xt7dfn10rr35 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dfn10rr35/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640303  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  3, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  3, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7dfn10rr35 section xt7dfn10rr35 Stars In The Night
Awards Announced

KIE IE MIS IL

By LINDA MILLS
Kernel Staff Writer

t

Scholarship recipients, new members r women's honor-arieand special award winners will be presented at the annual Stars in the Night program March 1 1.
Academic scholarship
awards
will be made by the Kappa Alpha
Theta Mothers' Club, Links, Delta
Delta Delta, and Chi Omega.
New members will be tapped
Cwens, sophomore women's
srary; Links, Junior women's
.torary; and Mortar Board,
senior women's honorary.
in these organizations is
based on academic achievement
and participation in campus activities.
Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman
women's scholastic honor society,
will recognize Its new initiates.
Individual awards for leadership Include the Delta Zeta Outstanding Woman of the Year, the
Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Club Outstanding Unaffiliated Freshman,
the Alpha Gamma Delta Gwen
Allen Memorial Award to the
Outstanding Sophomore Woman,
and the Kappa Kappa Gamma
Pattie Libus Berryman Award to
the Outstanding Unaffiliated

o

Awards in education Include
the Mary K. Duncan award and
the Kappa Delta Pi Education
award presented by Kappa Delta
Pi, the Kentucky Student Education Association Ester Adams Education Award, and the Phi Delta
Woman In
Kappa Outstanding
Education award.
Other departmental awards include the Phi Upsilon Omicron

Vol. LV, No. 82

University of Kentucky
MARCH

LEXINGTON,

X

Ortlers Accepted

For Regional

Mail orders are now being acc-

epted at the UK Ticket Office
lor the NCAA Regional Tourna-

ment. 1.000 tickets are expected.
The tickets will be placed on
sales at the
Coliseum ticket office as soon as
they arrive. No telephone orders
will be accepted.
Hie tickets are $6 for both
nights. No single tickets will be
sold.
Mail orders should Include 25
cents for handling charges. They
should be addressed to UK Ticket Office, Coliseum, Lexington.

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Top Independent

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Cornell award In home economics,
the Zeta Tau Alpha Book Award
In medical technology, the Alpha
XI Delta award In creative arts,
and the College of Nursing Outstanding senior award.
Additional scholarship-leadershi- p
will be The
presentations
YWCA outstanding member, the
Alpha Lambda Delta Senior Book
Award to the senior woman with
the highest academic average
for 4 years, the Alpha Lambda
Delta senior certificates to seniors with a 3.5 or better academic
standing, the Panhellenic Scholarship achievement and Scholarship Improvement awards, and
the Mortar Board senior service
awards.
Delta Gamma will present an
aid to the blind award.
Honored at the program will
be the new AW3 senate members, the women members of the
Student Center Board, and the
new freshman advisers.
Sallie List, chairman of the
Stars in the Night Steering Committee will be the mistress of
ceremonies. Diane Davidson, senior music major, will sing at the
beginning of the program.
The program will begin at 7
p.m. in Memorial Hall. Special
invitations have been sent to the
parents of those to be honored.

NCAA
Thursday is the deadline to
turn in nomination forms for
the outstanding independent,
n award to be presented this
year for the first time at Men's
Award Night.
These forms are available in
Fred Strache's office In the Office of the Dean of Men.
Students and faculty members are urged to make nominations. A nominee must be a
junior, senior, or graduate

KY., TUESDAY,

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Circle K
Larry Kelly, president of Circle K, is shown receiv- ing an award from Howard Orme, president of
Kiwanis Club of Lexington, as Ed Glasscock, vice

president, left, and Joe Humphrey, secretary, ob.
serve the presentation. Circle K is the Kiwania
organization for the University.

aiii.a,itiiiWJtvJii

23 Pledge UK's Fraternities

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Under the new rules, fraternities can pledge any rushee un- -

