xt7ksn012g54 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ksn012g54/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640424  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 24, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 24, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7ksn012g54 section xt7ksn012g54 Editor Discusses

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Educators;
See Page Four

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University of Kentucky
APRIL

LV, No. 109

LEXINGTON,

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Scholarship Award

The University
Club recently presented a $50 scholarship to
Gail Mayer (right), home economics freshman from McCracken
County. Presenting the check here Is Patricia Hager, Larue County,
Club. Gail was state champion In the
president of the UK
automotive project In 1962.

Academic Freedom
Is Greater In Europe
By DAVID COOVERT
Kernel Feature Writer

Students in European universities have more academic
freedom and are more independent of their schools than
American students, Dr. Eugene K. Grotegut, associate professor of German, said in an interview yesterday.
"Academic freedom for stu
dents there Is almost absolute,"
he said. "They choose their own
write
courses. Some students
their own books. There is less
emphasis placed on classwork.
Much study is done independently in a library."
Some students may take only
one examination in their whole
college career, he said. This exam
proximately the same a the
for a
linary examination
In the United States.
said that students in
t
French, German, and Scandinavian universities have no one to
tell them what to do or what
courses to take. They are forced
as a
to be more independent
result.
"Sometimes they have help
from students who have been
around for a while," he said.
"These students may print manuals which will help undergraduates, but other than this they
are almost completely on their
own."
He said this Independence has
caused the growth of student
governments In European universities.
"The student government here
t the University," he said, "is
mostly a mollycoddled operation.
European students have actual
tudrnt corps rations, some subsidized by the national government." .
He said the European student
in
aid students
governments
areas where they have no help
from their schools. For instance,
there are no dormitories In many
European universities. The student government would help students find housing space.
He said student publications
there have no advisory boards as
the Kernel does. They are completely Independent of the universities.
"In fact, some of the most exciting writing and some of the
most effective critclsm has been
done in student magazines." lie
said.
Since the Nai government was
destroyed, be said, censorship of

Vl'

Today's Weather:
Partly Cloudy, Warm;
High 73

student publications has been
the exception rather than the
rule. If a student wanted to
write an article in favor of free
love or some other unpopular
Ide, he would not be stopped.
"The marked contrast between
their schools and ours," he said,
"is that a major portion of a
student's education comes from
student interaction and a free
exchange of opinion."
social life, is
The student's
kept separate from the school, he
said. There are no sororities, and
the fraternities are marked by a
"militaristic spirit."
"The fraternities represent the
shadier side of their universities," he said. "Students who go
to a university to take part in
parties and dueling
may Join them. In some of them,
a scar down the cheek may be
a sign of membership."
The greater Independence European students have does not
necessarily make their system
more effective than the American one, he said.
"The student determines for
himself how much time he puts
Into his work," he said. "As a result, different students take different amounts of time to finish.
This is somewhat Inefficient."
Movements are underway now
to establish new Institutions to
counteract this inefficiency and
the crowdedness of some schools,
he said.
The new institutions will Impose restrictions on the students.
He said there Is a tendency away
from the freedom that they have
now.
"This is regrettable in a sense,",
he said. "There la a question as
to whether quality will be sacrificed for these solutions. It's good
that there Is an attempt to solve
the problem, but it's bad that
the students have to be restricted."
Some of the greatest achievements in science and the arts
were made under the old system,
he said.

KY.( FRIDAY,

21, 1961

I

Eight Page

Three Days Of Activities
Planned For Inauguration)
Three days of activities will
surround the inauguration of
Dr. John W. Oswald as the
University's sixth president.

President and Mrs. Oswald will
be the honored guests at a luncheon in the Faculty Club Sunday.
A faculty social hour will begin
at noon dunday and the luncheon
will be at 12:30 p.m.
Dr. J. W. Patterson, president
of the Faculty Club, will preside.
Dr. Arthur Cooke, chairman of
the inaugural committee will
discuss the Inauguration itself.
Also attending the luncheon
will be Dr. and Mrs. Oswald's

