xt76125qbn3k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt76125qbn3k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1964-04-21  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1964 1964 1964-04-21 2015 true xt76125qbn3k section xt76125qbn3k Pikes Peddle To Third Consecutive Win
I

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PI Kappa Alpha riders share rlatlon In their vie- lory celebration following their third consecutive

Coed Killed
In Sunday
Car Wreck
University coed, Mary
Louise Hicks, was killed Sunday afternoon in an automobile accident on the Paris
Road.
Miss Hicks, a sophomore
home economics major, was
returning to the campus after
spending the weekend with
her parents in Augusta when
with
her car collided head-o- n
a pickup truck.

y

The truck driver, Otto Hanish, '
Russell Cave Road, told police
that Miss Hicks was trying to
pass another auto when the accident occurred.
Deputy Coroner William Mun-for- d
pronounced Miss Hicks dead
at the scene. He reported that
received a broken neck and
she
possible Internal injuries.
Miss Hicks was vice president
of Hamilton House and had been,
accepted for Links, Junior womb's honorary, at the "Stars in
Night" program,
) ie was a member of Cwens,
domore women's honorary, the
aOmt Economics Club, the
Club, and was the economics
to the Ag
club's representative
and Home Ec Council.
Miss Hicks served as chairman of a committee for the High
Conference
School Leadership
and competed in the Dairy Princess Contest at UK as a freshman In February 1953.
The body Is at the Moore-PalmMortuary in Biooksville
today. The funeral is at 2 p.m.
tomorrow at the Sharon Presbyterian Church in Sharon.
Mrs. Writiht, housemother of
Hamilton House, suid. "We will
all attend the funeral Wednesday if we can get enough cars."
She said all 18 girls in the house
will attend.

v

Kernel photo by Sam Abell

sorority the festivities have Just
begun.
The Pike's won the Saturday
bike race for the third consecutive year. The coveted rotating
trophy now rests permanently In
the Pike chapter house. Their
time for the 15 lap final heat
was 10:45.
The DZ's not only won the
Debutante Stakes for the third
straight year, but set a new Coliseum course record while doing It.
Riding for the PIKA's were
Jeff Olindmeyer, Oary Sewell,
Lionel Hawse, Miles Kinkead,
Ralph Marquette, and Joe Oalati.
The Delta Zcta team was made
up of Val Floyd, Martha Bogart,
Sue Ellen Riggert, Ann Price, and

IRM1E IL
University
Kentucky

Vol, LV, No. 106

LEXINGTON,

of

KY

TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1904

Eight Pages

Revised Constitution
Vote Scheduled Today
By GARY HAWKS WORTH
Kernel Assistant Dally Editor

Student Congress elections
today will give students the
opMrtunity to approve or
disapprove of the proposed
alterations to the existing constitution and the one party
in contention for officer posts.
The largest change in the congress subject to the approval of
the proposed constitution is the
size of the Assembly. The size of
the congress would be reduced
from 50 to 30, with 23 students
elected campuswide and one each
from seven subgoverning groups.
Associated Women's Students,
Women's Residence Halls, Men's
Dorm Council. Town Housing
Council, Panhellenlc Council. In- -

i.ditor

Discusses SC
Sec l'agc

t.ledioii;

rur

terfiaternity Council, and the
Married Students Council would
all be represented by a voting
member in congress.
The amendments to the constitution were passed by the congress at Its April 13 meeting. Six
other major changes In the constitution include:
1. Increasing
the size of the
Judicial Board from five to seven

Coed Collapses
In McVey Will
a freshman
Ann
Judith

MARY LOU 1I1CKS

-

win in the LKD bike race.

ira

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Ate-

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'

The Sportsccnter track is silent. The Fiesta's were "So
Fine,' 'and Peter, Faul, and Mary, are just memories "Blowiu"
In The Wind." Little Kentucky Derby, "America's Most Spectacular College Weekend" is over for another year.
But to the Pi Kappa Alpha
fraternity and the Delta Zeta Patsy Cummins. Their time and

J4

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DZ's Se Course Record
In Taking Third Deb Win

