xt7jws8hhj3k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jws8hhj3k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661115  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 15, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 15, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7jws8hhj3k section xt7jws8hhj3k Inside Todays Kernel
A UK doctor describes a
strange, and
apparently new, scalp disease: Poge

Two.

Vol. 58, No. 54

The Berkeley activists are tired and
opparently in no mood for another
confrontation: Page Three.

of Kentucky
UniversityTUESDAY, NOV.
KY.,
LEXINGTON,

15, 1966

Coed 111,
May Have

AV

Meningitis

K

University coed has been
hospitalized in the Medical Center with a reportedly highly contagious disease.
The disease
apparently a
form of meningitis has a fatality rate of only five percent, according to Dr. C. E. Hernandez
of the State Department of
Health's Epidemiology Division.
"With modern drugs," he said,
"there is a good chance of recovery with no ill effects.
Medical Center authorities
would not comment prior to press
time this afternoon about the
hospitalization of Kecnclandllall
coed Cay Kirk, Springfield, 111.
Miss Kirk was taken to the Medical Center Sunday afternoon.
She is in an intensive care
unit on the sixth floor of the
Medical Center.
A spokesman for the
Health Department said
this morning no report of the
disease had been received. State
law requires that the county
health department be notified
of any outbreak of a communicable disease.
Medical Center authorities reportedly are attempting to informally contact students who
have been in direct contact with
A

City-Coun-

ty

Miss Kirk. However, no official

announcement has been made
to this effect.
Contacted in Frankfort, Dr.
Hernandez said "a piece-meapproach to giving out drugs"
is likely to have little effect.
Sulfadiazine is used to combat meningitis, he said.
Dr. Hernandez said medical
authorities are still uncertain as
to how the disease is transmitted.
"Some people who have only
had a brief contact with .the
virus might get the disease," he
said, "while some with more
prolonged contact might not get
al

it."

The incubation period for
meningitis is two to 10 days.
He described the symptoms
as sudden upset, high fever, and
headaches.

1

Eight Pages

Editorial discusses recruitment of the
top high school teachers: Page Four.

Give us young people with dedication,
and we will moke the revolution,
zolumnist says: Poge Five.
The

Pikes

campus

are on top of the first
basketball poll: Page Sii.

Davenport tells YAF that liberals
are illegocial: Poge Eight.
Dr.

Senate Discusses
South Campus

LI

ih

-

newly appointed Faculty Senate program committee Monday brought members of the Campus Planning and Development
Committee before the Senate to discuss two proposals made in the
1965 Academic Program.
room building, said his interest
Dr. Clifford Amyx, professor
was centered on the belief that
of Art, and Dr. William Axton,
and architecture proassociate professor of English, buildingsthe
vide for
"spiritual needs and
discussed the area of faculty stu- quality of life" on campus.
dent environment and what
Dr. Douglas Schwartz, proAxton calls campus "amenities."
fessor of Anthropology, explained
the goals and ideas behind his
Amyx was a member of Academic Program committee named proposal for a South Campus in
to study faculty and student aid the Academic Program.
A

