xt71jw86kw09 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71jw86kw09/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19630621  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, June 21, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 21, 1963 1963 2015 true xt71jw86kw09 section xt71jw86kw09 t7e (Kentucky
IV Mt
I

Vol LTV.NV.

cum-BSI

and was flying home
summer vacation.

Uc:'.

of

Gamma Delta

sorority.
CSSSAs, sophomore women's honor society, Boyd Hall Dorm and
SsMsory Councils, and the Greek
Week Committee. She had been
. Freshman Adviser for
cb
the !jJ3-19C- 4
school year.
A twin sister, Joyce Gail, is
SJO mending
the University.

ART SHOW
FEAT! RES
STUDENTS
Th

Annual Students' chow.
held in the Fine Arts
Osikrv. featured paintings and
tSBST art works by 21 University

BSCSntly

stuviv :.

The exhibit displayed several
students: Lenore

SjBeCS by fuur
bbU
s

metal and clay sculphi canvas, and charJudith Frances
fjsR

Included

tures,
coal

oil-

-

MfeBSSB,

bara
and

od.-- .

oils; Barnot
iandra Conover

Un

Besn
mm

B ran am

!t

engraving
lithograph.

0

K

y

KY

FRIDAY,

t

ti

t

John W. Oswald,

L)r

University

trstive vice president, will become the
dent when he assumes his duties here
The 45 year old Califorr.iar.
was named to the position by
the Board oi Trustees at
ipe-c- ul
meeting May 30 His anv. as set at SJO ,000
nual salary
lit will mii eed Or lr.ink S.
Ii'ki ' Uu ke who has tiet n I K
president smrc MMt will leaie
I
for Atlanta Jul
to betme
Exeeutiie Direttor of the south
rn ssori.tioii ot C nlleues and
hooK
Dr A D. Albright, University
SBBSStiSC vice president, was appointed bv the trustees to act
as uitenm president until Oswald arrival
Oswald's selection ended a .six
month coast to coast search by
the presidential screening committee for Dickeys successor
acOswald SSS unanimously
cepted by the board
The BSS pre idem has BBSS
hailed by President Dickey as a
man of strength, experience
and wisdom A wonderful choice."
Oswald's career In Mgjhar education spans trom his years as a
tudent at Indiana; DePauv
University to being the principle
officer in the nation's largest

higher

itate-wide

educational

vstem
He is presently one of the top
iministrators m the University
California system that has
"oximattly 49.000 students on
nine different campuses. His specific title is vice president, admin-

istration.

the

M6C

t NE

and metai

d

at

two nifN he

Summer Enrollment

.

Enrollment for the summer
:

figures, oil, co! .
forms, inlaghi' pi ..
reliefs ssssutted

io.
he I iiiversiti num
bered 2,799 as of Saturday. Dr.
,: var, .innimm i d He
expcct-- the figure to tome to
b the time
is completed. 3.4IMI students were enrolled for the
summer session last year.

UK

students through
The annua)

;iio

daily May 2t-- J
public at no a J:

of CslifornJa adininh
niversity s sixth pn si
in August.

U

been
the

irimiplc lone
ahfornia state universal reorganization, lie helped
plan and implement the
rill .It lull ulneh le- - e,n h of
the separate campuses auihorit
tornn rl
held liv the Berkele
IHM

Mm

(

s

deet-n--

ainpus.
During his undergraduate pasts
at DePauw. he was a guard OO
the fimtbsB team football captain in 1937. and a member of
,ie track and baseball team
Last year he was named to
'o
Silver AnniSports
team The
versary
earn was made up of former
athletes who have gone on to
in their ehsaen profs- -

sms

iSSM
A Worst

War II Navj veteran,
be was a PT boat (omm.mdi
in
the Medrterraneas where
he
completed more than M comba
missions He was decorated bv
th
Secretary of the Navy m
IMM.