U ili

Cox,
education major from Hanover,
Ind., was rushed to the University Health Service by a Lexington emergency squad yesterday
afternoon.
The emergency squad took her
to the Med Center after she collapsed in the halls of MoVey Hall
about 3: 15 p.m.
The Health Service refused to
release any informal ion at the
lime of aihnlUance. A sio.ieMii:iu
said she was under observation.

with one more woman student to
serve.
2. Changing
the method of
selecting the Judicial Board from
with
presidential
appointment
congressional consent to screening by a committee appointed
by the president and approved
by the congress. This committee
will submit twice the number of
names as the number of positions open and the president's
will be limited to
appointment
these names. Interested students
to the board.
may apply
3. The appointment
of two

terms.
board members to two-ye4. Changing
approval of the
constitution
and subsequent
amendments from the University
Faculty to the president of the
University.
5. Changing
the number of
congress advisers from four to
two, eliminating the automatic
appointment of the dean of men
and the dean of women.
6. Providing for the election of
officers in a campuswide election. Previously they had been
elected by the assembly. An
Continued
n Page H

new record was 1:31.4.
Second and third place went
to Weldon House and Holmes
Hall-- 2
respectively.
Second and third places in
the bike rare were won by Sigma
Alpha Epsilon and Phi Gamma
Delta fraternities respectively.
Sigma Chi came in third, but wa
disqualified on an exchange technicality.
The faculty race was won by
Stanley Blukeman, Supervisor of
Maintenance and Custodial Services In the Men's Residence Halls.
Fred Strache, assistant dean
of men, won the costume prize.
He came dressed as a Kappa
Alpha fraternity member.
The new Little Kentucky Derby
queen is Bonnie Lindner. She is
a freshman from Chicago, III.
A member
of Kappa Kappa
Gamma sorority. Miss Lindner
represented the teams of Holmes
Hall-and Lambda Chi Alpha

fraternity.

Tied for first attendant were
Dorothy Bartlett and Betty
Chambers.
Miss Bartlett is a Junior front
Owensboro. She represented the
teams of Kappa Alpha Theta
sorority and Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Miss Chambers
represented
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority
and PI Kappa Alpha fraternity.
She is a sophomore from Nashville, Tenn.
Fontaine
Kinkead, a senior
from
Lexington,
representing
and Haggln B- -l was
Troupers
the second attendant.
Third attendant was Debbie
Delaney. She is a Junior from
Louisville, and represented Kappa
Delta sorority and Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity.
The Turtle Derby was won by
nicknamed
"Sam,"
'Sebastian,"
an honorary member of Alpha
Delta Pi sorority.

President's
Conference

President Oswald will hold
his last student conference at
3 o'clock this afternoon.
The
conference
will be In Room
214 of the Student Center.

Editors Win Writing Awards
Two Kernel editors, David
Ilawpe and William R.
Grant, have won awards in
the William Randolph Hearst
Foundation journalism awards
program.
Hawpe won the third place
V.

scholarship of $400 for his Atlanta series which ran In the
Kernel earlier this month. Hawpe,
a junior Journalism major, is
managing editor of the Kernel
this year and has been selected
as executive editor for next year.
He won a $100 Hearst scholarship earlier this year for his
editorial, "A Mature Look at
Athletics." The editorlul called
of sports at
for a
the University.
Last year he won a f400 Hearst
scholarship for an editorial, "A
dealing
Question Unanswered,"
with the necessity for the Board
of Trustees to clarify their stand
handbill
on the Marlatt-Mori- n
case.
Grant, a Junior Journalism major, won a $100 scholarship in the
contest for the Eastern Kentucky
series, which ran In the Kernel
during the lirst week of February.
The seiies is the result of numerous interviews in Hazard and

Washington
by a
team. Grant organized the team
and directed the woik and his
part of the series was entered.
Grant is a daily editor this
year and has been selected
for next year.
were
team members
Other
Melinda Manning. Linda Mills,
Gary Hawksworth, and Kenneth
Green.

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s it

are
The Hearst scholarships
awarded monthly from October
through April to entrees from
accredited schools of Journalism.
Hubbard Keavy. Chief of the
Los Alleles Bureau of the Associated Press, who judged the
contest, said, "I have never encountered so many good entries.
I wish I could have rated every
one in the number one spot."