l

and increased relations between
The South Campus proposal
the two. Axton is a member of recommends a small campus, prethe planning and development
sumably south of Cooper drive,
where freshmen would spend 80
group.
Amyx described his group's percent of their class time and
role as giving as much attensophomores 50 percent of theirs.
-tion as possible to academic matBenefits of the residential colters within the development of lege type program would be givstudents voted Monday to select a slate oi officers the campus.
ing students a smaller frame of
and a
legislative council. Three officers LeeRosenbaum,
reference and closer identity not
Axton, who has expressed
some concern for the amount of possible in the present system,
president; Keith Brown, vice president; and Carol Mi elder, secretary
ran uncontested. Votes for the council will be counted Wednesday faculty-studeinterplay in the the report suggests.
and announced soon thereafter, a spokesman for the group said. planned multi-storoffice class- Schwartz also thinks a closer
integration classroom and residential aspects of college could
be fostered along with a freer
faculty student relationship.
Crucial to the success of the
plan, according to the report, is
the development of a cadre of
"
as opposed to
His announcement at a Lexington press conentered the race for
John Breckinridge formally
of upper
"
the
the governorship Monday, saying he "stands in ference came as little surprise to politicians and
division and graduate work. Prithe vanguard of the people's disenchantment and observers.' He had hinted several times before that
mary emphasis here would be on
dissatisfaction with the way things are now." he planned to run, and last month while on the
teaching.
UK campus his intentions were revealed in a
former state attorney general, now a LexThe
In evaluating the proposal,
lawyer, became the fifth man to enter newspaper story.
ington
Schwartz told the Senate there
contest.
an already crowded primary
Other Democrats so far running in the May
Breckinridge said he will make the state's primary are former Gov. A. B. Chandler, state
Continued On Page 8
educational needs one of his top priorities in his
Highway Commissioner Henry Ward, Lexington
r
campaign, and if elected, will "strengthen edubusinessman David Trapp, and state Sen. J. D.
avoided getting into Buckman of
cation across the board." He
Shepherdsville.
the "nuts and bolts" of a platform, however.
It is uncertain whose names will appear on the
of Kentucky poliHe did criticize the nature
Republican side of the ballot.
exclusiontics, saying its nature is "closed-dooU.S. Sen Thruston B. Morton darkened COP
ary, amoral," denying the people the talents and
services of "evolving leadership and the opporhopes by announcing Monday he will not be a
tunity to actively participate in their governmental aandidate.
business."
Glasgow attorney Louis Nunn, who lost to
"It is time to open the doors and windows of Edward T. Breathitt in 1963, is withholding an
to seek out and enKentucky's statehouse
announcement of his plans until further efforts
courage new ideas and new participation in our are made to "draft M rton."
party affairs," he said.
Jefferson County Judge Marloe Cook has called
Most of all, he added, it is time for the
a press conference Wednesday in Louisville to
of factionalism and the emergence
"scrapping
SCHWARTZ AND AXTON
of a unified Democratic Party in Kentucky, dediformally announce his plans. He has said inAt Faculty Senate Meeting
formally tha ne will run.
to high principles."
cated

Off Cam pus Students Vole

Off-camp-

nt

y

John Breckinridge Affirms He
Will Be In '67 Governor's Race

"teacher-scholars-

"scholar-teachers-

r,

...

H

-

.v

...

Peace Corps Falling Short Of Manpower Need
n

M

By CRETA FIELDS
Kernel Staff Writer
The Peace Corps has fallen short
in providing interested nations with the
skilled manpower they request. Dr.
George H. Gadbois Jr. told the Patterson Club Monday.

"The day of the

hand-shakin-

back-slappin-

g

Peace Corps volunteer is over,"
the director of the Corps India Training
Program said. Most of thecountries which
have volunteers have asked for more,
but they are requesting better skilled,
more experienced ones, he said.
The Peace Corps has failed to provide
the better skilled volunteer because of
what Dr. Cadbois calls a "crisis of
skills." (Now 86 percent of the volunteers have a B.S. or B.A. degree in
liberal arts; 11 percent have fiad some
college work; three percent have had
only high school training.)
Dr. Cadbois said there are three ways
the Peace Corps could acquire more skilled
volunteers:
1.

DR. GEORGE CADBOIS JR.

2.

To train liberal arts majors, ,
To find more skilled volunteers, and

3. To recmit volunteers from other
sources, outside of colleges, for example.
Also, new methods of training should
provide better prepared volunteers.
There are highly stmctured programs,
in which volunteers receive most of their
training in the classroom. Opposite these
are heuristic training programs, which
place the volunteer in the center of all
phases of program planning.
Now programs tend to take a more

moderate approach. One-haof thetrain-iuis done in the United States, and
is done within the country.
Peace Corps officials seem to agree
that this method is the way to train
volunteers, but there is still the problem of finding higher skilled volunteers.
Another major problem of the Peace
Corps is "finding a context for itself
within government, higher education,
politics, and within the world.
Some 15,000 volunteers have been or
are in service in about 51 developing
lf

g

one-ha- lf

countries.
Dr. Gadbois said that, in general,
the Peace Corps has been "extremely

well received" in other countries, and
that in American values, the Peace Corps
"has achieved the same importance as
theboyscouts and motherhood."
The Peace Corps received much early
criticism, he said, but that now, five
years later, it is hard to criticise the