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til one week before finals. Anyone pledged after March 1 will
be held over until next September.
The following were pledged.
Alpha Tau Omega Robert Eugene Leitner, Louisville.
Delta Tau Delta James Edward Pope, Louisville.
Jerome Applegate,
Farmhouse
Tollesboro; Frankie Ham,
and William Edgar Sharp
III. Georgetown.
Edgar
Sigma Paul
Kappa
Thompson, Ashland.
Lambda Chi Alpha Larry Joe
Corbin; and Wallace
Burton,
Kent Hicks, Corbin.
Phi Sijima Kappa
Stanley
Patrick Reister, Louisville; and
Donald Graham Wilkins, May-fiel-

Sigma Phi Epsilon Charles Ed
ward Neal, Lexington.
Tau Kappa Epsilon Kirk Bras
field Moberly Jr., Richmond: William Davis Schulz, Ashland; and.
Kenneth Norman Warren,

Sipma Alpha Epsilnn James
Edward Adkins I, Gattlettsburg.
Richard
Siuma Chi
Alexander, Glasgow.
Si sum Nu Arnold Fdu In Johnson, New foundiand.

'

Twelve of the University's
19 fraternities have pledged
23 men since this semester's
pledging rules went into effect, according to the Office
of the Dean of Men.

Due In Today

Triangle Beverly Quenton
Winchester; William Lewis
Griger Russell, Ashland; Richard
Lee Collett, Broadhead; and Wallace Hampton, Manchester.
Zeta Beta Tau Sidney Byron
Jacobs, Louisville; and Charles
Richard Weneske Jr., Irvington,
N. J.

LK1)
Hi he Race

Forms

Entrv forms for the Little Kentucky Derby bicyrle race are dua
in by 5 p.m. today to the LKO
office. Ruum 118 of the Student
Center.

Moot Court Round

Scheduled Tomorrow
round of competition in the College o
The semi-fina- l
Law's annual Moot Court Arguments will be held at 7 : 3
I
p.m. tomorrow in the I.alferty Hall Courtroom.
The three Judge court will consist of Dean W. L. Matthews Jr.,

AIT'S Election
Associated Women Students' elections will be held
tomoirow to fill positions for t lie coming year.
Candidates for the two lop posts are, sealed, Sue

Price, vice president: back row, from the left, Ann
Armstrong, president, Sandy Uroek, president, and
Jiuimie Parrot, vice president.

Circuit Judge Scott Reed, and Gibson Downing, of Stoll, Kennoit
and Park.
The participants are Sidney Easley, Kirksey; Daniel Yates, Lex
lngton; Fred Zopp, Lexington; C. Michael Miller, Bardstown; Richurd,
Lewis, Princeton; Cecil Dunn, Richmond; Joe Day Harklns, Prestons
burg: Arnold Taylor, Covington.
The argument involves two questions. The first Is whether the
manufacturer of a defective automobile is liable without fault to tlis
injured borrower of a defective automobile even though there is nit
privily of contract between the borrower and the manufacturer?
The second is whether a section of a Sunday Closing Law whicll
exempts those persons who observe, as a matter of religious practice,
tile period from .sundown Friday to sundown Saturday as a day ot
rest denies equal protection uf the law as provided for in the Four
teenth Amendment, and is thus unconstitutional?
The competition is open to the public.

j

* THE KENTl'C.KY KERNEL, Tuesday, Mardi

2

3, 19fil

,

800 High Schoolers NASA To Train
Expected For Clinic 8 UK Students
More than 800 liigli school students from tliiougliout
KeiuiKky are expected to attend the annual State High Sihool
1'iess C II i ti i e on March 13 at the University.

All sessions of the clinic, which
is sponsored by the Kentucky
Hith School Press Association,
will be held in the UK School
of Journalism.
Faculty members of the school
will give instruction In such subjects as writing news and features, vocabulary development,
advertising, publications advising,
the newspaper as a classroom
teaching aid, Interviewing, controlling printing costs, and other
aspects of Journalism.
high school
Any Kentucky
producing or planning to produce a student newspaper Is eligible to send students to the
clinic, Dr. Niel Plummer, director of the School of Journalism,
ha id.