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DAVID HAWI'i:

BILL OK ANT

� 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

21,

190--

Beshear, SP 'Regret'
Svara Withdrawal

f

Steve Hesliear and the Student Party candidates running
with liim in today's Student Congress elections have issued
the following statement relative to the withdrawal last week
of Jim Svara and the COUP party.
"We regret that Jim Svara and
to be effective.
the three candidates running
on the bal"Also of

with him have decided to withdraw from the Student Congress
race. We feel that positions of
such importance should not go
unchallenged or uncontested.
"We also regret that Jim Svara
failed to give full and complete
Consideration before his nomination to the duties and time required for the position of Stu-deCongress president. If he
had done so, perhaps COUP could
have found another candidate
f,or the position.
"While the election for officer
of student Congress are now
an ti lima tic, we urge students to
gome to the polls on Tuesday,
because by their vote they ran
show their interest in, and support of. Student Congress, an
organization which requires the
backing of all students in order

importance
lot Is the approval of the new
constitution. Students, we feel,
should exercise their privilege and
vote on this question. While
everyone Is not in complete
agreement on some few points in
the constitution, there is little
doubt that this new document is
an improvement over the previous one. We therefore urge students to cast a vote on Tuesday
for their Student Congress and
for the new constitution."
are
with Beshear
Running
Dave Clarke, for Vice President;
Janie Olmstead, secretary; and
Lois Kock, treasurer.
On the ballot today, In addition to the unopposed Student
Party slate of candidates, is a
vote oa the new Constitution for
the congress.

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A bicycle mishap occurs at the change point dur- lug the running of the annual Little Kentucky
Derby. Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity won the event

for the third consecutive year to keep permanent
possession of the trophy.
Kernel

photo by Sam Abell

History Professors Awarded
Coveted Hallan Book Prize
Dr. Enno E. Kraehe and Dr.
James F. Hopkins, University
history professors, were
named joint winners of the
1J61 Alice JIallam Book
II Award Thursday night. The
41 awards were announced at a
'la .Phi Alpha Theta history lion- orary dinner at the Phoenix
Hotel.

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The Winner

'

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...

Dr. Krache was honored for his
recent book, "The Contest with
the first of
Napoleon,
a
work by the UK
historian on the 19th century
Austrian statesman, Metternich.
The book was published in America by the Princeton University
Press, and In Britain by the Oxford University Press.
Dr. Hopkins was cited for
"Presidential
Candidate,
the third in the
series of "The Papers of Henry
Clay," which was published by
the UK Press.

Sebastian, the ADPi entry in the Turtle Derby, Is tftiown with the
Derby Trophy after running away with the Derby Saturday morning.
Katie Ferrrll. ADPi turtle trainer, holds the speedy animal.

University Coed Awarded
Hebrew Sludy Scholarship
The scholarship, made available by the American Friends of
the Hebrew University, allows
for 12 months of study at the
institution in Jerusalem. Tours of
Ifciacl are also included.
"With the scholarship it will
probably cost me as much as UK
lor a year." Suzanne said.
Suzanne will leave New York
City in June and return the following year. She will study He

STRAND
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SPECIAL LUNCH
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Selection change each day
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PERKINS PANCAKE HOUSE

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"HOW THE WEST
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a.ry. to 2 p.m
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"One of heB6at pictures
or our time

brew for the first four months
and enroll in psychology and sociology courses later on.
"I've had two semesters of
Hebrew here, but it has mainly
been Biblical Heuiew," Suzanne
said.
She applied for the scholarship
a pamphlet
she rethrough
ceived in her Hebrew class.
She plans to return to UK for
her senior year.

mack, Marion, Ark.; Carl Boyd,
Mt. Sterling; Glenn Graber, Ashland; and Loretta Flanders, Paris.
Harlan Birdwell, Snyder, Texas; Jane Maddox, Washington,
D. C.;.Bill Harris
nd Thomas
Carlena.
Kitchens,
Franklin;
Woliver, Totz; John Stephens,
J. H. Svara and Eugena
Russell;
and
Reed, Jr., Jeffersontown;
Robert Roach, Frankfort.
Mary Ellen Reed, Cleveland,
Paul Taylor,
Ohio;
Pineville;
Wendell Maynard, Louisa; Patricia Owens, Erlanger; Caroline
Haase, Niles, Mich., and Martha
Bell, Cynthiana.
Faculty Initiates were Dr. Walter lama n and Dr. Harry Dell.