Peace Corps.
Dr. Cadbois said that the Peace Coqis
has been successful in two of its three
goals, in promoting better understanding
of America abroad, and in promoting
better understanding of the host country
in America through returning trainees.
However, in a third goal, providing
countries with the skilled volunteers they
request, the Peace Corps has not been
as successful.
Besides improving existing programs
to turn out better prepared volunteers,
the Peace Coq)s may also work closer
with universities in recruiting and training volunteers.
Dr. Gadbois mentioned ideas for programs which may, in the future, allow a
volunteer to combine college credit with
service in the Peace Corps.

* J--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

TIIE

15, HMifi

Supreme Court Sustains
Civil Rights Convictions

Makeup Shown
Now, some of the prettiest and most natural'
looking coeds on campus may be members of
University Town Girls, who were Riven a makeup demonstration by Anita Wise, beauty consultant for Vivian Woodard cosmetics, at their
regular meeting Monday.
Using Vivian Woodard products, Mrs. Wise
made a display of potential Christmas gifts for
men and women and demonstrated how to properly cleanse the face and apply face and eye

From Combined
i

t

?

.!

-

'

make-u- p.

Mrs. Wise stated that one should choose makeaccording to her
up, particularly eye make-ucomplexion and to the color of clothing she will
wear. The students also learned that one important
factor in applying a liquid base to the face is to
use upward motions from the neck up, instead
of downward ones. This is to uplife the face and
avoid a double chin and wrinkles.
Town Girls are also looking for an uplift
inofficial membership in their
organization. According to President Linda Lloyd, all
coeds living off campus are eligible to attend
and to bemeetings, which are held
members.
come official dues-fre- e
p,

--

v
f

H

vi

,t

-

I

aw...

'

V

1

5--

Doctor Reports On Strange Disorder
brownish
blue dots centered

f rom Combined Dispatches
asWASHINGTON-Docto- rs
sembled here for the 50th meet-

ing of the Southern Medical Association heard about a strange
and apparently new disorder of
the human scalp.

SKATING

Fri. and Sat. nights
7:30 'til 10;

10 'til Midnight

Sunday night
10
7:30 'til

SCOTT'S
ROLL-AREN- A

NORTHERN

BELTLINE

The disease known as blue
dot disease hit two brothers in
one Kentucky family, Dr. Ullin
Leavell of the University
Medical Center dermatology de-

W.

partment, reported.
The sole symptom of the disease is scattered blue dots on a
victim's scalp, he said.
Dr. Leav ell said the two boys,
eight and 10 years old, were
brought into the center after
other doctors had failed to identify the disorder or come up with
a successful treatment.
Shampoo treatments, he said,
appeared to lessen the scalp blemishes, which he described as

wsssa
(

4 WINNER OF

I

;30 p.m.;

6 ACADEMY
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MAYER

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f

PRODUCTION

pasterns

DOCTOR ZHiV&GO

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JN.PANAVISI0N' AND METR0C0L0R

GUARANTEED

Leavell reported.
Dr. Leavell said a search of
medical literature failed to show
any previous reporting on the
subject. But, he said, he has
since heard of two unreported
cases of the disease.

of free speech.
Black denied that the ruling
departed from the 1963 ruling
striking down breach of peace
convictions of 187 demonstrators
who chose the state capitol
grounds at Columbia, S.C. for

their protest.
"Traditionally,

not."
The Florida demonstration
took place in front of the
jail and was considered
orderly. The demonstrators sang,
clapped, and danced outside the
jail but obeyed the sheriffs orders
to move back and not obstnict
Tal-lahas-

traffic.
However, the 32 did disobey
the sheriff s orders to disperse
completely.
Douglas was joined in dissent by his liberal colleagues
Chief Justice Warren and Abe

Fortas.
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Economy Cars
203 MIDLAND
Phone 233-101- 7

Phi Alpha Theta History Honorary will hold its monthly meeting at 3:45 p.m. Wednesday in
Room 309 of the Student Center
presenting Professor Thomas
Brewer who will have as his topic
"The Discipline of Economic
History."