I:: 1916 Oswald returned to the
(Jnirersit) of California where he
graduate work. Frun.
then until 1954, he was at the
Davis Bgl cultural campus. eSBQpt
bad done

for a year he served as a visit -nig professor in the Netherlands
From July. 1954 to January
.959, he was chairman of the
University of California depar-Bttn- t
of PBSSl pathology.
In
IMY-s- t,
he ssrsMI a administrative assistant to the University
chancellor.
His other successive positions

nber oi cold
checks has
Store in M
cashing of

It
to stop the
checks except
lases, accord-ri- s,
owner of
.'
11

checks totaling nearly
$10,000 have been received si
Beptessber 1362 HJH of ti
amount was received during thi
first three weeks in May
"When we got 120 checks in
less thai) three weeks' Morris
t.;, "we quit cashing checks
"Of the $10,000, all bit fM
has been recovered, but
order
to do that." Morris said, "I had
to have a man on campus writing
letters and swearing out war-

rants."

ConMrsetion i sow
ne at the
Buildin
e

whirh

i

i?

JOHN

I)K
a
i

Cahlornia prioi to being

:

it.

d new UK president were
Oct. 1958-Ja- n.
1959. academic

assistant to the president.
Jan.

1959-Fe- b.

19.'

vice president.
Feb. 1961 -- Sept. 1962. vice president and executive assistant of

Campus Book Ston
Refuses Check:
Cold

ime-ion-

loin Pages

21, 1963

OSWALD

V

the statewide network.
Sept. ISO ftesent, risi
administration.
Dr. Oswald :.. a :. r.v of 1M- fi
Hi
Rot tnel, h am
Alabama They have three chil-

t,

;ieM-den-

dren.

Elizabeth.

and John.

17:

14.

Nancy.

7.

.

::

The show as

i

L

ky

it

Oswald Of California

.of

Allen was a member

!

iH Mh

UK Chooses President:

,
Ft.
I killed
4ch.rdson. Alaska,
r
Mw
plant'
an .. acli she was a passenger
crashed in Alaska. She had
er ireshmar
the
dei:

Mi
Alpha

ii

i

I.EXINC.TON.

?TC,

Coed Dies
Iii Crash

ST

nir

MX

min

i the new Colleee of Cssnser
,

Street. The sew building will replace
housed the College ot Vmauutrtt i
ft--

White

Hall,

For small purchases Morris
said that checks should be written for a dollar. For purchases
over a dollar, checks sholud be
written for the exact amount
We have found that we are
operating a better bixik store
sout of
with the ceiiluin:
it, "Morris concluded
Book Store has not
KSHBsdjr
stopped cashing checks, according to Joe Kennedy, owner of the
store.
Kennpdv said that thev have
heir problems with bad checks,
bu they usually manaae to recover most of the money
Kennedy Book Store usually
carries from $1,000 to $1,500 IS

cold checks, but they have a revolving fund, m addition to the
operating fund, which helps cover the expense of these checks,
according to Kennedy.
"We're still cashing checks,"
Kennedy said, "because our
with the students has
not been that bad."
Action open to the bookstores
includes turning over the names
of delinquent students to the University or to the civil authorities.

Heads

I

aiix

i

By

Trustees
nun WMj depart
- s'i'o

act

.rpi'i-cie-

B
:.

H

urd of Tl silica ic ake
::cxi Mi

I wiitiei

Wairsn
roit

..d

Dsps

ai

C

:

IP
-

a- -

iU

i

v

Tieeii.- -

dwtrtca as

Dr. Holhs S. Summers, proit,-so- r
of English at Ohio University. Athens, was the first speaker of the new College of Education lecture series yesterday
The title of his address was
"The Making of a Poem." A native of Eminence. Dr. Summers
has published four novels and a
volume of poery. He was professor of English
at UK from
9.

j Stai'

t

i

:?.'

Oi

i

a.

Wh
.ntencs
crl in pin te
let :, cons
iu- MidS
rail h. mill
diM (of a
:'..'. SStl

r

h

rtss

Di

J.iiLi
BrM.ur,

:

n

sM

:

Jshu
uman af the

I

h liSM :.
tnssmsH

v

jrc.zi

ileparimt
iisiry ii'
tistlf.
.

f)R. SIMMERS
iDDRESSES
INSTITUTE

hgcia

Psdmtn
Mtt. .ne Or
s r nc
ii
head ol the Departsteui if Music: ,:.d Dr Weale) O Y- t.nf
.

H

:.

pital
Pi

D

t

-

.! iry-

.d

K

Lair

..:
u.

-

trill bt vtrtid.

