xt7z08637v3s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7z08637v3s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650212  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 12, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 12, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7z08637v3s section xt7z08637v3s Iimde Today's Kernel

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University of Kentucky
FEB.
LEXINGTON, KY.,

Vol. LVI, No. 76

FRIDAY,

'

Arts editors review
group: Poge Two.

""

.

12, 1965

the

;

Editorial evaluates Freshman Colloquium: Poge Four.

College of Nursing gets accreditation:
Page Seven.

What is the position of the Socialist
Party in Kentucky? Poge Five.

Sororities pledge new members: Poge
Three.

Lady Anthropologist from Berkeley to
be visiting professor: Poge Eight.

Eight Pages

Fae Professor

A

'Goldbriars'

Views

Science With Religion

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Breathitt Receives Tickets

accord-ingtoD- r.

Mrs. Frank McVey

Jr., presents Got. Edward T. Breathitt with tickets
to the Centennial Grand Ball set for Feb. 20. The governor will lead
the Grand March.
,

Gov. Breathitt, Wife

To Lead Grand March

Gov. and Mrs. Edward T.
Breathitt today officially accepted the University's invitation
to join with the President and
Mrs. John W. Oswald in leading
the Grand March at the Centennial Ball Feb. 20.
Meeting at the Governor's
Mansion in Frankfort-wit- h
the
chairmen of the Grand Ball
Committee, Gov. Breathitt said,
"Mrs. Breathitt and I are certainly excited about helping the
University celebrate its 100th
birthday at the Ball, and we
are delighted to lead the Grand
March."
The march will be the highlight of the Centennial Ball, the
social event of the centennial
year.
Col. James Alcorn, centennial grand, marshal, has
that the various centennial committees will join
with the governor and the president in leading the march, and
as many dancers as space permits will join the affair.
Forming on the balcony overlooking the Centennial Exhibit
in the Great Hall, the march will
proceed into the Grand Ball
Room at midnight, through an
arch of sabers held by members
of the Pershing Rifles, official
guard of the Centennial Grand
-

, The
march, the traditional
highpoint of grand balls, promises to excite and delight all
ball-goer-

s.

The music for the ball is by
Lester Lanin's Orchestra, which
recently played at President
Johnson's Inaugural Ball.
The entire Student Center
will be transformed into the
Centennial theme, carried out
by decorations and entertainment. The
area
will be the "Fabulous 100
Club," featuring a panorama of
entertainment from
The SC Theatre will feature
"The Golden Age of Comedy,"
with Laurel and Hardy, Charlie
Chaplin, and many of the silent
film heroes of the early movies.
Single acts will also be
featured in various lounges
throughout the building, where
dancers can rest and refresh,
enjoying quiet piano or guitar
melodies.
Students, faculty, alumni, and
friends are cordially invited to
join in the festivities of the
grille-cafeter-

ia

1865-196- 5.

black-ti- e

occasion.

Tickets are $2 for students
and $5 for adults, admitting the
holder to the entire Student
Center and all its activities.
Contributors of an additional
$25 will be designated as paBall.
trons, listed in the program,
and given reserved tables in the
with a single leadBeginning
ing couple, the march will twist Small Ballroom, just off the
dance floor. Seating for other
and turn through several elaborate maneuvers and reach its guests will be abundant in all
climax with lines stretching the parts of the building.
Profits from the ball will go
width of the ballroom.
to the Centennial Scholarship
Fund.
Art Film
Tickets may be
in
"The Swindle" a film direct- the Student Center purchased DiProgram
ed by Frederico Fellini will be
rector's office, first floor lounge,
shown Sunday evening Feb. 14 Room
102, Kennedy and Uniin the Student Center Theater.
University
Mike versity Bookstores,
A discussion lead by Dr.
Adelstein of the English Depart- Shop,
Dr. Rovin's office in the Medment and John L. Reily of the ical
Center, the Alumni House,
Department, and from fraternity social chairwill follow the showing of the men and various
Lexington
film.
firms.
The movie will be presented
Patrons are urged to purat 6:30 and 9. p.m. and the ad- chase their tickets
mission price will be 60 cents in order to assure immediately
prompt listfor adults and students.
iii the program.
ing
Embry's-on-the-Campu-