"

AVE.

A Christian fellowship for faculty members will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in the Baptist
Student Union. The meeting is
nondenominational and graduate
students are invited. For further
information telephone George

LEXINGTON

Hillery,

2701 or

Ext.

266-883- 4.

SEATING!

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UK's Brass Quintette will present its first concert of the season
at 8 p.m. on Thursday in the
Agricultural Science Auditorium.

SUN. 2:00 p.m.

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incrustations.
The disorder is still a medical
curiosity, however, since no way
to treat it has been devised. The
condition improves in hot weather
and worsens in winter.
Pure cultures of two organisms
isolated in the disease failed to
produce the same symptoms in
the number of tests animals, Dr.

4

UK Bulletin Board

at 8:00 p.m.

WED, and SAT.

MATINEES

over

EVERY EVENING
1

tors.
The decision also represented
of the narrow liberal
the break-umajority on the court that has
so long upheld the rights of
civil rights demonstrators.
The
majority opinion was
delivered by Justice Hugo L.
Black who had achieved the majority that has eluded him for
so many years.
The new majority could prove
as shaky as the old, however,
but the Black majority was able
to write into legal precedent
a key point: civil rights workers, backed by new federal laws,
should turn first to the courts
before trying to exercise unfettered rights to demonstrate.
In a vigorous and at times
moving dissent, Justice William
O. Douglas charged that Black
had done "violence to the First
Amendment" and its guarantee
p

two-year-o-

(7K

Dispatch

WASHINGTON
The U.S. Supreme Court Monday upheld the
conviction of 32 Negro students at Florida A & M University who
had been convicted under a Florida law for "going against the
property of another" with "a malicious and mischievous intent."
This marked the first ti
in the civil rights revolution of and are considered
appropriate
the 1960's that the high court
places to assemble, and petition
had upheld the trespassing cona government, Black said. "Jails,
viction of civil rights demonstrabuilt for security purposes, are

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UK NET YARDAGE

PHONE

This week's winner will receive: A Free Sweater.
Entries must be turned in to the University Shop by Friday, November 18f 5:30 p.m.

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* .THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

15, lHo-- .'t

Berkeley Activists Tired, No Mood For Revolt
GLENN BECKER

By

The Collrgiftte

Srrvlrt
Calif.
Mario
BEHKELEY,
Savio, leader of the Free Speech
Movement here two years ago,
has been denied readinission to
the University of California at
Berkeley after breaking a campus
rule Nov. 4 prohibiting the distribution of literature by
Presn

-

s.

Savio violated the rule before
a mass rally to dramatize the
"absurdity" of such regulations,
he said. The crowd was warm
and sympathetic; Savio's actions
were only a part of the protest
in the rally.
Observers sec little prospect,
however, of another broad student revolt, parallel to that which
shook the campus in 1964 and
made "Berkeley" the rallying cry
of student activists across the

country.

Berkeley activists appear tired,
in no mood to provoke another

with the administration. The faculty, many
of whom aided strongly with the
1964 demonstrators, seem more
appreciative of the administration's position this time.
Savio's infraction of the nde
occurred at a rally of almost
4,000 persons before the steps of
the Sproul Hall Administration
Building the site of the FSM
which
demonstrations and
Savio led in 1964.
The rally was held to denounce
plans by the university administration to rule the Sproul steps
to voice amplified
Savio enlarged his attack to
include the whole range of university rules on speech and advocacy on campus, which he called "more benefitting a prison
than a university."
Then he called on the throng
to witness as he handed out leaflets to persons sitting near him.
It was this violation of campus
rules that prompted a letter the
sit-i- n

ral-le- s.

off-limi- ts

following

from

Monday

Vice

Chancellor William Boyd inform

-

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rules committee.