I ilr

.1

H

The K Lair grill will be open
daily during the summer s
lunch

ah
decree-Te-

i

Dr

t

x

rh Ca 'n
.: whos d
( on inued an Put
Y-

-

* Oswald Is Indicative
Of IK s New Kra
When Dr Job ' Os
the presidency
Unh
tn
Sept 1 it will b
UK's history for mote thai

fact in connection
with the offict of the new UK president is lb;
alary has been increased by $9,000. The old ada( of
"you gtt what you pay for" certainly
:

is true m thii case. Dr. Oswald's salary wjM to pare favorably with the
salaries of other university presidents
across the atirm

and academically.
Under Dr. Oswald's

heard

During the past few years, ac
ademic standards at Kentucky institutions of higher education have risen
tn heights heretofore unattained. This
van only be a continuing trend so
long as adequate finances are available to the institutions.
Now. a in the past, annua appropriations from the stite lem'A'uirt'
have been much less than administrators at each of the institutions have
deemed necessary to continue improv
ing their curriculums.
The report, written by Dr. Thomas
D. ( lark. Dr l ewis W. Cochran, and
Trustee F. H. Wright, opposed the
decision oi the Council on 'Public
Higher Education which allows East-erWestern, Morehead, and Murray
to begin awarding master s degree)
in academic
subjects as of Jury
arnerly these schools only awarded
masters in education.

leadership,

the past.

Kernel

although the report opposed the
Council's action on four different
points, at least two of these points are
oi immediate importance

We know ail about the habits of
the ant. we know all about the habits
of the bee. but we know nothing of
the habits of the oyster. It seems almost certain that we have been choosing the wrong time lor studying the
oyster. Mark Twain

With the shortage of educational
funds, the awarding of graduate degrees at the state colleges will only
necessitate duplieation of facilities
already available here at the University. Funds expended for this purpose can certainly be used more wisely elsew lure.

OS

Probably men are as gtx)d

-

hus-

now as they ever were, but
grandmother had to stand grandpa,
for he was her mea' ticket and her
card of admission to good society.
We see that DO good purpose- i
achieved by keeping two people together who have come to hate each
other.-DorDir.
bands

'f

Secondly,

.

Dr. Oswald is a man to whom we
can look tor some new ideas. He
conies to us from an extremely im-

portant

office in

wha'

i

eei

MP.

NEW

I

I

Dr. Mcrl Ea ter. DewijT --elected

secretary of the board of (iiiec-torreported on KHF at the
s.

Board';-

-

mee'in:;

at

ttM

In .::. past year the foundation
flsdsdsterad "8 restricted funds
12

larntr

-

it-

general

I

Continued

tnt

Br

I

trn
ot
.

for

ih

S fn

c'

trie year

Rcstiursnt mJ
FRIDAY

Ccvrktail

i

:

crediti d nstrl itioa adstussion to a
state college p lihiati curriculum.
Other points of jtistslable concern
the trustees include the lack ol a
languagi requirement tor either th
M.A. or M.S. degrees, and the credit
for 12 hours of extension and transfer
credit toward the degree.
:

The trustees will ask the council
to reverse its action. This is a wise
decision and one which we hope the
council will heed.

Kernek
Democracy is that system of government under which the people,
having 3o.717.342 native barn adult
whites to choose from. WW haling
thousands who are handsome and
many who are wiae, pick out a Cool-idgto Ix- head of the state ft is as
H
a hungry
man, set before a banquet preparetl by master cooks and
covering a table an acre in area.
- back
ui i'o
mi
upon the feast
and stay his stomach by catching and
eating flies. Henry Louis Mesacssffss,
e

-

!

e

Even

p

ipularrrj

an

N:GMTj

SATURDAY

"

TO?--

254-437-

'ARTIES

3

H

i'i AvaflaMa

or PrWire

tt

KY. MVER

RICHMOND HO.,

ndone

t

3

REASONABLE

ard V.n. John

Inne-.-

,

PRICES

Froprictor.

College Needs

BOOK STORE

NIGHTS

"SMOKE" RICHARDSON
Dane

or

of regrets that Micnaelangelo died;
but by and by you only regret that
you didn't see him tin it. Mark TuMtkn

Phone

P.COMj

t

In Rome, along at first, you are full

KENNEDY

Lounge

MUSIC by the KEYNOTES

:

Depart mem of Hrtir. in Bo:
A native
of Naasaa. Idaho, he
MMs degrees fnim the University of Oregon Dental School of
Public Health.