Classes Dismissed
classes and University offices will be closed from noon
on Tuesday for the President's
Inauguration. Members of the
faculty are invited to march
in the inaugural
procession
which will form in front of the
Fine Arts Building at 2 p.m.
All students and the general
public are invited to attend the
cermony at 2:30.
All

the association will present a
show on the horse Industry.
The official inaugural luncheon
will be held at the Student Center at 11:30 Tuesday morning.
The inaugural processional will
form up in front of the Fine Arts
Building at 2 p.m. with the actual inauguration scheduled to begin at 2:30 in Memorial Coliseum.
the Inauguration,
Following
President and Mrs. Oswald will
receive the public in the Student
Center.
Tuesday
evening the
Board of Trustees will honor the
President and Mrs. Oswald and
visiting university and college
presidents at a dinner at Spin-dletHall.
Of the 505 delegates who will
attend, 67 are university and college presidents and 37 will represent learned societies.
Plans are being made for a
crowd of about 8,000 to attend
the inaugural ceremonies and
HII.WH

U.IMHHWm

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three children,

Mrs. Oswald's
and niece,
sister, brother-in-laand her parents.
The luncheon
arrangements
Fawere made by a nine-ma- n
culty Club committee headed by
Dean of Women Doris Seward.
Registration of the 505' official
delegates to the inauguration will
be from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday and
from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Tuesday.
At 9 a.m. Tuesday, the Keene-lan- d
Association is hosting a
breakfast at Keeneland for the
officials
and other
delegates
guests. Following the breakfast,

Dr. JOHN W. OSWALD

(channel 27 In Lexington) will televise the entire
ceremony live.
WKYT-T-

Parking Lots Closed
The large number of delegates and guest expected for
has caused
the Inauguration
University officials to close
1. 2, 20, and C
parking areas
(immediately behind the Coliseum) all day Tuesday. Faculty and students who normally
park in these areas are asked
to park in other parts or off
campus that day.

Glee Clubs

To Perform
Joint Concert
The University Men's and
Women's Glee Clubs will pre
sent a joint spring concert at
3:30 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall.
The Women's Glee Club, under
the direction of Sara Holroyd,
will sing "Adoramus Te Christe,"
a selection from "Stabat Mater,"
O Lord,"
"Hear
Our Prayer,
L o v e," "Kedron,"
"Wondrous
"Warrenton," and selections from
"Mv Fair Lady."
The Men's Glee Club, under
the direction of Dr. Donald Ivey,
will sing "The Testament of Freedom," "Ready When He Comes."
Chanson
da
"Mood Indigo,"
Route," and "Wanderin."
The concert is free and open to
the public.

Opinions Requested From Seniors

UK Student Achievement Hearing
To Be Wednesday In Faculty Club
The final open hearing on
student achievement will he
held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in
the Faculty Club Lounge on
the third floor of the Student Center.
Students and faculty members
are Invited to attend.
Dr. J. W. Patterson, chairman
of the Special Faculty Committee on Student Achievement, said
that the committee would especially like to hear from graduating seniors so that their opinbefore
ions may be recorded
they leave the University.
This meeting will be last in a
series of five, designed to define
the intellectual climate at the.
University.
The same Ave topics will be
dealt with as were discussed In
the previous four meetings. They
are:
1. The gap between faculty and
students. This Includes a study
of the channels of communication between students and faculty members, faculty attitude
toward student activities and expectations, and teaching techniques and methods.
2. The existing intellectual and

cultural activities at the University.
3. The extracurricular
and
social activities.
4. The physical facilities.
5.
The administrative
practices.
Special invitations have been
sent to several seniors. These Include the retiring presidents of
Student Congress, Associated
Panhellenic
Womens Students.
and Interfraternlty
Council,
Council, presidents of the scholastic honorarles, senior Oml-cro- n
Delta Kappa members, and
senior Phi Beta Kappa members.
Following this meeting, a report will be submitted to the
Faculty Council which will be
based on the findings from all
the meeting held during the year.
The first two meetings, held
last fall, were designed to obtain
student Ideas. The first of these
was an open hearing and the
second was a discussion of the
findings of a group of students
who polled the residence halls
and fraterity houses concerning the five topics.
The last two meetings were designed to obtain faculty Idras.
The first of these was an open
hearing. The second was a discussion of the ideas of several

selected faculty members front
all areas of the University.
Members of the committee, in
addition to Dr. Patterson, are Dr.
Ernest
McDaniel, professor ol
Dr. Lawrence S.
education;
Thompson, director of libraries;
Dr. Doris M. Seward, dean ot
women; Dr. Michael Adelstein,
assistant professor of English;
Dr. William T. Carse, associate
in counceling
and
professor
guidance.
John Hill, associate professor
of architecture; John E. Reeves,
associate professor of political
science; and Dr. 8tanley ZyznN
ewskl, assistant profe&aor of his
tory. The student members ara
William B. Drescher, a Junior in
arts and sciences, and Sallle T.
Dunn, a sophomore in arts and
sciences.

