's
intuition curbed her usual
generosity until she investigated

the case and called on the woman

at her home. It was very evident
that the expectant mother was not

expecting to see Mrs. Clemmons,
for she was devoid of all signs of
'
motherhood !
But most of the time Mrs. Clemmons forgets the troubles of the
world in her own home and enjoys
the evenings with her husband,
who is retired from the wholesale
drug business. "When we're home
together, we talk about home
things," she says.
Splendid health and- sparkling
personality reflect her own philosophy of life. Mrs. Clemmons
says, "I like to help people when
I can."
So that's why she replies to the
question, "How many lives do you
influence every day and every
year?" so positively with one
word "hundreds."
-

now. - My

.

d.

city-coun- ty

ing in physics promised to show
me how to operate the washing
machine. The last time I tried
to do my wash in it, it erupted soap
suds and flooded the whole laundry
room. If she can't help me I'm

PIZZA

2-90-

from Saudi Arabia on the closing
of that mission in 1355.
After the completion of his home
leave, Dr. Butler plans to return
to Thailand. lie is one of the two
malaria advisors assigned to the
ICA Mission there to assist the
Ministry of Health on technical
and administrative aspects of the
national malaria control problem
and other vector-born- e
disease Investigations.
Dr. Butler has given particular
assistance to the Malaria Control
Training School which trains all
doctors and technicians concerned
with malaria control in Thailand
as well as trainees sent from other
Asian countries such as Laos, Indonesia and Nepal.

radio-telepho-

CHICK-N-HU- T

Ar

i(

2 PM

Friday-Saturda-

August

y,

Ray Milland

5"

TONIGHT

The

Mel-Tone-

-

!

--

Sterling silver is real, solid silverall the way ihroughl
There is no surface finish to wear off your tableware.
You can wash it over and over again in the dishwasher. You cannot dim Its beauty. And it stays
beautiful not for a year, not for five years for a
fact, the wonderful lustrous look that makes sterling
treasured possession grows the more you use your
a
silver. Constant daily use gives it the soft, exquisite
"patina" that is characteristic of fine, highly prized
sterling.
In

When you select sterling silver you are assured that
the same timeless pattern you select will be available
In open stock for years to come.

Anthony Quinn
4-5-

-6

WAYWARD BUS
Color
Jayne, Mansfield Qan Daily

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BEYOND MOMBASSA
Dona
eed Cornell Wilde

Wednesday-Thursda-

,

Aug.

y,

-

IUNT PATTIRN SHOWN

MUm Vkterla

7-- 8

SECRETS OF REEF

Documentary

SATURDAY NIGHT

"SMOKE" RICHARDSON'S ORCHESTRA
PRIVATE DINING ROOM AVAILABLE
13 Miles
Richmond Road

Near 3rd

257 N. Lime

No matter how limited that budget may be, you can
begin now to set your table with pride-w- ith
sterling
silver. And what a beatiful future youH be leading
up tol

i

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BOOK STORE

2-- 3

Color
Geo. Nader

August

Sun-Mon-T-

'.FORMERLY THE CIRCLE- -

DENNIS

Join our Club Plan, for example, and buy the pattern
of your choice piece by piece, little by little, to fit
your budget.

Also

.

WE BUY
SELL OR TRADE

I

Audio Murphy

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Central Kentucky's Largest
USED BOOK STORE

As you live with your sterling... as you watch Its
beauty mellow and grow... you'll find you love h
more and more.

ne

JOE BUTTERFLY

-

The Department of Mining and
Mineralogy has placed an order for
a new device to separate particles
of different substances from conglomerate mixtures.
The machine is a Whippet-V-8- 0.
It uses a column of air rising vertically to raise the particles of the
different minerals to different
heights in the column. The parotides of each substance will do
this because of their different specific gravities. The heaviest will
remain near the bottom of the
column while the lighter comes to
the top or some intermediate position, depending on the increasing
and decreasing specific gravities.

lifetime I

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WIDE
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VISION
1
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PLATE LUNCHES, STEAKS, FOUNTAIN SERVICE
HOURS 6 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT
PIZZA HOURS 5 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT

Whippet-V-8- 0

it does!. . . and here is why:

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Engineers Order

ACTUALLY COSTS LESS?

WANTED
Radio engineer. Immediate opening. First class
license. Part time WBKY. Contact Ralph Albers, WBKY studios, 3rd
floor, McVey HaU, campus. Phone ext.
2264 after 1:30 p.m. or
evenings.