ST)

r

SEE

nd.

atasn. will become chairman
the Department of Coaununit)
Pmili'iln m the College uf Denw nh :h fttahr
tistry He i

t

h iatioa tor 4
lleg s
uradtiate education.

endow-

:

3

tar

For All Your

Bros, wackiest, wildest, most wonderful comedy

Page I
kira

Mif--

'Mi

degrees are to be t any
irenHSstl tor obtaining
i
h ul
b sttnsgeasl rather than
minimal. The Councils plan alnws
anyone who i a graduate of an at
It high
merit, th

Broodwo,

Mr.

Dept. Heads
will bt

It

'High Fidelity Music for Your Dmi.ig PLcsure"

ment fundi The foundation also
support, u ttu graduated fellow-hip- s
from

S,

PRIVATE

There's no
place on
earth quite
like it I

OFiove

exceeding six billion

dollars.
for Bckolaralsips, and

683

Coach

mse recently.
Sine-.ti. Foundation's establishment in H'It it ha.-- rrur.ased
398 project!
invoMng total i

I

ADAMS

TODAY!

THEATRE

Vss

u

HOME OF THE COLLEGE FOLKa

Starts

CONDITIONED

Swio'

Hie Kentucky Research Fountotal ol
dation administered
130 research and specie: projects
valued at over lour million dollars
during the past ficr.l year.

the Councils proposal

oJn

KRFHandles
139 Projects Kentucky

l
ii-- -

state coBegM Id adopt oaf)
m st.md.trds adopted by

n

(

Dr. Frank G. Dickey
the
working for the betterment
University while accepting
salaries.
lilc-

in

"!'

Wisely

n

however, we just may be able to reach
the stature of a great university sooner than the nebulous dates so often

The fact that th University has decided to pay a salary befitting the
quality of th new president is partial
evidence that we are indeed on the
right track and novii
swiftly towiW
as an important institution
recognition
of higher leaning
We have achieved much, but we
cannot allow ourselves to become lax.
We cannot be satisfied to remain at
the improved academic strata we have
reached during the past few years.
In the future we cannot hope to

Vcl

In opposing the expansion of gradcourses
uate study in
at each of the four state colleges, the
University's Board of Trustees has
gone on record on a very important
matter.

did not reach the position it holds
today through the efforts of Or. Oswald alone. We cannot expect this
man to come here and make our University a great one by himself. The
cooperation of more than ;ust tin
Board of Trustees is aecded if the
University is to grow both physically

program and die attraction of a top
quality tnau for the president's office.

have men

Triislff

At the same time we must remember that the University of California

We have made significant steps
forward with the expanded building

.h.- -

dMMg

John Bvhkhardt. Advertisim;

proud.

This fact is quite an important one
to the University. If UK is to retain
the god educators it already has and
tf the institution hopes to attract high
quality professors from out of state
then we are going to have to be willing to pay tar

In

Dan Omlor and Bosmi. Cox.
Mike Smith, SfMSSl ..:':'

From his position as administrative vice president of a !9.(KM student
university Dr. Oswald will bring administrative experience which probably no UK president has had in the
past. It's obvious that the presidential
screening committee has done its job
well. Their months of ".eart hing, interviewing, and 50,000 miles of travel
have paid off. UK s Beat president is
a man of whom we can all be justly

g

Kevtvcky

CM

red at the post other .it Lrxingtmi. Ki :ituik m wtuad iU
Published once weekly during the rtiiular oimmer sriiion

oa-tio-

Dr Osw ra Id'
vieweJ l die Presi lential Scree
Committee have been .set forth in
mes. It's obvious that
priutuun?' the maw is qualifi
position
be is alot.
A sststrtenii

LNIYEStSnT
Knti

ed by many as the most progressive
hiyher educational system in the
m

iiUirky Kernel

K

ORCHESTRA
Pirtifs Au.rnoon 'rd Week Nigh"
DIAL

266-6-

j.

ACROSS FROM

SUB

* nil

KENTlflKY

KFRXEL, Friday, June 21.

