xt72z31njw9k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72z31njw9k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19630719  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, July 19, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 19, 1963 1963 2015 true xt72z31njw9k section xt72z31njw9k IKE JEW

J

University of Kentucky

Vol. LIV, No. 120

LEXINGTON,
f

-

KY., FRIDAY, JULY

19, 1963

Four Pages

'

New Nuclear Accelerator
Installed In Physics 4Silo'
Is
The Physics Department
presently in the process of installing an accelerator which will
be used mainly for research in
nuclear structure physics.
This apparatus, a 5.5 MeV Van
de Graff accelerator, is being instrucstalled in the "silo-likture at the northeast corner of
1str
the new Physics-- C h e m
y

Building. It is being supplied by
the High Voltage Engineering
Corporation at a cost of approximately $500,000.
The Van de Craaff accelerator
will be put into operation during
the coming fall semester. The
working staff will consist of Dr.
Bernard D. Kern. Dr. Marcus T.
McEllistrem, Dr. L. W. Cochran,

Rehearsals Begin
For 'Brigadoon'
By JACKIE JONES, Kernel Staff Writer

Guignol Theatre's summer opera workshop has begun
rehearsals of 'Brigadoon," a musical fantasy by Lerner and
Loewe.
The fantasy takes place in the Scottish Highlands in
1747. An immortal sleeping spell upon the town has been
produced by the schoolmaster. The town enters this spell
by falling into a deep sleep from which it will emerge for 24
hours once every hundred years. If someone should try to
escape during the 24 hours, the magic spell will be broken.
The play opens 200 years later

in 1947 on the second "awakening." Two American hunters.
Jeff Douglas (Bill Hayes) and
Tommy Albright (Bob Davis),
are lost and happen to enter
the town and Join in the festivities. Tommy falls in love with
Fiona MacLaren (Dianne Davidson), Jean's sister, but he Is engaged to a girl in New York.
The 24 hours are up and the
town reenters its sleeping state.
Tommy and Jeff find their way
back to New York where Tommy
breaks his engagement. They are
convinced by an elderly man
that Tommy's deep love might
break the sleeping spell and the
town would come back to life
again. They return to Briga- -

University
Centers
Progr ess
Three of Kentucky's

doon, and it again emerges into
an active life. There, Tommy
and Fiano are married.
This musical, which made its
Broadway debut in 1947, contains
many songs which have become
well known, two of them being
"Come to me. Bend to me," and
"It's Almost Like Being in Love."
The Guignol production is under
the direction of Wally Briggs,
Aimo
Kivionemi, and Donald
Ivey.
The cast contains 15 principles
backed by a 40 member University Chorus under the direction
of Prof. Kivionemi and accompanied on the piano by Ann
Huddleston and Johun Whit-ake- r,
and a troupe of 17 dancers
under the direction of Constance
Phelps.
Performances will begin July
31 and run through Aug. 3.

Dr. Jerry Brandenberger,
Dr.
Fletcher Oabbard, Dr. Jess Weil
and associated graduate students.
Dr. Kern and Dr. McEllisof
trem will serve as
the research effort.
The accelerator will produce
beams of singly charged particles
of energies varying
between
500,000 electron volts of 5.5 million electron volts. Initially it
will be used to accelerate proor
tons, deuterons,
Alpha (ionized helium) particles.
Nuclear reactions induced by one
of these types of particles or by
neutrons may be studied in the
target areas in the basement
under the silo.
It will produce either continuous or pulsed beams. The
beam pulses can be as short as
about four nonoseconds (one
nonosecond equals 10- - seconds).
The pulsed beam feature will
be used to study neutron energies by measuring their speed
of travel and for studying neutron induced reactions.
The acquisition of this new
research tool is expected to
stimulate much greater Interest
and activity in the graduate
program of the Department of
Physics.