27

Can anybody show me how to
make a fire by rubbing two sticks
together. My lighter won't work
again.

Did,you know that

CLASSIFIED ADS

PHONE

boarFand a coffee pot.

who's major-

room-mat- e,

Dr. Butler Has Returned
From Thailand Position

A University of Kentucky grad
uate has returned to the United
States from Thailand after serving
two years as an assistant in the
Ministry of Health
Dr. Joseph Miles Butler, a na
tive of Paducah, was assigned to
the International Cooperation Ad
for the feeble-mindeFor over twelve years Mrs. Clem- ministration in Chiengmal, some
mons has been Foods and Nutri- 400 miles north of Bangkok. He,
tion Chairman of the Lexington-Fayett- e his wife, Margaret, and their three
County Red Cross. This sons arrived in Paducah on June
work takes time, but it involves 15.
people who need help, and for
Dr. Butler, who holds a Ph.D. in
Mrs. Clemmons, it's like water to Parasitology from the University
a duck.
of Utah, accepted an assignment
She has worked with the
with the ICA Mission to Saudi
clinics which are free to Arabia in May 1953, as a Malaria
expectant mothers of low income Control Advisor. The Butlers went
families. In this work Airs. Clem- - to Thailand on a direct transfer

In The

V

give up and start rolling
my own cigarettes and buy a wash
golng--t-

By JUDY SAVILLE

Phone

3-26-

41

or

4-46-

84

For Reservations

Also

WESTWARD HO WAGONS
Color
Fess Parker Kathleen Crowley
2
Color Cartoons
2

127 W. Main

Phone

2-62-

34

V

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday. AuguU

University Seal Has
Long, Confused Past
By DOB HARMON

If you have a jacket or notebook which bears a UK seal
with a pilot wheel and the date MDCCCLXVI, then you might
be interested in knowing that the seal is not the official seal
and the date is not the date of the founding of the University.
The history of the basic design on the UK seal goes back
of course to the state seal of- Kentucky. Kentucky, by an act
-

of the General Assembly of the
Commonwealth, on Dec. 20, 1792,
empowered and required the governor to procure a great seal for the
Commonwealth. The act provided
that the seal was to be engraved
with the device of two friends
embracing with the name of the
state over their heads; and around
them, our state motto.
As might be expected from this
stated act, the "two
friends embracing" has varied
from two men kissing, to an unconcerned pair shaking hands with
the unusual handclasp of right
hand in left. (Some say certain
diemakers deliberately made it
look like the two friends were
drunk on Kentucky bourbon, each
trying clumsily to hold the other
up.)
Our motto, United We Stand,
Divided We Fall, was probably
suggested by the chorus of a song
by John Dickinson, written before
the Revolutionary War, 'which

Incorporated Into the University
of Kentucky seals. But like the
design on the state seal, the University's has also seen quite a few
changes. The background at various times has changed, the friends
have dressed differently, and the
man on the right has constantly
switched the hand he was shaking
with. At least nine different designs have appeared on UK publications.
The first approved seal for the
University was designed in 1919
by Miss Minna McLoud Beck, the
first head of the Department of
Art. It was her suggestion that
the seal should contain the pilot
wheel to represent the power to
aid in directing the ship of state.
This 1919 seal Is still being used
on many campus bookstore articles,
although the University tried to
recall all the old cuts when the
new seal was designed.
The new design for the official
seal, our present one, was adopted
reads:
by the Board of Trustees in 1947
Such action seemed necessary
"Come Join hand in hand
since a variety of different designs
Comrades all
had accumulated over the years,
By uniting we stand.
and were being used more less
indiscriminately.
By dividing we fall."
Furthermore, the date of the
Both the motto and the device
of the two friends embracing were founding of the University was
incorrect on all of them.
Instead of the one date, the
t
present seal now contains three:
1878, the founding of the Agricultural and Mechanical College
of Kentucky; 1916, when State
University became the University
of Kentucky; and 1865, the correct
White Dinner Jackets
year of the founding of the University.
The present seal also depicts the
two old friends against a plain
Tuxedos
background. One, dressed as a
frontiersman in buckskin, and the
other, dressed as a colonial statesman, are shaking hands In the
Complete Line of
normal way.
Accessories
The one on the right is supporting himself on an old rifle, however, which gives a hint that he
might still be a little tipsy from
that Kentucky bourbon.
not-too-clea- rly