That committee, composed of
faculty, students, and administrators, advised Heyns months
ago to move the rallies to a lower
plaza surrounded by the student
union complex and all student
campus eating facilities. Political
activists have dubbed this plaza
Heyns was particularly critical
of the content of the rallies. "We
are unintentionally fostering a
style of speech that is often vicious in intent, dishonest, laced

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of dresses, skirts and
coats for women. MILDRED COHEN
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KeiltUCky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 40500. Second-clas- s Lex- ington. Kentucky,
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
times wet'klv durinff
I'uMivhpH fiv
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 board
UK Post
ot Student Publications,
Office Hox 4lJ!i(i. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell. secretary.
Hegun as the Cadet in 1894. became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.

253 E

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$.10

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Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
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against the activists.

"It looks like coercion to me,"
one said.
Savio reacted characteristically to the letter from Hoyd. "I'm
going to fight it," Nothing that
Hoyd had offered him a hearing "on the facts," of the alleged violation, Savio said he
would accept no hearing which
does not include judicial review
of the rules he had admittedly

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Fast, comfortable flights on Piedmont Airlines.
Home. Holidays. Weekend days (when you can
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flying is the easiest way to travel. On Piedmont.

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faculty
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KERNEL

Quality Protection for

TYPING
WILL

The students' action,

broken. He added that he wants
a hearing before a faculty committee in public and is looking
for a lawyer to represent him.
Savio's rule viol at ion occurred
at his first public appearance in
more than a year. He spent last
year studying in Kngland and had
declined to speak publicly since
returning to Berkeley last spring.
Ashe remained silent while antiwar and free speech demonstrations continued on the Berkeley
campus, speculation grew about
"when would Mario speak out.'''
His application for the upcoming winterquarterdrew angry
denunciations from some members of the
board of regents, which administers the

1

AUTO INSURANCE
PROBLEMS?

REWARD

14N3t

ever, several hundred students
walked over to the chancellor's
office to deliver a petition, which
they claimed had 3,000 signatures, protesting the new rules.

sit-in-

all-o-

1958

ings.

all-nig-

"th pit."

HN6t

1966

estimate the gravity of the situation: We are to be denied one
third of our free speech. The
student organizations find Chancellor Heyns' latest policy totally unacceptable. We welcome
this moratorium; it may resolve
the conflict; however, we will
not submit to the Chancellor's
coercion. The CCO does not feel
bound to obey this edict."
The group charged that the
Chancellor's new policy violated
the Academic Senate's resolution
of Dec. 8, 1964. The resolution,
passed in the tense atmosphere
s
in
following the
Sproul Hall by 801 FSM supporters, provided that the administration should regulate only the
time, placeandmannerof student
political activity and that the content of student speech should not
be restricted.
At the rally, which Savio attended but did not address,
Bettina Aptheker of the CCO
denounced Heyns' attack on student "coercion" as an "outrage
against the morality and integrity of an entire generation."
She defiantly told the group
that "we can resist and we can
win."
But the protesters were in no
mood for an
fight against
the administration. CCO leader
Mike Lemer said that the groups
in his organization are occupied
with activities off campus and
"do not desire a confrontation
with the University."
At the end of the rally, how- -

rule-violati-

be-

254-76-

one member said.
At the request of the Student Senate, Heyns delayed for
two weeks implementation of the
new ndes limiting amplification
and duration of the noon rallies. The later rule would slash
the length of the rallies from
one hour to 40 minutes.
The Council of Campus Organization (CCO), the latest successor to the FSM, was unhappy
with Heyns' speech.
"No member of the university community," warned a CCO
leaflet distributed before a rally
last Wednesday, "should under-

of sound amplification, and the
conduct of the rallies.
Then he warned, "If there continue to be incidents such as
occurred last Friday involving a
public, deliberate and provocative
designed to
intimidate administration, faculty, or student body, it will be
obvious that this experiment has
failed and we will proceed to the
recommendations" of the campus