Dr. Kenneth Harper, assistant
Dean of Men and International
student adviser, and Dean of
Arts and Sciences, Dr. Martin M.
White, are taking the Faculty
Club building located next to
Lafferty Hall and converting it
into staff offices.
"We have lots more space,
which I've wanted for quite a
while," Dean Harper said. "We

the

The main building at the
center is now about
half completed. The center will
open in September, 1964.
Last week the bid of Meade and
Kendricks. a Prestonsburg firm,
was accepted for construction of
the main building at the Prestonsburg center. Program Services Director Edsel Godbey reported that the center will probably open in September. 1964 depending upon the availability of
funds.
The Somerset center is in the
advanced planning stage. A team
from the Extended Programs has
made an intensive study of the
area and made recommendations
to the architect. The University
already owns the Somerset site.
An official selection committee from the University has written a report recommending a
specific site for the center in the
d
Blackey-Hazararea. The report
is now in the hands of the Board
of Trustees.
No plans are underway for
construction of the Hopkinsville
center.

i

lf

Nuclear Accelerator Installed In 'Silo

Scaffolding reaches up as maintenance men prepare the silo housing
for the 5.5 MeV (million electron volt) Van de Graaff accelerator
due to arriv- - next week. This high precision, high intensity tool for
nuclear structure studies will be capable of accelerating almost any
ionizable particle. The underground laboratory will be operated by
the faculty and graduate students on an estimated yearly budget of
$150,000 when at full capacity.

Arts And Sciences Offices
Will Move To Faculty Club

proposed

five community colleges are in
active stages of fulfillment.

ft

like the idea that the International students will have their
own center, lounge, and headquarters where they can be at
ease, and will have a place to
read their magazines and newspapers," he added.
Dean Harper and his secretary,
Mrs. Kathy White, moved into
the building July 2. Dean White
and his staff are expected to
move into their offices soon.
The main floor of the building will contain side and front
entrances, a receptionist in the
foyer. Dean Harper's office, Mrs.
White's office, wheih will have
a private entrance for international students, a kitchenette,
and a large room for Arts and
Sciences records and three to
four secretaries.
The second floor will be oc

cupied by Dean White's office,
two offices for his financial and
private secretaries, and a lounge.
More work needs to be done on
the building before the two
deans and eight secretaries can
move In officially. Drapes are to
be cleaned, floors reflnished, and
walls painted before the remainder of the office staffs and equipment can be moved in, Dean
Harper said.
The Faculty Club was formerly the president's home before
Maxwell Place was built and was
converted about 1297 into the
University Faculty Club. Lunches
were served to faculty members
and recreation rooms and lounges
converted about 1938 into the
building. The faculty members
will be served In a private dining area in the Student Union
Building in September.

Counseling, Testing
Combine Services

New Job For An Old Iluilding

UK soil was used in the forming of bricks for Patterson House,
which stands next to Lafferty Hall in the center of the campus.
The house, finished in 1883, was the home of university president
Patterson for 40 years until his death in 1922. After the house was
used by Patterson's brother for 10 more years it was used as a
women's social center until 1938. Now, after a quarter century as the
faculty club, the building has been converted into staff offices for
Dr. Kenneth Harpe. and Dr. Martin M. White.

Effective July 1, the University Counseling and Testing
Services were officially combined to provide more integrated
service for UK students.
The merger is a result of the
division of the University Testing Service and the Kentucky
Cooperative Counseling and Testing Service, a cooperative of Kentucky high schools which purchased tests from the University
service and had the tests scored
by the UK facility. The Kentucky
Cooperative is now a separate
organization.
Although the two services have
been separate officially, they
have always operated jointly because tests given by the Testing
Service must be assigned and in

the Counseling
by
Service.
for the position as
Applicants
Director of the combined services
are now being considered. Selection is the joint decision of the
head of the Psychology Department and the Dean of Admissions.
Former Director of the Test-ni- g
Service, Dr. Ernest McDan-ie- l,
is now serving as a full-tim- e
professor in the College of Education. Dr. George Rogers, previous Director of the Counseling
Service, is working in industrial
psychology.
Offices of the combined services will remain in their present
locations in the Administration
Building.
terpreted

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

Entrrrd at the jxwt office at Lrxington, Kentucky ai iccond
Art of March 3, 1879.
Puhlinhed onre weekly during the
except during holiday! and nami,

clai mattrr under the
regular lummer letfion

Dan Omlor and Bonnie Cox,
Mike Smith, Sports Editor
Janie Geisfh, John Townsend, Jackie Jones, Billie Dyche, Ceorce
Litteral, James Reed, Ann Poundstone, Reporters
John Burkhard, Advertising Manager

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Orientation Events
Now In Full Swing

The summer orientation for
Incoming freshmen Is in full
swing. According to Fred Strache,
director of activities, one thousand students have already registered for the fall semester.