Radio-TV-Fil-

s,

By SALLY ATHEARN
Assistant News Editor
"The Impact of Science on
Religion" was the topic of a
Centennial speech given last
night by Dr. Jul ian N. Hartt in
Memorial Hall.
Dr. Hartt, director of graduate studies in religion at Yale
University, spoke to about 200
persons in the second of three
lecture programs sponsored jointly by UK and the College of
the Bible.
The "secular" distinction between the formal theology of the
church and the informal theology in everyday life "has the
superficial appearance of a conflict of religion with science,"
Dr. Hartt said.
This separation of church from
reality is a "misfortune,"
Hartt, because "it confirms the illusions of a neat division of our culture, and illusion
aided and comforted by our traditional separation of church and

state."

He attempted to show the
falsity of this dichotomy by calling it "a thrological conflict
through and through. We hear
less and less," he said, "about
the flat and final opposition of
scientific and traditional theologies to each other.
"The equations of science are
very hard to translate into instruments which have enormous impact upon our daily existence,"
he added.- Dr. Hartt referred to the two
most popular conceptions of God
as "myths." They increase in
depth as our world becomes more
and more technical.

UL Trustees

KeepFootball

LOUISVILLE -- The University of Louisville Board of Trustees voted yesterday to continue
intercollegiate football for the
present, with its continuance depending upon attendance.
The decision was reached after
a day of demonstrations on the
d
campus. Mayor William O.
County Judge MarlowW.
Cook were censured by faculty
members for making statements
that "demean the university and
insult the dignity of its scholars."
Last night, the Student Senate, elected representatives of the
UL student body, defended the
faculty and requested that Judge
Cook and Mayor Cowger "reconsider their position."
Following a one and a half
hour trustees meeting yesterday
afternoon, Eli II. Brown III, trustees chairman, issued a statement
citing low attendance resulting
in an increasing loss of money for
the football program at the university.
He said, "We will not enlarge
the expenditure of university
funds for football and if the sport
is to continue on the intercollegiate level. . .it will be absolutely
dependent upon the increased
support it receives from the people of this community as well as
upon the support of the univerCow-geran-

sity."

Brown detailed the rising financial losses and poor attendance at football games.

"On the other hand." he add
ed, "this fact doesn't mean that
they are unreal, or than no power
is forthcoming to enforce them.
"Men can, of course, commit
all manner of atrocities against
other men. They cannot do so,
however, without losing something vital from the price of
terrible reprisal," he concluded.
Dr. Hartt commented on the
age of technology that man is now
entering, notingthat "He is entering it with remarkably thin and
fragmentary moral preparation."
"Man is encouraged to believe," he went on, "that he already knows enough about his

essential being and gcxxl to find
his own way in a world he has
with demonic ingenuity."
The doctor declared that creative freedom should be the goal
of mankind. "Man is intended for
life in a community where
management is strictly a secondary function of creative freedom
and unviolated trust," he said.
He concluded that the limits
to the technical management and
rearrangement of human life are
"ethical, but that does not mean
that they cannot be physically
and even psychologically
booby-trappe- d

UK College Of Bible

Panel Discusses Talk
By KENT HICKS
Kernel Staff Writer
A panel consisting of University and College of the Bible

faculty members and students
yesterday questioned Dr. William
A. Pollard on his address Riven
Wednesday nigfrt orw"The lm- -'
pact of Science on Religion."
The discussion was part of
the second academic conference
in connection with the Centennial year.
The panel was headed by Prof.
John Kuiper of the Philosophy
Department. Other panel members included Prof. William Barr,
College of the Bible; Dr. Wendel
Demarcus, Physics Department;
Daniel .cleppard, College of the
Bible; a..j Arthur Henderson of
UK.