1963-

-J

KENTUCKY BASKET!) I LL
AT THE CROSSROADS
Bv DAN OMLOB

Kernel

For h.iJ a century nov, America Ka
Kenice to the rngir image o Kentucky basketball
tucky has been a state m which th huh scho
colleges pUy a better caliber of baskethal! than anywhere
eLse in the country The coaches are ;aid more. Playei
are idolized to an extent unheard of elsewhere Winning
teams are followed with a fervor more like hysteria than
loyalty. And, naturally encash, other sp irts in thia I ind
are nverely tolerated while ercryooe a its the opening
of irw next basketball season

rh nation has pictured Kcnttickv m a atate when
basketball is nut a sport, but a
And Kentuckians, with a certain ring ol pride in
their voices, have usually agreed with thia
But now. after decades of definite superiority. Kentucky basketball may be aid to be at the crossroads.
To understand why. let us look at the foundations
on which this little empire rests.
Kentucky is a rural state, and has had very small
high schools long after the nation in general consolidated. In Kentucky, almost every town had i's own high
school until only recently. Therefore, when one mentioned the local high school he also mentioned the town
itself, a factor which tnds to generate a great deal
of pride

Now. one aataraMy Ukes n think 01 the local hnnje
as superior to Hm next one up the nnd. and athletics
became a very ubviotia way to spread the local iniaue
once quilt mg and spelling bees died out. But a small
school cannot afford 'rack, football and other big time
sports. About the only two sports i small school can
sponsor are baseball and basketball, and baseball on
the high school level ka a lost cause because it can be
played onlv ir. the waning months of school in the

Spring
Ba.sketiaii.
becaane Mm game. It could be
Umb,
played indoort all winter. It was perhaps, a treat deal
less eciting titan football and tbe sideline activities were
less of a pageant, but it served tbe pwpaee in the n
sary absence of football.
The stage vis m. Football was impossible for economic reasons, baseball was impossible for weather conditions, and all basketball needed was someone to inject
a little color into U U natch that of football in other

states.
Then a precise:. .; right time, two young geniuses
appeared on the scene
The first graduated from Centre college and
offered the position as head basketball coach at Western Kentucky State Teachers College. He was Ed Diddle.
The second graduated from Kansas, spent a few years

coaching high school ball in the midwest, did some grad-maOtk at Columbia, and was offered the basketball
coaching position at the University of Kentucky. He was.
of course. Adolph Rupp.
New these nun bad the unique mind that combined
tbe ajaaKttea at basketball knowledge, showmanship, tactical reaeaamg and teaching ability. They knew what to
tc.uli. bow to teach, how to make their students make
use of what tbey were taught, and how to present the
whole package to the public in pleasing fashion.
And they hit their respective areas like an explosion.
Both men introduced the fast break, the high-scorilong shot, the organized plays and the emphasis on the
pivot man that was then new to America, and completely unheard of in the South.
Diddle's teams ran wild in the small college circles,
while Rupp's teams ran wild in the major college circles
They both ran up scores over opponents that were totally
ridiculous, and they did it game after game, year after
year, tor what seemed like an eternity.
very one loam a winner, and the people came
to see these teams play They saw that basketball was indeed as colorful as football if played right, and the
younger ana began imitating the players on the college
teams. The college phi vers graduated and became coaches
i:. high school, teaching the young what they had
learned from the masters. The cycle began Interest increased, and with It the poungstera tried harder, because
thej no had I way to win respect and prestige, and
as they tried harder the interest became more intense and
the whole spiral tightened constantly.
Some of these coaches founded little dynasties of
their own at Carr Creek, Betsy Layne, Ashland, Mays-irill- e,
Lafayette. Hazard. Clark County and others. The
newspapers sensed that there was color here, and began reporting basketball information until today Kennewspapers probably have better basketball covtucky
erage than any other state in the country.
The Sweet Sixteen format of championship elimination was adopted, which made the whole month of
March a vast and gigantic pageant. Going to the state
tournament was really worth something here You went,
not for one game, as in other states, but for a week, and
everyone in the town went with you.
The nation heard of this, and recognized it. Coache
wanting high prestige and high pay came here. College
otiches wanting players recruited here. Professional
scouts wanting players recruited here. Other colleges
wanting coaches looked here. Sporting magazines came
here for feature material.
And just to prove it to any doubters, the team carry- -

name of
the nation consistently.