Student Publication;
Hoard
Applications for the Student
Board of Publications are now
available in the Dean of Men
or Dean of Women's Offices.
may
Any Interested student
apply. The applications are due
by 5 p.m. Wedneday.
wi r"iinn
nmriir virwwsy

* 2

21, lOf.l

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April

IVrsonalitirs

IEEE Sends Sims
1o
speech Contest
Tlie I'nivcrsity section of
l Electronics
the Institute
;iml Elec tric ;il Engineers will
send a speaker to tlie institute's regional technical paper
contest.

Jim Sims, senior In the College of Engineering, will represent UK with his paper, "Autoof
for Elimination
correlation
Noise in Pulse Code Systems,"
at the contest to be held May 4
and 5 at Clearwater, Fla.
Besides selecting Sims, the
IEEE elected Larry Thompson,
Ed Llebfarth,
vice
chairman;
chairman; Ted Brown, treasurer;
and Steve Curtis secretary for
next year.
Tom Woodall, sophomore Journalism major from Lexington,
has been appointed a page to the
Republican National Convention
at San Francisco July
Woodall will serve as one of
two pages to the
delegation. His apKentucky
was announced
by
pointment
Ted Hardwlck. Republician State
Central Committe chairman.
Anna Laura Hood, a Junior music education major, was presented the $250 Lexington Junior League Merit Award Tuesday.
The Junior League sward is
given annually to a UK Junior
or senior on the basis of scholand profesarship, character,
sional promise.
A booklet containing brief biographies on 30 Kentucky composers has been compiled and edited
by Gordon A. Nash, director of
music services for the Division
of Extended Programs.
. Dr.
Nash's booklet is an upof "Living
Kentucky
dating
Composers," which was published
in 1955. It may be obtained for
$1 from UK Extended Programs,.
Frazee Hall.

Jim Lucas, director of public
relations for a furniture manufacturing firm, was the guest
lecturer in a series sponsored
by the Department of Architecture.
Lucas' talk dealt with architectural environment
and was
concurrent
with his exhibition
of drawings and sketches on interior and furniture design.
Dr. S. Sidney Ulmer. chairman
of the Department of Political
Science, will address delegates to
the Kentucky Conference of Political Science to be held tomorrow at Eastern Kentucky State
College.
Dr. Max Milam, assistant professor of political science, will
moderate a penel discussion on
The Political Science Major in a
Small College."
Dr. Enno Kraehe

of

the De

addressed
the Humanities Club Tuesday in
the Faculty Lounge of the Stu's
dent Center. He discussed
Theory of Revolution
Its Status and Intellectual History."

partment of History

n
A
University delegaof
tion from the Department
Zoology presented research
papers at the 25th annual meeting of the Association of Southeastern
Biologists in Atlanta
over the weekend.
The IK group include! Dr.
John M. Carpenter, department
Dr. Roger V. Barchairman;
bour, associate professor; Dr. W.
II. Davis, assistant professor, and
graduate students Jackie "Batson,
Michael Harvey and Marlon D.
Hassell.
Dr. Carpenter is a member of
the ASB executive committee.

"Paleo-India- n
Culture In Kentucky: A Study Based on Projectile Points," has been published
by the University Press.
The author, Miss Martha Ann
Rolingson, formerly was associated with the UK museum of
Anthropology. She now is studying towards a doctorate at the
University of Michigan.
In her study of the Paleo- - Indian, who lived in one of the
least known eras of Kentucky
Miss Rolingson anartialyzes their characteristic
fact, the projectile point, which
was used as a tool to kill animals.
The new publication contains
many photographs and detailed
tables, and provides archaeologists with additional research
for further Investigation of a
little known phase of North
American
This is the second report in
the UK "Studies in Anthropology," which includes Kentucky
archaeology, other fields of anthropology, and related areas.
The first report, "The Tlnsley
Hill Site," by Dr. Douglas W.
Schwartz, director of the Museum of Anthropology, was published in 19C1.