The first question was asked
by Prof. Barr, who inquired if
Cod acts in chance or if chance
was an instance when he takes
no action.
Dr. Pollard replied that all
things come together as God plans
them. If you think scientifically,
he said, you see too much harmony in the world for chance to
exist. Science is unable to explain all the coinciding elements.
Concerned with the scientific
world view discussed last night,
David Sheppard asked whether
or not science is moving into metaphysics to try to explain
what philosophy has been saying for years.
In answeringthis, Dr. Pollard
said that science is still science
because people would scorn metaphysics attempting to explain
what has been taught them
through religion. Science would
be out of its field.
UK student Arthur Henderson
followed by asking if scientific
discoveries have changed any reli-

religious mysticism. Religion he
said, tells us about creation,
while science shows it.
Dr. Kuiper then said that this
seemed to go against our basic
Christian beliefs. God told us how
things were done. What is science
to question this, he asked.
As science progresses, Dr. Pollard answered, it seems to confirm and coincide with the incidents described in the Bible. It
is not coming into conflict with
our basic beliefs. Science seems
to confirm them.
Following this reply, the floor
was opened for audience participation. Prof. Strauss asked how.
science could account for the
scientist.
"How is a bodily creature able
to reach beyond space while we
are moving in time?" he asked,
"Can science take care of its own
discoveries?"
Dr. Pollard said, "I quote
Sophicles, 'Of all creatures, the
weirdest is man'."

AWS Senate
Applications
Available

Applications for AWS Senate seats are now available in
the Dean of Women's Office
and from AWS House representatives in each housing unit.
Eleven positions are available
including president, vice president) Panhellenic representative and Women's Residence
Hall representative. Runners-uto these offices will also serve
in the Senate. In addition, a
representative from each class
will be elected.
The AWS Senate selects its
own secretary and treasurer.
beliefs.
gious
Any woman student with a
Dr, Pollard replied that science
has not changed any of the basic 2.0 or better overall academic
beliefs. Science has only cleared average may apply and must
up the religious misconceptions take a test on the bylaws and
policies of AWS to le eligible
people have held, he said.
At this point in the discussion, for selection to the slate.
A screening committee companel chairman Dr. Kuiper said
that he felt religion and science posed of four senators draws
were growing farther apart. He the slate consisting of two canasked why Dr. Pollard felt that didates for the seats of president
the two were drawing closer to- and vice president and seven
candidates for each of the other
gether.
Dr. Pollard felt that, although positions.
Elections will be held on
science will never be an insight
release muc h March 3.
to religion, it would
p

* -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb. 12,

2

i

'GoldeBriars' Group Turns
Folk Into Music: ianship

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By ELIZABETH WARD
Kernel Arts Reviewer
A new folk singing group
called the "GoldeBriars" have
turned the popular folk idiom into

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Van Williams PI jto

National Repertory Theater Presentation

Farley Granger and Delores Sutton appear in the National Reperatory
Theater's production of Molnar's "Liliom." Opening: at the Brown
Theater in Louisville Feb. 22, The National Repertory Theater will
present two other famous plays besides "Liliom": Ibsen's "Hedda
Gabler" and Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer."

The Lively Arts
Students are being offered substantial savings on ticket prices
to attend the 1965 season of the
National Repertory Theater at
the Brown Theater in Louisville.
Croups of ten students may
order matinee tickets for any day
during the week of performances
for half the box office price. A
similar group will be allowed one
dollar off all evening performar e
ticket prices.
The National Repertory Theater is unique in its coverage
of the nation, bringing famous
plays and acclaimed actors together far from metropolitan
theaters. Through this system,
Louisville received professional
appearances of "Elizabeth The
Queen" and "Mary Stuart" in
1962. Last spring, "The Seagull,"
"Ring Round The Moon," and
"The Crucible" were presented.
This season's offerings span
a wide range of audience interest.
To the university community, all
three plays should be intriguing.
Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" has
been called one of his masterpieces, and this will be its first
exposure on professional tour
since 1948. Signe Hasso, a noted
Swedish star, plays the title role
under the direction of Eva

...

starred in NRT's nationwide
tours, but this year she confines
her talents to translation and
direction. Remembering her fine
starring performance in "The Seagull," it seems a loss to do without her. But perhaps Miss Hasso's
own acting will reflect Miss
long years of experience.
Goldsmith's "She Stoops To
Conquer" may be the finest
comedy in English. Certainly it
is a rollicking Tom Jones-styl- e
epic. And Molnar's "Liliom" is
romantic fantasy starring Farley
Granger as Liliom.
Students and faculty are invited to take advantage of this
season's NRT productions. The
complete listing of performance
times and ticket prices is available on the bulletin board in the
Journalism Building.