Registration fee for each school
for the first two representatives, and ft each for all additional delegates. Fees are payable
at the clinic for registration
forms should be returned
by
March 6.
School officials desiring an
for their
evaluation
session
papers should send three copies to
the School of Journalism
not
later than March 4.
Sigma Delta Chi, men's Journalism honorary,
will present
awards to the best school papers
in three categories based on
school enrollment. Further information may be obtained by writing Dr. Plummer at the UK
School of Journalism.
is $2.50

Horizons 64

The University is one of 135 institutions of higher learnin the National Aeroing in J7 states which will participate
nautics and Space Administration's graduate training program
for the academic year, ll-f5- .

Dr. A. D. Kirwan. denn of the
UK Oraduate School and acting
director of the Kentucky Resaid eight
search Foundation,
students will be chosen by April
1 to enter
the program at UK in
September. He added that the
eight new graduate students or
Individuals who have had no
more than one semester of graduate work will be chosen from
nominees from UK and other
schools.
d
areas
The possible
of predoctoral
study include
mathematics, botany, metallurgy,
physics, chemistry, biochemistry,
psychology and physiology-biophysic- s,
Dr. Kirwan said.
Each graduate student chosen

for the program will receive a
NASA stipend of $2,400 for 12
months of training. There will be
additional allowances for dependents.

"Reflections on Bratle-Maniwill be presented In a speech
by Dr. Robert Lee White, assistant professor of English at
the I'niversity at 4 p.m. tomorrow In Room 206 of the
Student Center as part of the
Horizons '64 series.
Dr. White rceelved his B.A.
from the I'niversity of Louis-vlll- e
and did his graduate work
at the I'niversity of Minnesota.
He has been at the Vniversity
since 1959 and is currently
teaching courses in American
literature and creative writing.

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Placement Announces Interviews
Mrs. Katherine Kemper, director of the University placement
service announces the following
interviews for this week.
TODAY
Bureau of Reclamation
Civil,
electrical, mechanical engineering
at B.S., M.S. levels. Citizenship
required.
(Jcneral Dynamics, Astronautics
Civil, electrical, mechanical,
nuclear engineering at B.S., M.S.
levels. Citizenship required. (Will
not interview ROTC gaduatesi.
College Life Insurance Company of America Graduates in
education, Journalism, radio arts,
recreation, sociology, commerce
Interested in training for sales
management
positions. Citizen- -

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Son Of Delia

it

The latist In second feneration
rwkrtry Is TAD, offspring of
NASA's reliable Delta booster.
TAD (Thrust Augmented Delta)
gels rtra hustle from three power pods which break away after
liftoff.

ship required.
New port News Shipbuilding and
Ory Dock Co. Elect ricnl. mechanical, metallurgical engineering at B.S.. M.S. levels for research, design, development, inspection, testing.
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
nuclear
Electrical, mechanical,
engineering at B.S., M.S. levels.
Citizenship required.
MARCH 4
Ford Motor Co. Finance, business management, economics, accounting, business administration,
general business, industrial administration, statistics for financial management
(schedule 1,
March 3i; marketing, statistics,
economics, business edministra-- .
tion, general business, mathematics, industrial Jiianagement for
marketing or sales (Schedule 2,
March 3; business management,
industrial
economics, statistics,
administration,
finance, general
business, personnel, purchasing
for purchasing, traffic, production control, etc. (Schedule 3,
March 3i; agricultural, mechanical, chemical, industrial, electrical, metallurgical engineering,
advanced degrees In chemistry,
mathematics, physics for manufacturing (Schedule 1, March 4);
mechanical, chemagricultural,
ical, electrical, metallurgical engineering; advanced degrees in
mathematics,' chemistry, physics
for product, research engineering (Schedule 2, March 4).
MARCH 4
Carnation Co. Dairy manufacturing;
chemistry;
ma:keting,
sales; mechanmerchandising,
ical engineering. Citizenship required.
Dayton and Montgomery CounLity Public Library (Ohio)
brary science at B.S., M.S. levels.
Port Huron Area Public Schools
Teachers in all
(Michigan)
fields, including special education.
Tiavelers Insurance Companies
Men and women in mathematics for acturial. electronics, research fields; graduates in all
fields interested in insurance administration, claims, data processing, sales and service, underwriting.
Western I'nion Electrical and
mechanical engineering.
MARCH 5
Procter and Gamble Journalism, mathematics,
psychology,
radio arts, sociology at B.S., M.S.
levels for general business departments (Schedule 1, March 4i;
chemical, electrical, mechanical
engineering at B.S., M.S. levels
for manufacturing, technical de(Schedule 2, March
partments
4); Men in all fields interested
in sales (Schedule 3, March 4, 6).
MARCH 5
Arthur Andersen and Co. Ac- counting at B.S., M.S. levels; engineering, law with accounting.
Baltimore Co. Schools (Maryland) Teachers In all fields and
at all levels.
Hallmark Cards, Inc. (Art department
Art, commercial art,
tine arts, art education graduates for urt design of Hallmark
products.