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with slander and character assassination, indifference to evidence and truth, contemptuous of
disagreement, and often charged
with hatred."
"I am not impressed with the
quality of our public forum and
neither are most of our visitors."
Heyns' speech was given a
ovation by the members
of the Academic Senate, "probably the most enthusiastic vote
he has gotten from the faculty,"

ing Savio of the decision to
refuse his application.
The letter, which the university released to the press and other
media at 10 a.m. the next morning, Election Day, said Savio
had indicated his unwillingness
to abide by University rules with
which he disagreed.
Berkeley Chancellor Boger V.
Heyns responded to the uproar
over the Sproul Hall steps and
to Savio's infraction of the rules
in a strong speech to 300 members of the Academic Senate.
"The days of doing business
on this campus by coercion or
threat of coercion are over. The
days of influencing opinion or
administration policy by such
means are over. Where there is
coercion, there is neither freedom
of expression or action."
Leaving no doubt that he considered the Sproul rallies often
marked by angry denunciations
of the university a prime source
of such coercion, the chancellor
said they are now on trial. He
set down three new rules regulating the length of time, the level

and Euclid

* r
The Kentucky Kernel
The South' Outstanding College Daily
Univkhsity of Kknucky

ESTABLISHED

F.tlitoriah

Si

km.

Ho:.

TUESDAY, NOV.

1894

15, 1966

represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

Wai.tkh M. Chant,
Editorial Vafie Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

Wii.i.iam Knait, llusiness Manager

I

Recruiting Of Students

While the pacesetters in American higher education have brought
e
athletic
in the tools of
to lure top students to
recruiting
their doors, the University is only
just past the gate in the race for
the superior young scholar. UK
is at the point of realization that
these academic flocks are not likely
to be descending upon the campus unless some strong and concerted effort is made to get them
here.
big-tim-

More obvious is the fact that
these students first must be convinced the University has something to offer them in terms of
academic excellence, for without
this quality no amount of cajol-

ing or persuasion will get them
here. The groundwork for such
excellence has been laid through
the new academic program, and
acquisition of new and superior
faculty members seems to be steadily increasing.
Given a sound and challenging program in which good students are interested, it is a matter
of persuasion to get them here
and as Dean of Admissions Elbert
Ockerman points out, money is the
best persuader.

'They want monetary recognition as well as a good education," Ockerman says. Scholar4

ships here have grown in number
steadily over the last three to four
years, yet if UK is really to com

be either dropped or curtailed; yet
the academic scholarship program,
according to its director Jim Engle,
is not a recruitment based thing.
Rather, he says, its purpose is to
help good students who have real
financial need. An athletic scholarship ranging from $8,000 to $10,000
obviously does more than meet
financial needs at the University;
it becomes real recruitment.
What is at hand is an attitude,
an attitude which sees the scholar
as someone whose bills we will
help pay but sees the athlete as
someone whose services are not
only worth bargaining for but also
worth a luxury bonus besides.
However, more than scholarships and the reasons behind their
assignment are involved in this
race for the nation's top
undergraduate scholars. Letter
writing programs are and have
been a major method of universities to sell their virtues to the
hopeful student. Pamphlets, brochures, and all sorts of official
publications also flood him. But
as Associate Dean of Admissions
Keller Dunn emphasizes, all this
may overwhelm the student who
is already weary of opening envelopes.

The biggest set academic stipend available at the University
is a $4,000 President's Scholarship.
(Other grants made through private interests on a need basis
may equal this amount.) Athletic
scholarships, while they may pay
for themselves

in game receipts,

often double this amount. We do
not suggest athletic awards should

'

""

S.

mnnmm
i in

so-call-

Dunn could not be closer to
the truth when he says, "We had
better get started doing some creative thinking so what they get
is not just another letter." An
illustration of such thinking can
be seen in the occasional informal contact promoted between the
prospective student and the department in which he intends to
major. Another example includes
an information team which travels
around the state speaking to students, and their parents, who are
interested in coming to UK.

pete for those Kentucky students
who are going to such universities as Michigan and Yale, it must
find the money to expand this
program far more.

'V

Perhaps the most creative thing
which could be done to attract
top students to the University is
again a matter of attitude. As it
stands now, the University speaks
only to those students who have
already indicated an interest in
coming here. Within the state at
least, we would do well to identify the superior student and then
concentrate on getting him here
irrespective of his previous indications. Such a program is practiced
to some degree at Transylvania
College where admissions counselors go to individual high schools
to talk not only to prospective
students but also to any superior
student in hopes of developing an
interest in Transylvania.
Surely such a program is not
too outlandish