The students, who register on
and FriMondays, Wedne-day- s,
days, are first given the American College Test and College
Qualification Test if they have
not already taken them in high
school.
Their next step is having pictures made for ID cards. They
are then given a welcome by one
of the deans, the vice president,
or one of the heads of the military department. They are then
given an explanation of "classification" and Instructed on how
to pay their fees.
deans are then asCollege
signed the new students. They
explain the purposes of the college and assign advisers. The adviser and the student then plan
a schedule suitable to the student's academic needs. Since they
are not pressed for time, they
are able to work around any
problems that may complicate
matters, thus fulfilling one of
the objectives of the summer
orientation program.
After having been advised, the
students hear a brief panel discussion concerning rules and regulations on university housing.
The last step of their orientation procedures is that of registering for classes in Buell Armory. They will return before
classes begin In September for
another orientation of the campus.
The students, however, are not
the only ones involved In the

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orientation program. About eighty
percent of the students are accompanied by their parents, Mr.
Strache said. The parents are
provided with Information concerning the university.

After a welcoming address by
one of the university officials, a
movie is shown about the university and some of Its many
both academic and
functions
recreational. The movie is followed by ar administrative panel
consisting of the Deans of Men
and Women, a staff member from
the health service, someone from
school relations, and a member
of the Alumni Association. The
panel provides information concerning rules, services available,
and advantages of the university.
A panel discussion by two professors, a university councelor,
and two students provide somewhat of an idea of what is expected of their youngsters while
at the university. To end their
day of activities, the parents rae
taken on a guided tour of the
campus where they may see what
the university has to offer in the
various areas of education.

.Mountain.

It is seldom that you And a
folksinger who is also the composer of a cantata. Even less
often do you find a folk group
who form the nucleus of the
same cantata.
Proof that the situation can
exist are John Boiler, and the
folk group of which he is a part.
The cantata is "Prometheus
Unbound," based on Shelley's
poetic drama. The folk singers
are the Peg O'Ramsey Singers.
The two combined July 10 at
Memorial Hall in the premiere
production.
John, a graduate student in
music composition and theory,
wrote the cantata In partial fulfillment of the requirements for
his master's degree. The work is
scored for chorus, soloists, and
wind ensemble.
Soloist for the premiere perwere Barbara
Dean
formance
and Elizabeth Ward, two of the
members of the Peg O'Ramsey
the
singers. Nick Lawrence,
fourth member of the group,
enacted the part of the voice
from the balcony, symbolizing
the chorus of Spirits, Hours,
Earth and Moon.
The two activities have coincided since the middle of June
when the group began practicing
together. John had been working on the cantata since the last
two weeks of the past semester.
Although the actual composition of the work itself took about
two weeks, preparation of the
printed parts took almost an- -

Professors To Attend
Convention, Tour Europe
Two University home economists and a retired home economics staff member have left
for Europe to attend the Tenth
International Congress of Home
7.
Economics in Paris, July
Miss Elizabeth Helton, food
and nutrition specialist with the
Extension Service, Miss Helen
Wilmore, assistant professor of
home management at UK, and
Dr. Ethel Parker, retired professor of home economics, are Kentucky's delegates to the Congress
which will host home economists
from all parts of the world.
After the Congress ends, Miss
Helton's tour group of 85 U.S.
home economists will visit Vienna,
Moscow, Leningrad, Helsinki,
Stockholm, and Copenhagen.
They also will spend some time
in London before the Congress.

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John Boiler, graduate student In music from Lexington, puts the final
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is also the founder of a local folksinginf group known as the Peg

Complete Automotive Service
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to

Before returning to the United
States on August 15, the group
will spend seven days in the
Sovief Union. In Moscow and
Leningrad, they expect to view
day nurseries, markets and food
distribution centers, schools,
homes for the aged and summer
camps for children. They will
also tour the residence of the
American Ambassador to the
U.S.S.R.
In Stockholm, Helsinki and
Copenhagen, the home economists will study new patterns
of family life, with particular
emphasis on the home-relate- d
services and cooperatives typical
of Scandinavia.