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TUX SHOP
113 E. HIGH

252-195-

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Action! Action! Action!

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BACK IN ACTION!

CONNIE STEVENS

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Henry Slesar and John Kneubuhl
Music: Max Steiner
Story by Henry Slesar
Produced and Directed by William Conrad
Screenplay

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CESAR ROMERO

by

PANAVISION

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Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published four timea weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Hoard
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
,
chairman
Stephen Patmcr, .
W1

LANDEN'S

and

Tonu Curtis nataiio v:ood
Etenry Fonda

The Kentucky Kernel
The

- WIS--

1 II II 1
1

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uW-

nmimjim

jiGOIiDFINGEB'

At 9:30

4

We have over 15,000 tuxedos
for the Centennial Ball. Size and
fit guaranteed. Stop in soon and
see our wide selection.

IAN

'THE WRONG ARM
OF THE LAW"

JJ

Everything

freslily cleaned,
neatly pressed,
perfectly fitted!

DEAN JONES

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HARRY SALIZUAN

At 7:30

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No matter what

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formal occasion,
you can rent it.

OTRBROCCOU

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RENTALS

2nd Week

"THE AMOROUS

mtury,
,lkj.tm
tA e the

2T

cnniiAi
rumiiHL

will perform Sunday at 3:30
p.m. in Memorial Hall.

J

DOUBLE SHOW!

Otx-rst-

(EDETD

Musicale

I

PETER SELLERS

"

UUJuD

so-call-

The Faculty Brass Quintet

TONIGHT

In Color

ting

FIRST OUTDOOR SHOWING!

"ffj

- STARTS

well-wor-

eight-interes-

They employ not only the folk
and jazz idioms but also the serious business of good music theory
and practice.
Their arranging is organized
and disciplined without losing its
spontaneity and feeling, which
requires more musicianship than
is evinced in the average commercial folk group.

HELD OVER!

I

I

by scott nun ley

Miss LeGallienne has often

an experiment in musicianship.
With an average age of 19,
this group can be best described as just plain healthy and
alive but with a phenomenal
knack for artistic professionalism.
Using an unusual voice distribution of two tenors and two
sopranos, the GoldeBriars achieve
an excellent blend often approaching the sound of a single voice.
Their arranging, often utilizing
parallel fifths in interesting ascending and descending patterns,
is new to the modern folk sound
and vaguely reminiscent of the
English and Italian madrigal.
The material they use is ordinary, including such songs as
"No More Auction Block,"
"Shenandoah," "Long Time
Travlin," and "He Was a Friend
of Mine." However, their use of
good arranging and outstanding
musicianship gives new verse to
n
the
material.
The most interesting piece on
their first album (Epic Records
"The GoldeBriars") is "Voyager's Lament." Combining this
song with a traditional French
art song, "The Joys Of Love,"
the group reaches the height of
its display of adept vocal work.
The four voices, through the
use of unresolved leading tones
and uncommon harmonic intervals, manage to sound like double
their number. One tenor carries,
in an excellent and unspoiled
falsetto, the melody, leaving the
sopranos free to carry out interesting obligato parts which move
constantly above the melody line.

The other tenor moves more in
the baritone range to give necessary foundation to the otherwise
constantly changing harmonies.
Thus we have four voices singing
two songs in two languages and
fou rt parts that sound like
to say the least.
"The GoldeBriars" deserve
consideration from any serious
listener of folk music. While they
are largely commercial in appeal,
"ethas opposed to the
nic school" of folk music, this
group has one big point in their
favor they are musicians of rare
excellence in ther particular
medium of performance.