International Harvester Co,
Accounting; sales; agricultural,
civil, electrical, mechanical, metat B.S.
allurgical
engineering
level. Citizenship required.
Osborn Manufacturing
Co,
enMechanical,
metallurgical
gineering at B.S. level. Citizenship required.
II & S Pogue Co. (Cincinnati)
Home economics, commerce
graduates interested in training
program in merchandising, retailing. Citizenship required.
MARCH 6
General Dynamics, Fort Worth
Division
Mathematics, physics
at M.S., Ph.D. levels; civil, electrical, mechanical, metallurgical,
nuclear engineering at all degree levels. Will interview women.
Citizenship required. (ROTC
graduates must have six months
availability).
MARCH 6
Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing Co. Commerce graduates interested in sales. Will interview for Summer employment.
California State Government-Ci- vil
engineering at B.S., M.S.
. levels. No summer
positions. Citizenship required.
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
Liberal arts; commerce at B.S.,
M.S. levels for sales, manufacturing, production, general busicredit.' Men
ness, accounting,
only. (Men with military obliga- tion must have six months availability). Citizenship required.
Los Angeles County Civil Service Civil engineering. Citizenship
required.
R. J. Reynolds Tobarco Co.
Chemistry, accounting, marketing, electrical, mechanical engineering at B.S. level. Citizenship required.
n
City Schools,
Grove City, Ohio Teachers in all
fields.
I'nion Central Life Insurance
Co. Liberal arts, commerce graduates Interested in management
training program; graduates with
major in mathematics or with
mathematics through calculus for
acturial work.

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* THE KENTUC

KY KERNEL, Tuesday, M.iitli 3, 191.1- -3

Trendsetting Mrs. Kennedy
J

t.

if.

-

To Fade To Background

j

S

It's The Iieatles??

This was (he tcene at (he Greek Week Dance
Saturday night as the dancers (ook a break for the
entertainment section of the dance. Ted Browne,

a well known folk singer was also on band for
the occasion,

Meetings

Hints For Male Trapping
From A Real Authority
Editor's note This article was
written by the author of the best
teller, "Sex and the Single Girl."
By HELEN Gl'KLEY BROWN
It's leap year. Remember? Ever
faithful to your needs, I have
list of
compiled a handy-dand- y
13 days to propose to your man.
Bear In mind that even proposals from man to girl are not
u
always straightforwrd,
or wont-yo- u
propositions. Sometimes the hint at marriage Is so
oblique that a girl is hard-pto decide if he did or did not
suggest they get together for
keeps.. Eeveral of these "proposals" from you to him are of
a direct nature either. They will
definitely give him the idea that
you have marriage on your mind,
however, and if he shows up for
your next date, I think you can
be reasonably optimistic.
(At his apartment) "Darling,
you really do have the greatest
Mites Davis collection in the
world.- Won't
it be wonderful
when I ca nadd my Dave
to It and we can have a
house full of music?"
(Consulting calendar at your
apartment) "Harry, what are you
doing June 19? If we happened
to get married that weekend and
k
a
vacation, it
took,
would bring us into the Fouth
of July holiday and we'd get
three extra days."
"Isn't it Just too good to be
true we both like sailing. I was
thinking we might buy that sloop
you had your eye on. I'd put up
half the money. I'm sure we're
going to be involved In each
ethers' lives (throw in a long
slow look here) a very long
while."
"I think it's wonderful that
your dog and my cat get along
eo well together, don't yuo? Do
you think they can ever both
sleep in the same room or should
we give Benji the backporch and
Baffles to kitchen?"
"I'd love to go to Las Vegas
with you Harry, but of course
I wouldn't dream of traveling
with a man I wasn't married to."
"I don't think men should ever
help with the dishes or housework, do you? Oh, I know a lot
of men do it, but I wouldn't want
you and me ever to have that
kind of arrangement, wolud you?"
"My mother and father don't
really approve of you, darling,
but I've tcld them I'm too old
for them to huve anything to
fay about the man I . . . well,
I mean, the man
the man I
(He finishes the
I