Formal

Cental
$5.00

$7.50

and Son
117

S. UPPER

ANNA'S
E. HIGH

WEE WASH
DRY
FOLD

Personality Influences Grades
which may not be measurable, may
be more Important In' de termlnlnr
a student's rradea than either
ability or amount of time) spent
in study," he explained.
repCher a hundred student
n
resenting a
of the
student body reported their activities around the clock; for a
typical one-weperiod In the
school year.
Total study time averaged 25.9
hours per week for students with
high, medium, and low grade
point averages. Freshmen being
surveyed spent an average of 20
hours a week In study, sophomores, 30 hours, Juniors, 23 hours,
and seniors, 24 hours.
Of those wno studies more than
the average, the grade point averKentucky has been chosen as the ages ranged from a perfect 4 (A)
site for the 1958 Interstate Sanita- to a low 1.38 (D). Those studytion Seminar, reports Dr. Russell ing less than one hour per hour of
E. Teague, Commissioner, Ken- credit had grade point averages
tucky State Department of Health. ranging from 5.83 (A) to 1J!8
D).
Harry A. Marsh, Assistant Director of the Division of Sanitation,
who attended this year's seminar
at Clemson College in South Caro3,
was appointed
lina, June
chairman for the coming year. He
will preside at the 1958 session at
UK at which some 400 sanitarians
represent Virand engineers-wi- ll
ginia, West Virginia, Kentucky,
North Carolina, Maryland, South
Carolina, the District of Columbia,
and Regions III and IV of the U. S.
Public Health Service.
The purpose of the annual seminars is to bring before professional sanitation personnel the emphases and trends in sanitation as
they apply throughout the region
and to the participating states.
The Kentucky delegates to this
past conference presented a discussion of "Trends in Sanitation
and Safety Practices for Tourist
Accommodations." Ways of constructing and maintaining safe
and clean recreational and boarding facilities for tourists were
A high IQ and long hours of
study do not guarantee good
grades In college.
Results of a survey at Illinois
Institute of Technology Indicate
that it's the use of study time and
not the actual hours spent poring
over the books that counts.
"And the grades may not bear a
close relation to the amount
learned, says William D. Diemer,
Illinois Tech mechanics Instructor,
who made the survey.
"Personality characteristics,

WEE WASH
AND WOODLAND

ek

MINUTE
SERVICE

SERVICE

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
NO ADDED COST

Walker Gets
Certificate
James Porter Walker, a senior

In the College of Commerce, is the

DeBOOR

Phono
265 Euclid Ave.

TRY OUR LAUNDERING

Entered at the Post Office at Lexington.
Kentucky, as second class matter under
the Act of March 3, 1879.
Published weekly during school except
holidays and exams.

Jim Hampton
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS
Judith Saville
Bill Epperson
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Paul Daniel
Phil Mcintosh

MM
ITU ITU

35

15

Discount

FOR THE
FINEST
IN
REFRESHMENT
TRY

ST.

For Efficient Service

3-02-

Next to Coliseum
Cash & Carry
1966 Harrodsburg Road
880 East High Street

IT

10c lb.

"In general.' says Dicmer, "students who spend more than the
average amount of time (I J hours
per hour of cIass) studying underestimate study time, and those
spending less than the average
overestimated time fpent studying."
The correlation between IQ and
grades indicated that, even though
ability was taken into account,
there was little clear relation between the two.
After this phase of his Survey
on the Use of Student Time,"
Diemer intends to ue the same
material to analjte student use of
leisure time.
Dlcmcr received his master's degree in education from the University of Chicago after being
awarded a bachelor's degree in
civil engineering from Case Institute of Technology, He worked as
a draftsman for several Ohio firms
and was an admissions counselor
at Case Institute for two years.

ONE DAY

10-1-

The Kentucky Kernel

90

For Economy . . . For Ease . .

Prescriptions

the scholarly
DRUGSTORE

PROMPT

o FOUNTAIN SERVICE
o COSMETIC ITEMS
o SCHOOL SUPPLIES

PROFESSIONAL

OPEN

7:30-10:0-

1

0

Dunn Drag Co.
LIME AND MAXWELL

JZlce cream

FRIENDLY

SERVICE

W

cross-sectio-

University Is
Seminar Site

recipient of the Philip Morris 1956-5- 7
Merchandising Award Certificate, the company announced recently.
The award, given at the conclusion of each college year to the
outstanding student representaA majority of XT. S. presidents tives of the company In recognition of exceptional Initiative, was
have been lawyers.
Nikolai Lenin was the first presented to 78 college students
from 32 different states. The
president of Soviet Russia.
award signifies that Walker has
"distinguished himself while gaining valuable practical business experience as a representative of the
company."