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BROS.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

Sororities Pledge
44 In Open Rush

The University's 12 sororities h ave pledged 44 girls in the
spring
semester s open rush period which ended
Monday.
The sororities and their pledDELTA ZETA (1)
ges are:
Ruth Ann Kriener.
ALPHA DELTA PI (5)
KAPPA ALPHA THETA (2)
Gay Bonnie Bush, Jean Allen
Elizabeth Nooe, and Mary
Lankford, Deborah Mulliken, Rachford.
Margret Gail Owen, and Gail
KAPPA DELTA (4)
Lynn Westerman.
Georgianna Pendley, Karen
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA (5)
Gabriel, Susan Haddad, and
Pamela Kay Anderson, Maija Jeanne Montgomery.
Avots, Susan Marie Lowry.Rren-d- a
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA (2)
Vanlloose, and Sharon Elaine
Mary Diane Jordan and Nancy
Stalker.
Carroll Wallace.
ALPHA XI DELTA (5)
PI BETA PHI (2)
Janet Ann Gilroy, Lois Jean
Jennie Rose Heim and Elinor
Hayes, Cecil Pelter, Barbara Lee Bickford Henderson.
Rutland, and Cheryl Kaye Smith.
ZETA TAU ALPHA (4)
CHI OMEGA (3)
Mary Faraci, Dianne Ruth
Sue Bartlett Kunz, Marcia Godman, Elizabeth Ann Tabor,
Martin, and Nita Saffell Yates. and Marian Zapoleon.
DELTA DELTA DELTA (3)
Sandra Carole Strong, Karon
Adele Thomas, and Kathryn Rose
Troupers
UK Troupers will hold tryouts
White.
for the spring semester on TuesDELTA GAMMA (8)
Ida Marie Armstrong, Barbara day, at 7 p.m. in Room 107 ofthe
Elaine Bush, Nancy VVilford Alumni Gym. Entertainers of all
Cooper, Sharon JoDulworth.and kinds singers, dancers, tumblers
and those interested in working
Susan Beth Lubin.
Gail Mangus, Mary Elizabeth backstage arc urged to attend.
Breault.
Myers, and Bonnie-Jo

Social Announcements
Pin-Mat-

Patricia O'Connor, sophomore education major from Lexington and a member of Alpha
Xi Delta sorority, to Joe Lawrence, junior prelaw student from
Louisville and a member of Phi

es

Bonnie Lindner, sophomore
English major from Western
Springs, 111; and a member of
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority,
to Dan Purcell, junior Spanish Kappa Tau fraternity.
major from Ft. Thomas and a
member of Kappa Alpha fraEngagements
ternity.
Pat McDonough, senior eduLinda Wellinghurst, sopho- cation major from Matawan, N.
more English major from Lex- J., to Ron Gosette, junior comington, to Charles Kendall, jun- merce major from Wilmore and
a member of Lambda Chi Alpha
ior engineering major from Louisville and a member of Phi Kappa fraternity.
Tau fraternity.
education major from
and member of Pi Beta
Phi, to John McReynolds, a
sophomore electrical engineering major from Mt. Sterling,
and member of Delta Tau Delta.

Committee chairmen: alumni,
Frank Chumley; culture, Chandler Davis; financial, John Talbott;
intermural, David Switzer; rush,
Dick Meers and Huey Martin;
scholarship, Hite Hays; and social, Phil Norton.
Pledge class officers: president, Charles Mitchell; vice president, Elmer Neumen; secretary,
Jim LeMaster; and treasurer,
Rubber Green.

Graduate Exams
The University Testing

The Graduate Record Exam,
required for all seniors in nursing, education, honors program,
psychology, zoology and students
seeking full graduate standing
should be filed for by Feb. 19.
Students desiring to take the
National Teacher Exam on Feb.
20 must submit the completed
form plus fee to the Educational
Testing Service by Feb. 19.
The Graduate School Foreign
Language Exam, scheduled for
April 10 must be registered for
between Feb. 15 and March 10.

ill

Dial

266-441-

The New York Life Agent
On Your Campus Is a

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Student Center Basement
FRIDAY, FEB. 12 thru SATURDAY, FEB. 20
Your favorite artists on these labels
CAPITOL MERCURY

Ferrante

Teicher
Billy Vaughn

GENE CRAVENS

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Member American Gem Society

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UNITED ARTISTS

Kingston Trio
Josh White
Cannonball Adderley
Four Preps

Insurance Company
INSURANCE
ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS
INSURANCE
141 North Upper
LIFE

ic

Phone:

252-895- 9

or

252-291- 7

Will Dunn Drug
Maxwell
Corner of S. Lime and

The College Store
VALENTINE

A

owe rsitv Book Store

James Brown

Tiffany Sterling Silver
$3.75
Money Clip

FHOMC

versity of Arizona.