Um

stnte. Kentucky, rompeo over

': I wa? a situation
Like all good thins,
me time. It appi u
'..nge of ending now
men w ho i
First of all
Tige, Rupp
and Diddle, are Dealing the final stage of theif long
and colorful career. Without them, it isn't gonm to seem
quite the same. And the great high school coachea art
retiring. At Hazard. Lafayette. Henry Clay. Clark Co.
Paducah Tilghman and other
names, the
head man has either stepped out this year or within
the last four years. There are new names, but there
are not enough
And domination by the seventh region has bemm to
make the rural regions lose hope, thus killing the drive
to win and robbing the game of its intensity
The Kentucky colleges are finding native Kentucfctnna
helping outside schools come back to the home ataftt
and win.
A lack of consolidation,
the factor which originaihj
created the situation, is now adding to its troubles, at
Bigger schools in other states have caught Kentuckyi
enthusiasm for the game and are trying to overtake tia.
Tile scandals of 1951. while 10 years eld. are sUH
burtiag because they gave tbe game a bad l ia hi the
eyes of many school administrators.
And this led to the worst evil of all
ragkggm

at ion.

We now tell players they cannot play or practice
because it might corrupt them, an
in the
absurd theory we will deal with mc es) B tshrefj in
loBoarmg issues. We tell then
things, ten, which
will in the long run hurt the game without helping
myone.
In light of all this, what can we expect in the future
Well, someone Ls obviously going to have to fill the hoes
of Rupp and Diddle, not completely of course, but enough
to satisfy the public, or basketball will suffer thl ame
fate football suffered in Tennessee when Neyland stepped
down.
now gaining momentum
Consolidation,
here, Wll
offer a brand new vacuum which could be tilled if the
right men are in the right jobs at the right time.
But beyond this it is impossible to speculate. It kl
going to be necessary to just wait and see if the Image
of Kentucky basketball will survive these nex few yean,
or become, like the image of the Old South, lodged
firmly in fond memory but. m real life, a thing of
the past

42 UK Cadets Warded liars In Commissioning
Second
lieutenants' commissions were awarded to 32 Army
and 10 Air Force ROTC cadets

Corps; Ronald H. Moss. Lancaster. Artillery; John F. Rampulla
III. Miami. Fla.. Signal Corps:
Jerry L. Ream. Glasgow. Armor;
Terry R. Roberts. Ft. Thomas,
Signal Corps; John C. Thurmond.
A.
William
Gracey.
Artillery;
Tolman Jr.. Lexington.
Signal
Corps.
Donald J. Ruhe. Irwin. Pa.,
Transportation Corps; Frank S.
Button Jr.. Crestwood. Quartermaster Corps; James F. Jackson.
Connersville, Ind., Quartermaster
Corps; Everett C. Lail, Paris. Infantry; Joseph K. Robinson. Lexington. Quartermaster Corps:
Henry R. Vinson Jr.. Cadiz, Artil

during exercise- - at the University June 5.
Principal speaker at the com-

missioning ceremony was to be
Maj Gen James B Knapp of the
Strategic Air Command. Omaha
Neb.
Those receiving Army Commissions
Kenneth A Akin Jr.. Spring
station. Signal Corps; Gilbert R
Edwards. Harrodsburg. Infantry:
William O Pmaythe. Royal Oak
Mich.. Smnal Corps: Peter B
tfeister, BellevuP Ordnance

lery; Clarence D. McGaughey,
L.
Ronald
Louisville.
Armor;
Grimm.
Ordnance
Alexandria,
Thomas J. Cherry. LouisCorps:
ville, Infantry; Bradley B. Cox,
Lancaster. Ordnance Corps; William H. Jones, Prestonsburg. Signal Corps.
Lee A. McMillan, Lexington. Intelligence Corps; James E. Miller.
East Bernstadt, Ordnance Corps ;
Roger O. Minton. Dubuque. Iowa.
Chemical Corps; Ted R. Morford.
Foster, Signal Corps; Jerry L.
Noe, Cawood. Infantry: Donald
G. Ryan. Loveland. Ohio, Artillery; James B. Fitzgerald III,
Hazard. Adjutant General Corps;

SHIRTS LAUNDERED
FIVE SHIRTS

LAUNDERED

FOR

ONLY

Fenton

L. Angell, Erlanger. Ordnance Corps; John P. Emrath.
Lexington, Infantry; Charles L.
Mills. Paintsville. Artillery: Bobby
W. Simmons, LaCenter. Ordnance
Corps.
Those to receive Air Force
commissions :
Charles F. Berge. Carrollton;
Alvin B. Broderson.
Franklin;
Ralph J. Palmer. Irvine; David
L. Butler. Paintsville; Charles D.
Kirkpatrick. Irvine; Lemuel R.
Wall mail. Lewisport:
Gene P.
Owen. Jeffersontown: Fritz B.
Bodenheimer. William R. Drake
and Gayle W. Dinsmore. all of
Lexington.