..."

...

"Dearest, since Fred and Doris
give you such a pain in the neck,
I've decided we won't see them
any more. I'd rather we made
tome new permanent friends together."
"Do you think we should have
a baby . . . what I mean is, should
any girl have a baby . . . the first
year she's married?"
"I have to name a beneficiary
for my life insurance policy at
work pretty soon. I have no immediate family and it occurred to
me that you . . . we'll, we're such
good friends and seem to be
seeing so much of each other
." (Stay off the end of the pier
.
after this action unless you trust
him completely.)
More Desperate Measures
I have to decide
"Johnny,
whether to renew the lease on
my apartment for another year,
or do you think I probably will
be living somewhere else?"
"Dearest, there's a fantastic
chairs at the
rale of Swedi.-.Furniture Fair this week. Should
we drop by Just to browse?"
"All right, Paul Applegate, I'll
give you two more weeks to
make up your mind!"

MS-PA-

Phi Ipsilon Omicron
Phi Upsilin Omicron, national
honorary professional Home Economics fraternity, will meet at
6:30 p.m. today in the lounge of
Erikson Hall. The program will
feature Miss Helen Wilmore professor of housing and home management who will review a trip
to Europe.
SAM

will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Student Center. Mr.
Charles Pulley presllent of Irving Air Cmite will speak.
SAM

I K Dames Club
The UK Dames Club will sponsor an art show at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Dames. Room of D
Building in Cooperstown.
ASK YOUR FRIENDS

By The AssnrLitrd Press
With the flag from her husband's bier tucked under her arm,
Mrs. John F. Kennedy lighted
the torch of eternal light and
walked away fiom the crowds
into private lite.
Did the grieving First Lady
with this gesture also relinquish
her role as the nation'; style and
cultural pacesetter?
"She will always be a leader
in my opinion in whatever she
does, or wherever she goes" Olcg
Cas ini paid tribute to his beautiful client whose choice of
g
costumes have
simple,
been followed by women around
the world.
Yet Kenneth Bat telle, the hair
stylist who created a rage for
bouffant coiffure by teasing and
puffing the hair of trendsetting
Mrs. Kennedy, hopes fervently
that the curious, admiring eyes
that have followed her so long
will now turn away.
"Mrs. Kennedy has always had
a deep respect for our rights of
privacy." M says with great emotion. ' We should grant her that
respect now. She Is my client,
my friend, and a great, great
lady. I love her."
Early In the presidential campaign. John Fairchild, editor of
Women's Wear Daily, a powerful fashion trade publication,
dubbed Mrs. Kennedy "Her Elegance." That title has remained
with the majestic beauty. It's a
title she cannot gn bark on, he
says, because she has so much
to contribute
glamor,
"youth,
culture."
"I think she will go on being
because she has
a trend-settbecome a leader in her own right,
The role
contends.
Fairchild
played was never of her own choosing but
foisted on her by her own copy-abgood taste and intellect. But
Is a part
her
of her charm, he says.
Fairchild
and Cassinl, who