At 7;30.nd 9:30,

TONIGHT

"Wild

"I've wanted to go to Israel since I was 12 years old,
and now this scholarship is making it all possihle," Suzanne
Ballcw, sophomore psychology major said discussing her
yjOO grant for study at Ilchrew University.

The annual award, recognizing the best book or essay, published by a I K historian during
in
the year, was established
honor of Miss Alice Hallam of.
Covington, a benefactor of the
history department.
Dr. Hopkins Is the current.
Theodore Hallam Professor of
History. The Hallam professor--shi- p
was provided by a bequest
In the will of Miss Hallam, in
honor of her father.
Delores Jean Hall, a UK graduating senior from Mayfield, was
presented the Phi Alpha Theta
award for scholarship in history.
Thirty-tw- o
UK students were
initiated into the history honorary Thursday afternoon. They
are John Johnson, Ellsa Hussey,.
Lola Mobley, N. L. Passmore,
Dean Elkins, Dorthy
Lander,
Joseph Walton, Phyllis Wall and
Jere Calmes, all of Lexington.
Arlnda Roelker, Sharon Gray,
Jacqueline Vanzant and Thelma
Cote, all of Louisvillej Jim Ham- -

d

lou IM

Stop Worrying
Bomb

Aclrau!

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

21, l!Kil- -3

Mr
-

i

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I

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'1

'

7

4

.v
The new LKD queen is Bonnie Under, a freshman from Chicago, 111.
Miss Linder, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, represented
Holmes Ilall-- 2 and Lambda C'hl Alpha fraternity.
Pin-Mat-

Susan Miller, a Junior elementary education major from Los,
Angles, Calif, and a member of
Delta Delta Delta, to Jim Bunce,
a Junior horticulture major from
Clermont and a member of Alpha Gamma Rho.
Linda McDonald, a freshman
Arts end Science major from
Ashland and a member of Kappa
Kappa Gamma, to Carroll Smith,
d
a senior
major from
Hopkinsville and a member of
Eigma Alpha Epsilon.
Ann
Breeding, a freshman
Spanish major from Miama, Fla.
and a member of Kappa Kappa
Gamma, to Mike Willett, a Junior commerce major from Lexington and a member of Eigma
Chi.
Nancy Lee Johnson, a freshfrom
man
Journalism
major
Hazard and a member cf Delta
to Harry Lee Water-fielDelta Delta,
a Junior business administration major from Clinton and
a member of Kappa Alpha Order.

CHI DELTA PHI
Newly elected ofticers of Chi
Delta Phi, women's literary honCarol Tennesson,
orary, are:
president; Trudy Mascia,
Kathy Ultton, secretary; and Suzanne Phelps
Gilliam, treasurer.
SPFECH AND HEARING CLVB
The Speech and Hearing Club
has elected officers for the 1364-6- 5
year. They are: president,
Jennie
Pope;
Nancy Hurt; secretary-treasure- r,
Dorothy Hegeman; senior counselors, Gayle Short and Meme
Simmons; and social chairman,
Carol Nation.
ASME
The student Section of the
American Society cf Mechanical
Engineers elected new officers.
They are chairman, Robert J.
Baglan; vice chairman, Thomas
H. Eskew; secretary, Kenneth E.
Trice; treasurer, Clyde W. Owen;
and student council representative, Roland G. Seigfried.-

ASK YOUR FRIENDS

WHO THE
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DixicCrcam Donut Shop
Across from Holmes Hall

5outh Lime and Euclid

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ATTEOTIOM STUDENTS!
WE WILL CARE FOR YOUR
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Guaranteed against moth

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Why go to the trouble of carrying your clothes home

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then carrying them back agcin?

CROLLEY CLEANERS
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TAKE A DONUT BREAK!

Tickets JVrSO On Sale Now At
METHODIST

photo by Clyde Willi

You're Ok at UK when yau bank with First
bank with lis
Security . . . the
convenient locations in Lexington.