Ht

..

DRY CLEANING
h REALLY CLEAN
BEAUTIFULLY
FINISHED

Crolley's

One-Ho-

and

116 W. Maxwell

A Short

Walk from

"24-Hou-

r

252-712-

E.

9 p.m.

Revlon, Cory,
Max Factor, DuBarry

STATIONERY
MAGAZINES

7

FREE

DELIVERY

Emergency Rood Service"

WILL DUNN DRUG Co.

TAYLOR TIRE CO
400

.

COSMETICS
UK

Complete Automotive Service
Phone

missions was
Tucicer, pia- e. Members
f
Capt. John E.
Schaei
Air Fore Maj.
John P. Bradti
together with
Dr II. af. Whit, dan of tne
' d SciencJ. and
I. W. Alexander. Army
lam. took part in
the ceremonies.
e

Robe:
fessor of

Col.

PRESCRIPTIONS

Cleaners

ur

R.i

SANDWICHES ond SHORT ORDERS
. Open 7.30 a m. to
SERVING PLATE LUNCHES FROM 11:00-2:0- 0
.

.

VINE ST.

LEXINGTON,

fcradu-Co-

Emrath.
me Heistei. Mills
Pltzpa rid
f the Arm? unlL
and
Aiding General Knapp in

Fountain Service

1.00

7 HOUR SERVICE

Come fa and Take A Look at

litary

KY

Livt

--

J v.aXWElI.

Fhone

254-425- 5

* KLN1

I

( K.

Fricl.n.

MKNR,

J,.(

.

Ji,

I'M

Girls State Convention
Meets Here This W eek

Academic Upgrading
9

'Toughening-U- p

Results

Begins To Shot
First In A series
N
POUNDSTONB
Kernel Mall Writer
When Sputnik was launched, the University
literally "went into orbit."
Er. Leo M Chamberlain, professor emeritus
of education. Dr. Stephen Diachun. plant pathology
jwofessor and part -- time director of the honors program, and Bruce F Denbo, University of Kentucky Press director, agreed the event shocked the
University and nation into intellectual awareness.
Dr. Chamberlain said AJBfl Dear. If. If. V.' ..
took the first mole. He called for a committee tu
B

reevaluate educational standards and

standings.
Tins group triggered a University-wid- e
improve the qualrj of ics graduates
a totter faculty
Effective September 15S fresh tx
dropped if they failed to maintain a
afler their second semester.
The next September a similar ru

grade-poi-

effort to

and attract
n

.!!.

h.

M ttaadta
applied

uppercl:i.-me-

as "the country club of
South." the gentleman's C ceased to be served o:. a
silver platter
weren't able to stay in
Borderline student
The 2.0 average was an increase of
a'otne that formerly required for freshmen and two-tentabove that required for juniors.
The University authorized a subcommittee for
the study of gifted students in 1959. When the
committee's plan for an honors program VH approved in the spring of that year, some of the
advantages recommended only for honor students
weie voted the entire student body:
Open stack privileges required no permits.
The library stayed open longer in the evening.
Better study conditions were arranged.
Dr Stephen Diachun became the honor's program director, dividing his time between teaching
plant pathology. He said the honors students would
raise classroom standards for all students because
:hey would be in class together.
An honors prosram also v mid attract a faculty eager to teach superior students and thus
benefit the entire University, he felt.
Bv the end of l'tt.l the I'niversitv
found that
h
almost
of the freshmen ranked in the
top tenth on southern regional norms, ac cording to
entrance-tes- t
score comparisons.
Seventy-fou- r
percent were m the top half on
the
reported Dr Ernest McDaniel. director
of the University Testing Service at that time
Today the trend of better freshman clase
At