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have sometimes disagreed, fully
agree that Mrs. Kennedy Was
always above mere fashion.
"Mrs. Kennedy transcends the
narrow point of view in fashion."
said her couturier. "!she was groat
in sqieci. and she was treat in
tiai.edy. She is nil example to all
outh of what high morals mid
great character can achieve with
dignity and heart."
he is now a symbol to the.
American people, Casini says,
"a ra'.lying point for everything."
The usually winy, dapper
with t lie continental manner
said that he hopes to continue
to have the privilege and the
pride in working for her. Mrs.
Kennedy was the first President's
wife to select an official couturier.
Hopeful that the bereaved
widow will eventually renew her
interest and leadeiship in the
nrts is Henry F. Dupont, w ho, as
chairmen of the committee for
White House restoration, worked
closely with her.
"What she has done in the
White House is absolutely marvelous. It was her idea, and
everything that has been dons
is so well thought out," he says.
With August Heckscher as her
cultural consultant Mrs. Kennedy
sparked the nation's interest in
good music and dance by inviting the country's talent to perform in the previously staid
White House halls. "No one will
ever be able to describe adequately what her tastes and discernment meant," he said. "She
lent her brightness to the whole
cultural world."
Of the patterns that President
Kennedy's keen young wife fet
for the adoring,
public the people who worked
with her closely agree her courage, dignity and grace during her
from the
sorrowful departure
White House was the greatest
example of all.

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* TITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

The Right To Criticize

C.i it it ism seems
to le characteristic of the Anient an way of life. All
of us are prone to ciiticie the actions and beliefs of others, especially
when they are concerned with issues
cl a controversial nature.
All too often, we criticize for a
lack of something better to do, thus
making much criticism suerficial and
without meaning.
This is likely to be the case with
the march on Frankfort planned for
Thursday. Undoubtedly, there will be
many individuals whether they are
onnected with the University or not
who will criticize those from the
University who participate. Much of
this criticism will probably arise solely from the fact that these people are
connected with the University and
for no other reason.
It is for this reason that we feel
certain important aspects concerning
those who are taking part from the
University should be pointed out.
In the first place, those who will
be going to Frankfort Thursday are
in no way officially representing the
University. The University, because of
its position as a
cannot rightfully participate
in such a demonstration. These people will be participating in the march
tm Frankfoit simply because they want
to and not because of any responsibility to the University.
Indeed, their participation is somewhat analogous to the student who
s.pcnds his spring vacation in Florida. Just because he is there and just

because he wears a UK sweatshirt
does not in ony way mean he is
representing the University. The University is not respmsible for his actions and therefore cannot be criticized for them. The same holds true
for the march on Frankfort.
Secondly, participation must be
looked uxn as an
activity not in any way connected with
the function or operation of this University. Those who will participate are
doing so because of personal convictions which have nothing to do with
their status as University students or
faculty members.
There is no rule of the University
that states students cannot participate
in civil rights demonstrations. Nor
should there be. In actions such as
these they are not under the jurisdiction of the University and there-foi- e
the University should not be subject to criticism for their participation.
There are those who feel that
participation in such demonstrations
is wrong because their views on the
civil rights issue are not in agreement with the marchers. To those we
say you have a perfect right to criticize provided you limit your criticism to the individuals involved-treat- ed
as individuals
without regard to any position they might hold
and their beliefs.
However, we would ask that you
not ciilicie the University as a body
since, as an institution it plays no
role in the march on Frankloi t.

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The Kentucky Kernel
Tlie South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky

t Lfifnfton, Kentucky at iroond clan matter under tri Ac of March 8, 1879.
Published lour timei a week during the regular achool year except during holiday! and eaama.
a acnool year; 10 cent! a copy liom iliea
buuscriplion rates:

Intrrrd at the port offir

Sue Endicott, Editor in Chief
Carl Modecu, Campui Editor
David Hawpe, Managing Editor
Associate and Daily Editors:
Richard Stevenson, Sandra. Biuxk, William Grant, and Elizabeth Ward
Departmental Editors:
John Pfeiffer, Artt
Nancy Louguhidoe, Social
Wallt , Pacan, Sports
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
.
Joe
Advertising Manager
Tliones:. News, extension 22S5 and 2302; Advertising and Circulation, 2306
.--

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:gvamaairWW

Ford Foundation Describes Tomorrow's Colleges
-

NEW
When Johnny
YORK
Jones, now eight, goes to college 10
yeais hence, what will his learning

loutine

be?