Thejblch"

FRIDAY, APRIL

-- Kernel

Old South
Old South
Spindlrtop Hall Dance, Spring Formal, 9 to 1
6
Fiji Island Party
26 Musicale, Men and Women's Glee Clubs, Memorial Hall,
3:30 p.m.
April 27 Blazer Lecture, A. Hunter Dupree, Guignol Theatre, 10 a.m.
April 28 Inauguration, Dr. Oswald, Memorial Ciloseum, 2:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
April 28 Classes end at noon
Inauguration of President Oswald 2 p.m.
24
25
25

April
April
April
April
April

at the Military Ball which was
held in the Student Center Ballroom, Saturday,

Klnkcad, Betty Chambers, and Dorothy Bartlelt.

Campus Calendar

ROTC Stonsors
Marilyn Orme,. Alpha Delta PI
from Mt. Sterling, has been
named
the "Sponsor of the
Year." This award Is given annually by the Albert M. Woody
of the Arnold Air
Squadron
Society to the AFROTC Sponsor
who has made the greatest contribution to the cadet corps. The
presentation was made by Cadet
Capt. Stephen D. Johnson, Executive Officer of the Society.
Mary Gall McCall has been
honored as outstanding
senior
Army Sponsor. She Is from Dala member of Kaplas, Texrs and
pa Alpha Tlieta. This "Sponsor
of the Year" award was accepted
by Pam Smith In Miss McCall's
absence.
It was presented by
Hugh Ward, Army cadet.

WESLEY FOUNDATION
ANNUAL SPRING BANQUET

Applications Due
for Centennial
Applications
subcommittee positions are due
in by 4 p.m. today. They may be
turned In at the Student Center
Information
desk, the office of
the dean of men, or the office
cf the dean of women.
The subcommittee positions are
open to any student in the University, not just members of the
Class. Applications
Centennial
are available in the dean of men's
and the dean of women's office,
the desk of the women's residence units, and the Information
desk at the Student Center.
The subcommittee will be headed by one or two members of the
President's
Student Centennial
Committee and will handle specific programs during the Centennial year.
will
Committee appointments
te announced next year.

Miss Lindner, is shown with her court, on the back
row from the left Is Debbie Dclaney, Monlaine

v

Dial

255-431-

3

� The Best Vote
Is No Vote At All
The proverbial straw has broken
t'le back of a dilatory camel, which
only recently became able to stand
Upright.
Jim Svara has withdrawn from
the Student Congress race, and with
him he took the remaining opposition to Student Party's continued
domination of the organisation.
Following, as it does, close on the
heels of the Student Government
Party's demise, Svara's withdrawal
may have sounded the death knell
for our poor camel. Some progress
had been made this year (mere existence of a governing body would have
constituted progress of a sort). The
dynamic interchange involved in
election would have provided a sound basis for continued
progress.
The elective process ideally provides a sounding board for propped
piograms. In the heat of debate, ideas
can be synthesized given full examination. The ballot box should determine who has presented the program
most popular among voters.
There has been no debate. There
has been no synthesis of ideas. There
will be no opportunity for choice
at the ballot box.
Only a few weeks ago we were
piepared to admit that Student Con-pres- s
had a fighting chance. The Student Party had at least pumped sufficient lileblood into the body to
sustain it. And there was the promise of an election's ability to clarify
issues, and of the voters' approval and
veto.
There is only one recourse, and
it is with great reluctance that we
say this. A succession of failures, following one upon the other, in a caravan-parade
through the past few
vears, leads to the inevitable conclusion that students are not inter

on an
level, as it exists now. It now
to
remains for the administration
lend the organization what it lacks
stability. Students have never fully
accepted Congress as a governing institutionprimarily because it has
never been able to stand upright and
face the problems before it. In short,
students have little admiration, and
even less interest, in an organization
which never seems secure.
ested in

Nor does the answer lie in the
proposed revision of Student Congress' constitution. The alterations it
includes will tighten the organizational unit, but it will not delegate
new authority to the group, nor will
it erase factionalism. No
governing group will function
until it is given the authority to act in a governmental capacity
and the authority must be explicit.
The definition of this authority must
be accomplished by student leaders
themselves in recognition of the roles
played by other campus governing
groups.
President Oswald must act. He
must disband the present Congress,
call together a representative group
of student leaders from each class and
each area of interest, and begin planning a new, workable system. Only
the authority of the president's office
will bind together student leadership
in a common endeavor of this sort.
In order that the president be
made aware of the student body's
reaction to an inactive Congress, students must register a protest. This
can best be done at the ballot box.
If students refuse to vote (and certainly there is presently no compelling
reason to vote) the
part-tragi- c
elements of the situation can
be demonstrated. Dr. Oswald would
not ignore such a boycott.