Phillip Gall

1. 1937- -3

Block from University
820 S. Limestone St.
High St. and Cochran

944 Winchester Rd.

* u

4

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, August

1, 1957

CUnie Is Meld

Increased Salary May Solve
Teacher Shortage Proble

For Coaches

By JOHN EGEIiTON

The 1937 University of Kentucky coaching clinic will be One of the most prominent ques
tions around educational circles
held at Memorial Coliseum, Wednesday through Saturday.
these days Is this one:
The clinic, under the direction of UK Athletic Director, What's wrone with the teaching
Bcrnie Shivcly, will cover basketball, football, track, and profession?
And one answer pops up more
baseball. While the clinic is free now head coach at the University,

version of the than any other:
Not enough money.
offense and other phases of
That's the general consensus of
Kentucky football.
a number of University of KenTrack
Don Cash Beaton, UK Physical tucky professors who were inter
Education head and track coach viewed in a series of noon-hofor 10 years; and John Heber, chats last week. Here are three
Lexington Henry Clay high school typical excerpts:
Q. Why do you suppose so many
track chief.
of our graduate teachers take jobs
Baseball
John Heldman, director of the outside the state?
A. To make more money, of
University of Louisville's physical
department and for 20 course. If I weren't settled here,
education
I'd leave myself. It's hard to igyears UL's baseball coach.
nore a difference in salary of 30
Other members of the clinic staff
Kentucky
are Brad Jones, Georgetown Col- to 60 per cent betweenstates.
Louisville St. and the better paying
lege; John Meihaus,
Q. Do the average salaries of
Xavier High; Nolan Fowler, More-heaTho- teachers throughout the country
Bernie Sandosky, Ft.
mas Highlands High; and Ermal compare favorably with our other
Bill major professions, such as engiAllen, Charles Bradshaw,
Domi- neering, business or law?
Arnsparger, Matt Lair, and
A. Not by a long shot I I've been
nic Fucci of Kentucky.
teaching in college for ten years,
For reservations, send a letter or yet many of the students I instruct
postcard to Bernie A. Shively, Di- take Jobs after graduation making
rector, UK Coaching Clinic, Mem- more than I do. Only the armed
orial Coliseum, Lexington, Ky.

will discuss his

te
to high school coaches,
college coaches must pay a regisout-of-sta-

split-- T

tration fee..

All lecture sessions will be held
in Memorial Coliseum, and guests
are asked to register at the desk in

ur

the front entrance lobby of the

Coliseum immediately upon arrival.
Men who will lead discussions on
their particular sports are:
Basketball
Johnny Jordan, Notre Dame,
quarter-finali- st
three-tim- e
in the
NCAA championships, and 1954
college basketball "Coach of the
Year;" and Harry Lancaster, chief
assistant to UK's Adolph Rupp and
University freshman basketball
coach.
Football
Ara Parseghian, Northwestern,
will discuss the inside and outside
belly series; David Nelson, Delaware, will discuss the wing-- T system; and Blanton Collier, eight
year backfleld aide with the professional Cleveland Browns and

d;

KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER
SERVICE
Typewriters, Adding Machines

Former UK football stars, J. T.
Frankenberger and Dave Kuhn,
have Joined the professional ranks

YELLOW CAB

Inc.
2-22-

RENTAL SERVICE
Repair service, adding machines,
new and used portable, cvarbons,
ribbons, and office supplies.

30

Radio Equipped

PHONE

387 ROSE ST.

07

TJli

TAYLOR

CO.

Incorporated

ex-U-

400

2-71-

TYPEWRITERS

27

eANE

LEXINGTON

as n FOR
Ul

RENTED
SOLD
REPAIRED
Late Model
RENTAL MACHINES
ALL MAKES

BOOCCS
Campus Boole

Store

Standard
Portable
Electric

LEXINGTON
BUSINESS MACHINES

COMPANY
Phone
145 S. LIMESTONE

McVEY HALL

80

PINKSTON'S

School Supplies

Watch Repairing
Fine Watches

AT

GRUEN
BULOVA
ELGIN
PARKER FOUNTAIN PENS

KENNEDY
BOOK STORE
405

SHOP

WATCH

Engineer's Supplies

Rolex Watches $150.00 up
Diamond Rings
130 N. LIMESTONE
Nx door to Chop Surf

S. LIME

ACROSS FROM SUB

PHONI

LEXINGTON,