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presently engaged in a hoote-nanntour of several Kentucky
towns, including Somerset,
Georgetown and Paris.
They will also be preparing a
tape July 20 for presentation to
a recording company. In addition
are
several local appearances
scheduled for the future.

O'Ramsey Singers.

At each stop, they will meet with
home economists In that country

and visit institutions
family life.

other two months. All parts had
to be written out by hand before being microfilmed and reprinted.
At present John plans to continue work toward his master's
degree in the fall, including final
work on "Prometheus."
The Peg O'Ramsey Singers are

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* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Friday, July 19,

1963- -3

KENTUCKY'S 'DREAM TEAM'
IS REGISTERED AND READY
Last Friday, without fuss or fanfare, the University registration staff calmly processed six freshmen Who are expected to become college basketball's next "Wonder Team."

It

was the final step in a long, hard campaign
by Kentucky coaches Adolph Rupp, Harry Lancaster and graduate assistant Neil Reed, but It
is now official: Kentucky has scored the greatest
single basketball recruiting sweep since 1953, the
year Frank McOulre collected North Carolina's
"Fabulous Freshmen" that went on to become
the first modern basketball team to combine an
undefeated season with the NCAA championship.
And Kentucky's achievement is assured because of the new NCAA "letter-of-lnten- t"
ruling,
making it illegal for a school to "pick off" a player once he Is registered at another school.
The six are center' John Schroeder of Nor walk,
Ohio; guards Pat Riley of Schenectady, N.Y., and
Louie Dampier of Southport, Ind; forwards Brad
Bounds of Bluffton, Ind, and Oene Stuart of
Brooksville, Ind; and forward-guar- d
Wayne Chapman of Daviess County, Ky.
Actually, these positions are vague at best.
Dampier and Schroeder are definite, but Riley,
Chapman, and Stuart could Interchange from forward to guard If necessary and Riley could even
start at forward.
This has even been predicted by one Kentucky
player, who has played against him. "They'll never
play him at guard," he said. "He's the best re- -

bounder for his size of anyone I ever saw. He's a
fanatic. He goes on the boards like every rebound
Is for life or death."
Even Duke's Jeff Mulllns has praised the New
Yorker. "He compares favorably with Heyman,"
the former Lafayette star said. "He has about
the same moves right now, and Heyman's a senior
while this guy's only a freshman."
Eligibility should provide little trouble. Many
of the players have made the National Honor Society and all have good high school records. Several
of them racked up excellent scores on the entrance tests given this summer.
What has coaches across the nation rather
awed is the way Kentucky has pulled off so
many top players. Kentucky competed for eight
of the players generally agreed to be the nation's
top dozen, and signed six, an almost unheard of
concentration. And the players Kentucky did not
compete for were those In positions, like center,
that they had filled.
Kentucky lost the top Illinois star to Northwestern and the top Washington star to Boston
In situations where Kentucky did not
College.
compete, Cincinnati signed the final Indiana great,
Louisville signed the other Kentucky star and
Virginia signed Pennsylvania's super-sta- r.
But while these various schools have one big
star, Kentucky has six, and it is this that has fans
rubbing their hands together In anticipation while
other coaches are already laying awake nights.

The Baron And The Boys

After a Ion;, hot day of orientation three of the "Fabulous Freshmen" chat with Coach Adolph Rupp in the Coliseum lounge. From
the left are guard Pat Riley of Schenectady, N.Y.; center John
Schroeder of Norwalk, Ohio; forward Brad Bounds of Bluffton, Ind.;
and a Jubilant Baron. 'Tve been around here thirty yean," Rupp
told the photogapher, "so I guess it's about time people saw a picture
of me without my necktie and brown suit."

Sports Shorts

Although Man O' War was bred
ancr spent most of his life in
Kentucky; he never raced in the
Bluegrass State. He was considered so far above his class
that he seldom ran against more
than two or three other horses.

On one occasion, when he had
absolutely no opposition, a friend
of Man O' War's owner ran one
of her horses. "Big Red" won that
race by an overwhelming 100
lengths over his hopelessly outclassed rival.