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
Univebsity of Kentucky

trhool year ncrpt during holiday! and
wwk during th
Published (our limm
Subscription ntea: $1 a school year; 10 centi a copy

nam.

Sub Endicott, Editor in Chief
.Cam. Modecxi, Campu Editot
David Hawpk, Managing Editor
Associate and Doii Edit or it
Stevenson. Sandra Brock. William Grant, and Elizabeth Ward
Richard

Improper Conduct?
Yes, But Not Cassius
The U. S. Senate Subcommittee
an Antitrust and Monopoly just closed
hearings concerning whether or not
to put boxing under federal control,
and we now wonder whether it was
all worth the trouble. It seems unlikely that anyone can raise calculated mayhem to respectability, especially with boxing's cast of characters what it is.
Leading man is Cassius Clay, or
Cassius X, or Muhammed Ali, whom
the World Boxing Association (as it
so grandly calls itself) recently tried
to strip of his heavyweight title, because of what the WBA vaguely called
"improper conduct." This sport is so
sick that Clay has been correctly
proclaimed the best thing that has
happened to boxing in a long time.
Then we have surly Sonny Liston,
former heavyweight boxing
champion of the world, who lost his
title to Clay while sitting on a stool.
The WBA seems inclined to depose
Liston as a challenger because of some
trouble he had with a Denver traffic
's
cop. Circumstances surrounding
episode are obscure, but it is
said that he was doing about 80 in a
h
zone, that he had an unidentified woman with him (who was
later released), and that he threatened the policeman who stopped him.
Lurking in the background are
Frankie Carbo, Blinky Palermo, Pep

Barone, Sam Margolis, and Ash

Res-nic- k.

Carbo, who used to control boxing,
is serving 25 years sentence in a fed-

eral prison for extortion. Carbo was
linked with Liston before the monopoly subcommittee in 1960, headed by
Estes Kefauver, told Sonny to get rid
of his shady pals.
Palermo, Carbo's buddy, is appealsentence for extortion.
ing a
Pep Barone used to manage Liston. He was one of Palermo's front
men, and Sonny Liston still thinks he
brings him luck. Liston thought so
highly of Barone that he invited him
to Miami, where lie was training for
the Clay fight.
Sam Margolis, 50, pleaded guilty
in 1937 to operating a gambling house.
Since then he has been arrested on
gambling charges and for assault and
battery. Each time he was released.
What makes Margolis interesting is
that Liston gave him 225 of his 500
shares in International Promotions,
the outfit that promoted the Liston-Cla- y
fight. He supposedly got the
shares because he helped set up IP
and because Sonny likes him.
Ash Resnick is the "athletic director" of a Las Vegas gambling joint,
lie hung around Liston's training
camp and made sure everyone wore
his place's
Improper conduct?

The Decline Of Teaching: An Old Story
It's getting to be an old story in

the academic life, but the case of
Trofessor Woodrow Wilson Sayre is
St last bringing it to more general
attention.
Dr. Sayre is the assistant professor
of philosophy at Tufts University who
has been advised his contract for the
iiext academic year probably will not
be renewed; he has taught there since
1957. The reason is that, though he is
considered to have been effective in
the classroom, he has not published
enough scholarly works. The professor, who incidentally was one of the
lour amateurs in a near-tragi- c
assault
on Mt. Everest a couple of years ago,
js fighting the impending decision.
While we are not in a position to
judge the merits of this particular
case, it does reflect an emphasis on
research and publication which may
he getting out of hand. That is true
not only in the teaching profession;
the pressure is felt in medicine and
other scientific disciplines. And now
that the government is so heavily involved in research of all sorts, the
fctrt ss on research is raising important
questions of public policy us well.
No one, we take it, opposes either
research or publication as such. Apart
to knowledge,
irom contributions
tome universities believe that formal
research and the discipline of publishing findings in scholarly journals and