Dr. George A. Hillery Jr., Uniprofessor of
versity associate
sociology and rural sociology,
spoke on "Appalachian Exodus,"
at Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio.
He reviewed forces behind the
population shift from the Southern Appalachians during the last
20 years and the meaning this
shift has for the Appalachian
area and the entire United States.
Dr. Hillery was on the campus
as a visiting scientist under a
program jointly sponsored by the
American Sociological Association
and the National Science Foundation. He also addressed several
classes and conferred with students and faculty members dur-inthe visit.

Foreign Language Conference
To Be Held Through Saturday
Tlie seventeenth Annual
Foreign I.;nif;ii;ige Conference
beg;m ycsteuhiy at the University and will continue
through April 25.
Thlr year, 4.400 students are being taught foreign languages at
UK. When the University was
founded, only a few students enrolled in classes of the four offered languages.
The languages offered at the
University this year are Latin,
Greek,
Japanese, Chinese,
French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Slavic, Spanish.
The annual meeting will con

There will be various luncheons and discussion groups held
during the conference. On Saturday, visiting delegates will attend
a horse farm and sightseeing
trip.
John Oswald exPresident
tended his welcome to those attending the conference. The text
Included:
"One hundred years ago lang- -

CLASSIFIED
WAKTtO

MIL

to

office
NEED GIRL for part-tim- e
a day. Person
Job, 2 to
must be wiltfng to work at least
21A4t
two years. Call
WANTED Male to share furnished house during summer.
Near UK. $40 month. Call
after 8 p.m. for InforA22&A24
mation.
MEN working way through school
e
Job. Ap- interested in
ply Dairy Queen 895 N. Broad23A4t
before 6 p.m.
way

IALI

FOR SALE 1964 Honda 300 cc
dream motorcycle. Fully equipped. Excellent condition, $650.
after 6:30 p.m. 21A3
Call

ifwrs

Jrnouth convertFOR SALE
ible 1,959 VjgAutomatic transmission, r?er steering, radio,
seat OrJ. Fine condition, $745.
22A3t
Call
Mini Bike. Dart
Cycl with 3 hp. West Bend engine' Road equipped. Excellent
edndition, $100. Call

FOR

WANTED Male to share large
3'i room apartment; stereo; carpeting, kitchen. Indoor garden,
bar.l kitchen, parking lot, front
and! bflck yards. Available for
nowVnd summer session. 330 E.
5:30 to 10.
High. Call
23A2t
Very reasonable.
HELP WANTED Man with car
sales work, day or
for part-tim- e
evening. No canvassing. Leads
furnished. Inquire at 281 Lime,
Room 235. Phone
Mr.
24A2t
Swearinger.

23A2t

V

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Stanley Kubrick's

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or.

Honey-dippe- d
Char-broile-

Opposite
Med

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Honoring the
Birth of

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MARTIN

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ROBERT

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AT THE OK CORRAL"

LANCASTER

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7:30

Admission 75c

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western action

SATURDAY ONLY

"Hiroshima Mon Amour"

CHAS

fATURtS

'GUNFIGHT

Lime

student
center
theater

Admission 75c

PVUS

EAGLES"

0

NOW!

4 TTiYllfrfriTaVJ

mil. Mf.fr

"A GATHIRING

ADMISSION

,

A CONTINENTAL
DISTRIBUTING,
INC. RE RELEASE

WED. - SAT.

,

ft V 1

M

"HAMLET"

m

n

Admissions: SOc Fri. & Sun.,
60c Saturday
Shewing at 6:30 and
Fri. and Sat.;
Sunday

m

400th Anniversary of tha
William Shakespeare

ai-r-

:30 a.m.
Weekends

PERKINS PANCAKE HOUSE

Stop Worrylnn

TONIGHT
AT 8:1 S P.M.
AND SUNDAY SHOWS AT
AND 8:25
5:50

3:15

MlUAlt 11801

pancake treats
chicken, jumbo shrimp
steaks, 'Perkins-burge- r'
Open
On

To

uraiM Bomb

STARTS
SATURDAY

23A2t

1

Uaned

How I

ado

IOST

-

2nd Week!

ACoMMPictWMlltkltt.