Commerce

Future
Foretold
dean of the
College of Commerce told a group
of Kentucky high school teachers
that in the future college business education courses will prepare students for management
careers, not for their first jobs.
He spoke at a luncheon meeting July 12 ending the Conference on Business and Economic
Education, held annually at UK
for secondary school teachers.
Dean Carpenter said there will
be a decreasing emphasis in college on the teaching of such
business skills, as typewriting,
shorthand and bookkeeping and
a greatly Increased use of the
analytical processes available in
mathematics, behavioral sciences
and philosophy. In the future, the
dean said, there will be a more
intensive treatment of the international character of business,
the social obligations of management and the ethical aspects of
decisions.
He also predicted that there
will be increased numbers of high
school students who do not go to
college after their secondary
school years. For this reason, he
said, high schools will have to
begin teaching more vocational
courses, hence more business-ski- ll
courses. This, in turn, will require the production of more
teachers of business subjects.

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* 4

THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Friday, July 19, 1963

IIonorsGroup

Strives For
Cohcsivcness

ANN POUNDSTONE
Kernel Staff Writer
(This is the fifth in a series)
Oxford, the famous English
University, is the model for
UK's "working for honors" program, according to Dr. Stephen
Diachun, director of the program.
Here's a summary
of the
"work" required to have your
diploma and official transcript
read "graduated in the University Honors Program": an overall
average of 3.5 or better, completion of your college's requirements and those of the Honors
Piogram committee, the writing
of an acceptable thesis or essay,
taking the Graduate Record Examination, and in some departments passing with distinction a
comprehensive written and oral
examination.
Dr. Diachun said that academic reasons accounted only
paitly for having an honors program. "Another goal is to get
them to feel a kind of cohesive-nes- s
in knowing one another."
This goal Is fostered by requiring freshmen to take a
seminar composed of several interest areas. "Last year
engineering students in the program centered their discussions
around the history of certain
ideas about electricity, each student reporting one chapter of a
physics book recommended by
Dr. Wendell C. DeMarcus. A psychology group discussed the
measurement of man, having a
series of speakers the first hour
and a discussion the second."
Dr. Diachun, who divides his
time between the honors program
and a professorship in plant
pathology is trying to have the
required freshman seminar approved for two credits.
Although only freshmen are
required to attend, other classes
are encouraged to do so, although
participation does fall off. "By
the time they're Juniors (the
first class will graduate
in
June 1964) they are departmental
majors and tend to concentrate
in their areas of specialization.
I think this is the way the committee visualizes the Honors Program," he said.
Now in its third year of operation, the Honors Program has
81 students. Thirty-on- e
are women. This corresponds with the
original plan of having only 25
in each year's class.
At midterm 44 of the 81 had
averages of 3.5 and up and 25
more were between 3.0 and 3.49.
Only one student, a freshman,
had a below C average.
The committee is seeking to
improve its admission standards
with more adequate testing and
is worried that many brilliant
students who can't take examinations well may be left out. Currently honor students are selected on the basis of College Qualification Tests and other national
examinations, high school records and recommendations, written work, and interviews.
The type of student must be
one "who wants a challenge to
match his talents, a chance to
stretch his mind and an opportunity to study with other good
students," according to a pamphlet encouraging students, to
apply for the program.
Dr. Diachun said Sputnik and
its implications had a direct
stimulus on the setting up of a
subcommittee on the gifted student in 1959. The committee
wrote: "Programs for gifted students provide an academic climate which sholud favor and enthe development
of
courage
higher standards for all students."
The committee had been appalled by surveys which indicated
that "the cream of the crop"
seniors in the state were either
not coming to college at all or
steering clear of the University.
The establishment of the honors
reprogram and a stepped-u- p
cruitment plan were seen as
ways to combat this loss of
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Bobbie Brooks Travel Kits
Slipover Tops, regular 5.99
Sheath Skirts, regular 9.99
Pleat Skirts, regular 11.99
Jackets, regular 11.99

Now
Now
now
Now

3.99
6.99
7.99
7.99

EXJNCTON
mowf rr.5 733

GAR HENS IDE

734

PLAZA

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