books may make a teacher's own
teaching more stimulating and significant for his students.
It is, rather, a matter of proportion. Many observers think that requiring a man's academic career to
depend on how much he publishes is
unfair to him, introduces an excessive
rigidity and causes a dilution of teaching. As Mr. Sayre sees it, this national tendency downgrades teaching
"by judging merit by such superficial
externals as publications, articles,
grants and fellowships." It risks putting quantity above quality.
What, after all, makes a good
teacher? Enthusiasm for the subject,
eloquence or at least ability to communicate effectively, genuine interest
in the minds of the young these are
a few characteristics. Formal research
may or may not aid a teacher; it
certainly cannot supply such individual talents where they are absent. In
Professor Sayre's words, "there is no
necessary logical connection between
the ability to publish and the ability
to teach."
If the "publish or perish" fetish can
work to the detriment of teaching, it
can also lower the quality of research,
paradoxical as that may seem. The
very necessity of publishing is bound
to mean that much research will be
undertaken which is marginal or
worthless.

Jacques Barzun, Columbia University's renowned provost, is one who
has long and forcefully argued research has been given such sacrosanct
status that it covers multitudes of
waste. It is not here a question of
whether the particular research has
any immediately evident application;
what is of concern is the proliferation
of petty, pedantic, silly projects.
With the rise of the foundations

and the Federal government, plus general affluence, there has never been so
much money to toss around on any- fhincr that ran narnr c lKelr in th - I
"
'
mantle of research. That is more likely to dissipate both the money and
the human resources than it is to add
to knowledge.
The intrusion of the Federal government is of special interest because
its money the taxpayers', that is
already finances the bulk of the nation's whole research and development effort. Among other potential
dangers, this circumstance places a
weighty additional premium on research, and that can only be at the
further expense of the art of teaching.
How a better balance might be
struck is naturally not easy to say. It
should be possible, though, for the
the
Federal government to
implications of its somewhat helter-skeltresearch activities. It should be
possible for college and university
administrators to encourage intelligent
research without making publication
the price of survival.
At least the publicity attending the
Sayre case may propel some needed
thought on a problem of growing importance. It will not serve the nation's future interest if it is permitting a decline in the quality both of
research and of education.
From Tlie Wall Street Journal

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

21, 1961- -5

So You Wanna Be A Folk Singer?

Note: In Just three
(Editor'
years. The Smothers Brothers
berome one of the most
have
popular folk singers In America
appearing on college campuses
from coast to coast, In guest appearances on television, and realbums.
cording five
They have agreed to share their
and vast knowledge
experience
.)
of folk singing with our

'py TOM
You,

and DICK SMOTHERS
too, can be a folk

Singer.

Although folk singing . is
and
difficult, super-naturpure, you can become proficient simply by following a few
short cuts.
After

all,

folk

singers

have

traditionally been people with
untrained voices who sang for
the enjoyment of their friends
and families.
The tremendous

surge of pop-

ularity of folk singing in recent

years has unfortunately led many
folk singers to become commercial. We utter loud sighs of disabout this every
illusionment
time we count our money.
First you should learn to sing.
This is an important part of
being a folk singer.
It is better if you don't know
bow to read music. Meter violations and illegitimate rhythmic
patterns are essential to good
folk singing, and besides, you'll
te making up most of your own
music.
Start oft by discovering your
voice range. Lock yourself away
Jn private in your own room,
or in the shower. Do not turn the
water on.
Open your mouth, take a deep
breath, and sing the lowest note
you can. Then, sing up the scale
to the highest note yon can reach.
This Is your range. It may be an
octave or even two, or it may be
Just three notes. If the latter,
don't despair: it makes you even
better qualified to be a folk
Singer.
Now find the center note of
your range. This is done by
counting backwards from the top
rote, or forward from the bottom note, to the center note.
Important: The center note is
your note. Start all your songs
on this note, for you can thus

sing up and down and around
it and still stay within your
range (and you will have to
learn to sing in only one key).
Boon you will become famous
for your note. It will become your
own identifying symbol. Warning: People will undoubtedly try
to steal your note from you. Protect it with your life.
Now that you have your range,
you can settle down to serious
Set aside a special
practice.
period each day to devote to
to
Don't
hesitate
practicing.
practice singing while engaged
in any daily activity, such as
walking across campus, in a
movie, or during class. This will
give you an opportunity t