LOST Gold Oruen watch with
initials .M. Burt on back. Lost
In restsrjom Donovan Hall Cafe- teria.M'as family heirloom. Call
3
after 7:30 p.m. Reward.
21A4t
LOST Key ring In vicinity of
Church of Christ, Clifton Ave.
Sun, AprlQ. Reward phone

r.v A

HELD OVER!

FT XT AT CtrfinnnlAt
IIP

f

m

Jam Session
An
jam session
will be held from 4 p.m. toIn the parking lot in
morrow
front of Keeneland Hall. The
"Classics" will play.

BALE

WEEKEND DELIGHT
Taste-tempti-

uages were accepted as part of
the educated man. Today, linguistic ability is not only desirable
but essential If we are to
to hold our place in a world
of skrinking distances and increased tension. Now the und
standing of another man's
Var
may mean live itself.
"If we can in any way contribute to our growing understanding of language, our attempt to
more efficiently teach it, or to
probe the ways in which language itself can help us to more
completely understand man, then
the efforts which have gone into
this conference are worthwhilp."
on arrangeThe committee
included:
ments
Norman
H.
J. Chambliss,
Binger, William
John L. Cutler, George P. Faust,
Eugene K. Grotegut, Marianne
Hameau, Richmond Y. Hathorn,
L.
Clark Keating, Robert P.
Moore, J. Hunter Peak, Alverta
W. Server, Thomas C. Walker,
Robert O. Weiss, Paul K. Whit-ake- r,
and Leon Zolondek. John
A. Rea will act as director.
will be held in
Registration
the foyer of the Student Center
Theater.

vene under the chairmanship
of Robert O. Weiss. The agenda
includes reports by members of
the executive council and disArthur
cussion of International
Schnitzler Research Association
activities and plans.

I

""AUDIE

KATHLEEN

CHARLES

DRAKE

lifcT

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April 2f,

Social Sidelights
You've always heard that
tlicy save the best till last,
Well this adage is true rf ye

old Alma Mater this weekend.

Jl'he weatherman

is rooperat-i-

me sty le with lots nl
lomantic flowering trees in
bloom, acres of lush grass,
balmy breces, a full moon,
and plenty of parlies.
This is obviously the time to
grab your flask, shake out your
bermudas. check the sneaks lor
wear, and say goodbye to your
pin.
The last good fling Is upon us
and lor the seniors It's an especially nostalgic time. It's goodbye to all the old friends, the
Paddock, Splinter Hall, the bells
and clocks, the law students,
Danceland, Adams, the Sports
the Grille, fraternity
Center,
weekends, going grub, the Kernel,
M&O trucks speeding along the
walks, and all the million and one
haunts UKers discover during
four inspiring years of higher
education.
This aura of sentimentality
will be deepened by th occurrence of Old South, the K.Vi
annual return to the days of the
traditional South.

This much sought after, always talked about event, will begin with the Sharecropper's Ball
tonight. It's open to the campus
with the Thornton Sisters providing the fiddling. The Phoenix
will be the place and there is
only one hitch to getting into
this event, it's couples only.
Since this is a last blast time
there will be a Jam session to end
the semester's TGIF in style.
Bradley Hall will have the
on hand in the Quad
from 5 p.m. Drop by and en-Jsome dancing.
While the South is attempting
to rise again a few other fraternities will be celebrating with
formals and weekends.
The early morning hours seem
to be departure time for those
venturing away from the hallowed halls of learning and the
Fiji's are no exception as they
pack up spear, grass skirt, and
hut and head for Butler State
Park at Carrollton for the annual Fiji Island party.
The day will be filled with recreation as the natives will be
swimming, boating, boiling a pot
of people or two, and getting
ready for tomorrow night when
the Del Rays will beat out the
jungle rhythms. This South Seas
illustration will end Sunday.
Central Kentucky's Largest

Ily
Nancy Loughritlge

Meanwhile back at the campus the KA's will be marching
from Haggin Hull at 12:30 p.m.,
accompanied
by the Southern
Belles, to the Fayette County
Courthouse to secede from the
state. Lt. Gov. Harry Lee Water-fiel- d
will be on hand to surrender the state to the bearded
group.
With the state safety in Its
possession, the Order will adjourn to Elmendoif for a victory celebration.
While Lexington reels under
the shock of secession the Phi
Delt's will be getting away from
it all with a party at Lock 8.
After a successful semester they
will be letting their pent-u- p
frustrations out by enjoying one
of the few beaches in the area.
Another group also has plans
for the Lock 8 area. The Lambda
Oil's have scheduled a party at
this location complete with picnic. They should have a great
time frolicking In sand and surf
(?) well if you drrjim real hard
river water can be a substitute
for the real thing. So It looks
like the Lambda f'hi's are putting a nice finishing touch to
their year of fun and parties.
Looks like the Lock will be
filled with fraternal spirits and
fun.