UK. known

mnt

M UK

has been established, but not ignored.
The effort is on attracting the brightest
all over the state. Temporary director of the
lesing Service today is William Chambers, who is
m charge of the Kentucky Cooperative Hmh School
Testing Program, a voluntary test given by county
high schools and scored at
high school counseling attracts the best
identa to UK, he believes. It is for this reason
that the departments of testing and counseling
will merge this summer The director of the
has not been announced The new
service will attempt to reach more student by a
proposed piogram of compulsory testing.
While Dean White hopes that freshmen and
d

com-ra-

- ha

Kentucky Girl's State, a group
of outstanding high ichiwl seniors meeting to learn the fundamentals of city, county, and state
government, is being held at the
University June
Throughout the week, variety
city, county, and state officials
will speak to the group about different phases of uovernnient
Awards and certificates will be
presented on Saturday and two
outstanding girls will be elected
to represent Kentucky at Girl's
Nation held in Washumton. DC

!

1

.i
xi

'Li

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at

.

i. (ul
'

i

nI

i

m

i

V j wall
4

!
I

tu

t.

ei

udes

-- .tai
bettei anaer-staodio the oyer at ion of the
.itai a :.i'.:. intl
n.:.
the outvs of citizenship," s.t fH
t
iitl F lit
H. . S boat

li

4

I'.--

4h

6
J

3BI

1

girk spen-n Lt

Ant r,

of Keii!u
Is bt.:
.
women's residei

m

sophomores won't get left out of academic improvement in favor of graduate students, he commended the expansion of advanced work.
Two years ago Graduate School Dean A. D.
Kirwan said inclusion of the University in the new
ll of Graduate School
had put UK tn the
major leagues'' as far as prestige is concerned.
His associate. Dr. L. W. Cochran, cited further
steps toward excellence at a May 1963 banquet.
These included: the purchase of a nuclear accelerator, plans for the improvement of the Computing Center, the total increase in the budget, and
the reduction of teaching loads for the purpose of
speeding up the research prouram. Building expansion and increase in faculty number and size of
the student body have resulted in a new image
hir i!.- I
.',.
However, the University is curbing "blind" exand constantly reevaluating its aims. In
pansion
19at the Committee of Fifteen authorized an interval house cleaning to take the dust off itellec-r.a- l
uoal . :h.. .v rn ; w.-rbeing forgotten. This
eomniiTiee has given birth to regular reappraisals.
Students an- captariag some of the prize
scholarships and l llowships nationally, which is
one ua ot judpini; the quality of a university
said Dean White.
Faculty are encouraged to submit their works
for publication to the University Press, which has
established a series of books on cultural aspects
wi'hin humanities and social science. This is limited
to University faculty and seven works have been
published to date.
Mutt- bonis, more effort, better teaching, and
imaginative projects are helping the University keep
up with educational advances made in sister land-graoajfege
NEXT WEEK: A closer look at how the University is striving to maintain its higher standards

1st

'Cm;h'
Drive-I-

.;.

;

--

.

:

.

-

Run

ROBERT MITCMuM
SHIRLEY MaaAIH

.

JAMES MAUREEN
STEWAff
0H9$I

A VERY USl r
LOVE STOPV

FaetAN

tHA

ALSO

i

I

Y'('r

SI" r

I

4

jjjgrppi

TUESDAY.

No.

aDv 7 5c
Caittea irti 8:20
C

rVt.

WEDNESDAY.

THURSDAY

1

:

III

PLAY

B

ANK

0

ON TUESDAY AND FRIDAY

COLLEGE NIGHT
Our Doors Are Open to College

Students Only!

Twist to Charlie Bishop's Bond

D

ot

ANCELAND

8:30 12:30 On The Old Ftnnkfort Pike
(A AVi

r

L-

-

Art Exhibit
The inlric.ife design of thia metal
sculpture w as just one ot the
maii

orHs

of

art

Thr ethihit included wooden
ajid ni lal sculptures. tira retta
figures, mis color iroodfts. rta;
forms iniaelio prints .mil welded
Liiiurirvlieis
Nenlai'd.
Tuditki Johnson Barbara More in,
ami Sandra Braham an- student
hu dispUrd
artists
tver.,l
tie evhIMt ran from Ma
works

2.
tound

information
e
in
on pate utie

in the vior

ONE DAY
MONDAY thru FRIDAY

CLASSIFIED

No Added Cost!

which mere

displaed at the Annual stuheld in t