Valentine Gifts

-

l

School administrators from 50
Kentucky counties and officials
of tch State Department of Education will attend a special education workshop tomorrow in
the Student Center.
The workshop, sponsored by
the College of Education, is
centered on the theme of "Educating the Culturally Different
Child."
The workshop consultant will
be Dr. R. Van Allen of the Uni-

DANSK DESIGNS
SELECTIONS

ZJ

xi

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For Workshop

5

till

40S07

rgeant-at-arm-

State Educators
To Meet Here

817 EUCLID AVENUE
Lexington, Kentucky

itftt

Fuller & Wilder

s,

PI RETA PHI
President, Susan Mayer; vice
president, Claudia Jeffrey; recording secretary, Ann Scott Covert;
corresponding secretary,
Sheryl Shaw; treasurer, Linda
King; assistant treasurer, Pam
Anderson; scholarship chairman.
Merry Werner; pledge trainer,
Ann Hamilton; assistant pledge
trainer, Sarah Webb; rush chairman, Kathy Ryan; program chairman, Nancy Rames; activity and
publicity chairman. Cay Cish;
historian, Terry Dean; house
manager, Jo Peck; social chairman, Dane Rridgewater; courtesy
chairman, Jayne Melton; special
events chairman, Nancy Hickman; AWS representative, Rarbara S prowl.

JAZZ

Good Man to Know

I

Serv-

ice has announced the dates for
filing for and taking examinations
necessary for admittance to graduate school.

252-638-

llii

n;

PHI SIGMA KAPPA
Pledge class officers: president, Larry Forest; vice president,
Donald Darst; secretary, Ronald
Cobum; and treasurer, Frederick
Irtz.

HOLIDAY HOUSE

Europe by First Class Train. One
pass allows you to wander through
13 European countries at your con-

.ft.,:

KEENELAND HALL
President, Sue Hood; vice
president, Marcia Martin; secretary, Mike Hancock; treasurer,
Nelda Regley; social chairman,
Lynn Schuster; chaplain, Susan
hostess chairman,
Cutshaw;
Claudia Churchill and Rarbara
Rcazley; and scholarship chairman, Sharon Stalker.
LAMRDA CHI ALPHA
President, David Kirk; vice
president, Frank Rums; secretary,
Edward Combs; treasurer, Skip
Slaline; rush chairman, Jerry Patterson; IFCdelegate, Glenn Dish-maand ritualist, Rob McIIardy.
NORWOOD MINING SOCIETY
President, Doug Cook; vice
president, Charles Matherly; secretary, Fred Myers; treasurer, Jim
Kinsler; recorder, Jon Kelly; and
Student Congress representative,
John Mcintosh.
PHI KAPPA TAU
President, Rob Rostick; vice
president, Gene Steward; secretary, Rill Greenwood; treasurer,
Hal Reals; social chairman, Riff
Stanton; rush chairman, James
Nimocks; scholarship chairman,
Tyner Shifley; intramural chairman, Rill Combs; 1FC representative, Rill Greenwood; pledge
trainer, Joe Lawrence; house managers, Don Gash and Nick Harper; chaplain, Larry Eblen; Laurel
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* Multiversity: Distressing
:

A letter to the editor in today's
edition notes that a recent Kernel
article on the Freshman Colloquium may have emphasized the
negative aspects of that meeting.
If this is true, it is certainly
regrettable.
The colloquium offers a unique
opportunity for underclassmen to
influence policies of the University.
It is a link between the administration and the students a channel
through which the two are able to
communicate.
Nor should the lack of such
communication be written off as
"unfortunate," but not particularly
serious. On the contrary, the opportunity for the individual student to
raise his voice and be heard is a
prime prerequisite to the emergence
of modern universities as productive institutions.
The question of communication
in higher education today is a large
one, and, in its multiple aspects,
provides the central challenge to administrators, faculty, and students
of increasingly complex institutions.
The multiversity is, by definition, a machine with many functions, and which produces a variety
of products. (A great many students,
distraught over the impersonality
of the multiversity, would heartily
approve the "machine" analogy.)
Too often students come to conceive their role as that of raw material which is molded, turned,
tempered, and otherwise manipulated, to produce the desired product.
A great number of factors must
be considered here: the large number of students for which the administration must provide housing,
meals, and classroom space; the emphasis on research and publishing
by faculty members; the diminishing supply of qualified teachers
and the resultant increase in teaching loads and size of classes.
All these, and many more such
problems, have combined to accomplish what students in revolt
at the University of California call
the "dehumanization" of higher
learning.
Though the problem is complex
in its many causal factors and in
its various consequences, it can be
explained succinctly from the student's point of view: he wants to
say, "Here I am!" and know that
someone is listening.
Today's student approaches the
college experience anticipating a
very special delight the happy
possibility that here, at last, the
rigid formula for learning which is
institutionalized in both elementary and secondary schools will be
forgotten. Most students associate
college teaching with the Socratic

method; they come to college to
listen at the feet of masters, and,
hopefully, to participate in the dialogue.
But what dialogue is possible in
a classroom overflowing with stu-

dents, in which the teacher probably is never able to learn everyone's
name? How can a ponderously
large college class maintain a meaningful discourse?

ed

In the final analysis this complex set of factors is producing
larger, more complex universities,
in which the opportunities for communication are at best minimal.
In other words, the multiversity.
Perhaps we are wrong in considering interaction between students and faculty to be a very basic
process in the machinery of higher
education, but we think we are not.
There is no easy solution, however, and we must not be deluded
into thinking there is. But still a
beginning must be made.
If money were no object, classes
could be smaller, and a larger number of talented students could be
induced to become teachers. Perhaps in time this will be possible,
if the public can be educated concerning the necessity for adequate
schools.

In the meantime, such programs
as President Oswald's student conferences and the colloquium series
are going to be helpful. Private
conferences between students and
teachers are also useful.
suggestion we would offer is
that the University institute the
seminar approach more widely in
the lower division courses. These
are characteristicly large classes,
depending almost entirely on lecture. At frequent intervals in these
courses, specialists in various areas
A

covered in course work could hold
seminars for interested students.
These extra sessions would enable
research-oriente- d
usuprofessors

ally the
faculty membersto share the latest information with students.
University of California President Clark Kerr has posed this
question about the multiversity:
Are its several souls worth saving?
Our answer, of course, is "Yes!"
But the saving process, we predict, will be both lengthy and
difficult.
top-echel- on

'

The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

1894

FRIDAY, FEB.

Wiixiaxi Crant,

12, 1965

Editor-in-Chi-

David Hawpe, Executive Editor

Sro Webb, Managing Editor

Linda Mills, News Editor
Kenneth Cheen, Associate News Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Cay Cish, Women's Page Editor
C. Scott Nunley, Arts Editor
Blithe Runsdorf, Feature Editor
Tom Finnie, Advertising Manager

13

And where are the masters at
whose feet students supposed they
would learn to think for themselves?
They are on leave, or in the laboratory, isolated by the necessity to
research. Meanwhile the younger,
teachers are in the
classrooms.

The Kentucky Kernel
ESTABLISHED

1

Business Staff

John Dauchaday, Circulation Manager
Editorial Page Staff

Thomas Bkrsot, Arthur Henderson, Claudia Jeffrey, Robert Staib, James Svara

Letters To The Editor
To the Editor of the Kernel:
Thank you for the report in your
issue of February 5 of my meeting
with the Freshman Colloquium. Mr.
Hoskins' report of what took place
at the meeting seems to be accurate
except for two points, one minor,
the other major.
Let me begin with the minor
point. Mr. Hoskins quotes me as
saying that "Our present system
causes values to be based on intrinsic motivations." What I ac-

tually said was, "values tobebased
on extrinsic motivations" rather
than intrinsic motivations. When
students are induced to study primarily for a grade, the motivation
developed and reinforced is "extrinsic" and may inhibit these same
students in developing "intrinsic"
motivation to learn the subject matter, both because of its inherent
interest to them and because of its
importance in deepening and ex-- ,
panding their comprehension of
themselves and the environment
in which they li