The dorms are also getting In
on the last fling act as Keene-lan- d
d.mc-ln- g
provides
with a Jam session in front
of the dorm from 4 p.m. with
the Classics.
The Kappa Sig's are making
a weekend of it in the true spirit
of the Blue Grass as they hit
the road for Louisville and the
opening day at Churchill Downs.
After an afternoon at the track
the brothers and their dates will
dash through traffic to the Holiday Inn for their formal with
the Parliaments playing. Yes sir,
this certainly is a below the
Mason-Dixo- n
weekend.
The Delt's by this time tomorrow will be on their way to
Rough River State Park and
their formal. They will travel
with the speed of a Greyhound
and arrive rested, full of pep,
and famished. There will be a
banquet at the lodge followed
by a dance at which the Sultans
will play. They will return Sunday afternoon.
Back in Lexington the members of FarmHouse will be ending their social year with the
Sunburst Rose formal at the Imperial House. The Temptashuns
will be on hand to add Just the
right touch.
The KA's by this time will be

a grand mood as they enjoy
e.
Old South Ball at

In

the

All of this will come to an
end Sunday with a concert and
Jam session at Vern Hatton's
Sport Camp.
The Sigma Chi's will be having a real last fling with a cabin
party.
The Student Center will have
something to do for those that
don't fit into any of the previThere
ously mentioned affairs.
will be a Jam session on the
2
patio at the Center from
tomorrow niht.
From all of this, you can see
that in the true tradition of the
college student the
semester will end with a real
bang.

Peace Corps Tests

Peace Corps placement tests
be given at 12:45 p.m. tomorrow in Room 33 of the
Tharmacy Building. Studrnts
planning to take the test ara
requested to pick up application forms in advance. The
to
forms will be presented
testers before the exam, and
are now available In Room 304
of the Administration Building.
will

Kappa Alpha Annual Sharecropper's Ball

USED BOOK STORE
(Other Than Ttxtf

8 P.M. TONIGHT, CRYSTAL BALLROOM, PHOENIX
ADMISSION FREE,' CASUAL DRESS
Couples Only

DENNIS
BOOK STORE

HOTEL

Near 3rd

257 N. Lime

Going Formal!
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Park On Hour Frea
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Monday Nights Till 9!

UNITARIAN
CHURCH
Higbea Mill Roid

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Clays Mill Road

10:45 A.M.
Service and
Church School
Sermon
UK.

KENNETH HARPER

Subject
"HIXIGION

AND

JAZZ"

Music
KAY

RECTOR SEXTETTE

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Consultant
keenness for the water's
edge in "Posh" diamond pattern
Helanca nylon with the
100
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swimsuit with contrast waistband in white, aqua or yellow
combinations. 8 16. $23.00.

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As a part of Kappa Alpha's Old South Weekend, the campus is invited to
attend the "Sharecropper's Ball" with music provided by the fabulous
"Thornton Sisters" combo, direct from the campuses of Washington and
Lee and the University of Virginia.

ATTENTION STUDENTS!
WE WILL CARE FOR YOUR
CLOTHES THIS SUMMER
Guaranteed against moth and fire damage.
Why go to the trouble of carrying your clothes home
then carrying .them bad: again?

...

and

CROLLEY 'CLEANERS
116 W. Maxwell

Dial

255-431-

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* The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