Facilities

Educational
Laboratories
(EFL), a Ford Foundation research offspring, has Just released a detailed study
called "Ericks and Mortarboard" which
cllers one view of the future:
Johnny will spend much of his college
time in dim campus theaters where
television will offer him educational films and lectures recorded by
scholars at his own and other schools.
To study, he will go to a small booth
called a carrel (a French word once
applied to monk's cells) where he will
te able to dial a "resource center" and
summon learning material stored there on
magnetic tape to his booth's small TV
screen and audio system.

In the same booth he will be Interrogated by a teaching machine, which
will present questions on a panel before
n
answers will
him, and his
be fed to a central computer which will
record his learning progress lor university officials.
His contract with professors will come
during small seminars and counseling sessions.
This vision of the future Is not welcomed by some educators, who see In It
the transferal of teaching responsibility from teachers to machines and to the
technicians who will know how to opera-lit- e
the machines. But welcome or not, EFL
sees It as largely Inevitable. College enrollments in the U.S. are due to nearly
double, to some 8 5 million students, in the
next decade. With teachers already In
short supply and funds for expansion of
physical plants limited, EFL sees little
alternative but to turn to teaching automation to handle the student load.
In fact, EFL's study supplies extensive
evidence that its vision already is turning
to reality as new campuses and additions to old campuses spring up around
the country. "The revolution is not yet full
an EFL
tlown," says James J. Moris.-eaexecutive staff member who writes the
foreword to the
report. "But Its
advance guard has infiltrated the instructional front on many campuses. Television,
electronic language laboratories, teaching
n.achines and automated lecture halls already are to be found In some colleges

and more sophisticated
on the horizon."

developments

are

For instance, eight electronic carrels
are being Installed experimentally at Chia
cago Teachers College-Nortinstitution operated by Chicago's Board
of Education on that city's north side. The
booths will contain a set of earphones, a
tape recorder, a small television monitor
dial. By selecting
and a telephone-typ- e
a number from a directory, the stundent
dialer will be able to have
instructional materials piped Into his booth
or to tune into a closed TV channel carrying Instruction. His tape recorder will enable him to save some of the material and
repeat it if he wishes.
Florida Atlantic University, due to
open later this year at Boca Raton, north
of Miami, will have 200 electronic carrels
which are ultimately to be equipped so
that students can respond to questions.
Corrigan & Associates, a San Mateo, Calif.,
firm, already has developed a way to do
this by "programming" questions into instructional tapes. To respond to the questions (usually multiple choice) the student presses buttons. A green light on his
panel flashes if he answers correctly, red
if he is wrong. He continues to press
until he gets a green light but both right
and wrong answers are recorded on IBM
cards for grading.
More large lecture halls also will be
rising on campuses. A huge lecture center,
consisting of nine auditoriums seating
from 75 to 500 students, will form the
centerpiece for the $150 million city campus of the University of Illinois taking
shape In Chicago. New York's state university system is planning or building no
fewer than 10 such centers. One, at Albany, will have 20 auditoriums accommodating from 60 to 500 students.
At University College, opened in 1961
by the University of Miami, a huge
building contains six
lecture halls, each focusing on a
viewing screen at Its apex.
In the central core of the building,
present their lectures before TV
cameras and technicians channel their
programs to the proper hall, inserting film
strips and other supplementary material.
The lectures frequently are recorded on
TV tape and played back for subsequent
audiences.
Theoretically,

a single professor at the

lecture center could speak to 1,800 students at once within easy view of all-- go
on to other duties and have his lecture played back to successive groups of
1,800 later the same day. Some Miami
professors enjoy returning to sit in on
their own recorded lectures to observe
student reactions and check flaws in
technique.
However, some educators are apprehensive about the growing use of electronics. They fear that separating the
professors from the students will destroy
the personal contact that many educators
hold to be vital to the learning process.
No doubt some teachers also are concerned that they will be replaced by the
lecture.
But advocates of the new techniques
contend such fears are largely unfounded.
They argue that with the enrollment load
colleges face, the institutions will be able
to use all the professors they can find
and a heavy Investment in electronics as
well. They point out that most colleges
plan to supplement electronic teaching
with m