M serond clans nmltrr under the Act of Much 8. 1879.
KentucVy
Entered lit the port offlr at
week during the regular Khool year except durinf. holidays Slid eiams.
Published lour times
Subscription rates: $7 a achool year; 10 cents a copy from files

trinmi,

Suk Endicott, Editor in Chief
Carl Modech, Camput Editor
David Hawpb, Managing Editor
Associate and Daily Editors:
Richard Stevenson, Sandra Brocx, William Grant, and Elizabeth Ward
Departmental Editors:
Sn Webb, Cartoonist
Nancy Louchridce, Social
Wallt Pacan, Sport
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
Joe Curry, Advertising Manager
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Open Door Policy
For Educators
Teachers wield more influence and
have fewer checks than any profession in our nation. At this university
for example, it is possible for a
to complete a long career without either his colleagues or his
superiors having judged his classroom
performance.
And as citizens, in the face of
fieedom and the cry for privacy, we
liave tucked our tails and allowed
leathers moldcrs of youth to thumb
disci iminately at our clay.
We have been guilty in pressuring
educators, so that they have closed
their doors. When we cried out
against Darwinism and adverse
thought against knowledge we pressured our educators. When we have
cried out against a professor's use
ol profanity often a petty complaint
we applied pressure.
But our sins are greater than this.
First, we have allowed the doors to
le dosed; secondly, it is seldom that
we have strongly presented a worthy
complaint. An educator's job is to
teach. But do wc stoutly protest when
lie docs not?
Do we shout with indignation
these remarks?

at

"He taught me nothing."
"I asked, but he didn't know and
he offered no source of information."
J,The information he gave me is
'v
outdated."
learn of this, but he
"I wanted to
offered no encouragement."
Day by day more emphasis is being placed upon our educators. They
are molding today the thinkers of
tomorrow. If we are to give teachers
and the profession our
respect; if we are to pay them more,
give them better facilities, then we
must pry open their doors to see
that they teach.
Most professors perform their jobs.
But the few who do not must no
longer be allowed the protection of
privacy. Deans' offices should maintain an "open door" policy where students may complain, without fear of
discrimination. After substantial criticism, a complaint should be thoroughly investigated by professors
equal or superior in rank to the professor in question. Jf complaints are
valid, but do not warrant dismissal,
then the professor's course should be
quietly taken from all required-subjec- t
lists.

A College Education:
Mind Over Money
will be awarded on basis of need,
academic promise, and high school
record.
2. Increased student loans would
be provided by raising the loan limit
of the National Defense Education
Act from $1,000 to $1,500 for un.jk
graduates and from $2,000 to $2,jStl
for graduate students.
3. Loans to full-timstudents making satisfactory academic progress
would be insured. Loans so insured
would be limited to $2,000 per academic year to any one borrower,
up to $10,000 total. Repayments could
be extended for a
period
graduation.
4. A student work-studprogram
population reaching college age.
would enhance student employment
What does this cause?
opiwrtunities while contributing both
State universities are limiting the to the college and the student's edustudents.
of
cation. These would be in the form of
percentage
Smaller colleges are getting more research, public service, internships,
attention.
and assistantships.
Educational
are
Junior colleges and community
opportunities
publicly supcolleges increasingly
broadening, but increasingly the inportedare getting much more at- tellectually capable will be favoied
tention. They will serve as fillers lor over those merely financially capable.
institutions, weedthe larger four-yea- r
And bills such as Sen. Hartke's, if
ing out those who can't make the passed, will allow those students
grade at a big school before those greater opportunity for academic purstudents try (and fail).
suits free from financial worry.
While college attendance is exFrom The Daily Texan
panding, a bill now in Congress might
help the financially unable to pursue
their education if they have the mental ability.
Senate Bill 2190, sponsored by
Sen. Vance Hartke (D., lnd.), presents a program balanced between
loans, scholarships, and student employment. Hartke says it will provide
for more than a million students at
relatively low federal cost.
The bill has four parts.
1. A program of four-yea- r
undergraduate scholarships to entering college fteslunen. Grants up to $1,000

the
Many students now attending
University might not be able to get
in if they had to start over.
U. S. News and World Report
are expoints out that applicants
educeeding the space necessary to
cate them. High grades and good entrance scores may not be enough for
took
entry anymore; Amherst only
of its applicants this year,
and rejected 90 valedictorians.
More than 50 percent of high
school graduates now enter college.
The percentage of high school graduates hoping for college education
continues to increase, rising even
faster than the percentage of the

The Liberal Arts Tradition Is Dying

The liberal arts tradition

is dead

or d)ing.
So says Dr. Jacques Barun, Columbia University l'rovost and Dean
of Faculties, quoted by the Intercollegiate Press Association.
While he said that he was "not
objecting or criticizing, but only
Dean Barun declared:
"What we see is the thinning and
flattening out of the once distinctive
(college) curriculum under pressure
from above and below, the high
schools taking away the lower years;

the graduate