xt78sf2m6z5f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt78sf2m6z5f/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1931-09-25  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1931 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1931 1931 1931-09-25 2013 true xt78sf2m6z5f section xt78sf2m6z5f I

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
UNIVERSITY

FRIDAY EDITION
SEMI-WEEKL-

Best Copy Available

KERNEL

OF

NIGHT FOOTBALL
FRESHMEN VS. MARSHALL
SATURDAY NIGHT

KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1931

VOLUME XXII

STUDENTS HEAR
U. K. PRESIDENT

AT CONVOCATION

University's New Buildings
Only Part of Expansion Plan
BY MARY ALICE SALVFRS

Executive Says University
Faces Most Serious Times
in History of School
McVEY'S APPEARANCE
FIRST THIS SEMESTER

,. ft

XWc

Students Want Jobs
Than Ever Before, Speaker Continues

More

"We have entered another school
year facing one of the most serious
time that the university ever has
faced an era of depression," were
the words of Pres. Frank L. McVey,
speaking before the student body at
a general convocation held at 10
o'clock Thursday morning In Memorial hall. Invocation was led by
the Rev. Joseph Chllllngton, pastor
of the Good Shepard church, and
music was rendered by Dr. Abner
Kelley .organist.
It was President McVey's initial
appearance before the student body
this semester, he having been de
layed from an earlier appearance
by the death of his mother.
President McVey said that he
wished that he might show all the
students exactly what they are fac
lng at the beginning of this school
year. In the entire history of the
school there never have been as
many students looking for jobs as
there are this year, he stated.
"We need sympathy as well as
help In facing such a serious situa
tlon." he said, "and this situation
is not of the Victorian age nor of
some previous age, but of an age
in which there must be some ad'
Justment of difficulties. He em
phasized the fact that prices have
been lowered prodigiously and also
the fact that the money standard
of numerous countries has dropped
to lowest levels. "This is a great
time for reconstruction," he added,
"if people will furnish the will and

rV

N

THOMAS L. RILEY
Thomas L. Riley a recent grad
uate of the university, has accepted
a position as announcer for Station
WFBE, the; Scrlpps-HowaSta
tlon in Cincinnati.
This station
recently was acquired by the organization, and will form the key
station of a chain belonging to
the news syndicate. Mr. Riley, who
is acting as master of ceremonies
at the local radio show, will nan
die the dramatic material for the
Cincinnati station. He was dram
atic editor of The Kernel for seV'
era! years, director of the Strollers
last year, and was an announcer
for the university extension stu
dlos for WHAS, Louisville. He is
a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha
rd

fraternity.

COMPLETE RADIO

determination.
The speaker said that In such an PROGRAM LISTED
era one should quickly realize the
value of an education.
Some students, he said, consider their In- Addresses, Music, and Vocal
structors heartless creatures and
Selections Planned for
some students do not know the
Week of September 28
names of their Instructors.
Many
waste their time In college and
awaken to the fact when it Is too PROMINENT MEN SPEAK
late for any remedy. President
Addresses by prominent men in
McVey gave several phases of college studies with which a student their respective fields, music by the
should be well acquainted.
First Blue and White orchestra, a string
everyone should know something of quartet, and an organization renhis mother-tongu- e,
for expression is dering a program known as Mounmore Important In this age than tain Melodies, make up the radio
ever before. Second, one should program for the week of September
know something of the history of 28 to October 3 from the university
his government and of the many extension studios of station WHAS,
government
problems
of today. Louisville.
rnira, one should know how to use Talks by Prof. Richard S. Allen,
books in any field of study. Fourth. head of the department of anatomy
something of science should be and physiology, J. W. Whitehouse,
studied In order to discover its pro- state leader in Junior Club work,
cedure and Just what it is trying Prof. J. B. Kelley, of the depart
to do. Fifth, every student should ment of agricultural engineering
be well versed In tolerance, courtesy, and Lieut Howard Criswell, In
and courage. Last, but not least, structor of military science and
one should have a large amount of coach of the men's rifle team, feaknowledge in that great field re ture the program for the week.
liglon. "An education Is an awakDance music by the Blue ana
ening process", he continued, "and White orchestra will be heard only
it should vitalize the mind in such on Tuesday at 1 p. m. for the week
a manner that It can seize the sit- -. as no program will be presented
uation and deal with it accordingly. on Thursday, the other regular day
It also enables the mind to cope for the orchestra to broadcast.
vigorously and skillfully with probThe program follows:
Monday, September 28
lems that confront It."
"Canning
' President McVey expressed his
12:45 to 1:00 p. m.
wish that the purpose enveloped in meats," Florence Imlay, field agent
me nunas or the student on the in home economics; "The County
first day of school a purpose com- Agent and Marketing," H. F. Link,
prised of high and noble ideals
assistant state agent, extension di(Continued on Page Six)
vision.
1:00 to

MEETING TO OPEN

FOR EDUCATORS

1W30

n. m.

"Your Foods

and What They Do for You, No. 1,"
Richard S. Allen, head of the department of anatomy and physiology.

Tuesday, September 29
2:45 to 1:00 p. m. "The County
Community De
Agent's Part
Second Annual Convention of velopment," I. In Graddy, assistant
C.
Central Kentucky' Associa state agent, extension division; "Retion to lie Held at Rich arrange Your Fields and Save La
bor," G. B. Byers, assistant in farm
mond, October 2-- 3
organization and management.
1:00 to 1:15 p. m. The Blue and
The second annual meeting of
the Central Kentucky Education as- White orchestra. m. "The Current
1:15 to 1:30 p.
sociation will be held Friday and
Z.
Saturday, October 2, 3, at Rich- Business 'Situation," by Dr. ofE.ecomond. H. C. Burnette, Nlcholas-vlll- e, Palmer, associate professor
president of the association, nomics.
Wednesday, September 30
will open the program with an ad12:45 to 1:00 p. m. "The County
dress on "Health Education," at
(Continued on Page Six)
9:30 Friday morning.
Other speakers Friday morning
will be J. W. Bradner, president
of .the Kentucky State Board of
Health, and Dr. D. Oberteuffer, supervisor of health and physical edAll Present Members of For
ucation, of Ohio.
ensic Team Requested
The association is divided into two
groups, elementary and high school.
to Re Present
The separate groups will hold talks
and round table discussions In the
Tryouts for vacant positions on
morning and in the afternoon on the university debating team will
problems of health and physical ed- be held at 7:30 tonight in room 231,
ucation In Kentucky. In the eve-ri- McVey hall. All students interestthey will Join at 7:30 o'clock, In ed in debate work are urged by
the college gymnasium, where they Prof. W. R. Sutherland to attend
will witness a health and physical the meeting. No previous preparaeducation demonstration.
places being
tion is necessary,
On Saturday morning at 9:30 awarded according to abilities in
o'clock, the program will open for extemporantous presentation of ma
the dedication of the Weaver health terial which will be announced pri
building. The program will Include or to the tryouts.
talks by Dr. Jay B. Nash, professor
All present members of the de
of education at New York univerbating squad are requested to atsity, and Dr. W. A. Sutton, supertend also, and Professor Sutherland,
intendent of schools, Atlanta, Geor- will discuss plans for the coming
gia. Saturday afternoon at 2:30 season.
o'clock, the group will attend a
The debate program for this year
football game between Eastern and will be as extensive as It has been
Sue Bennett College. AU O. K. E. in the past. The beginning of the
A. memben will be admitted free schedule will consist of a number
on presentation of membership of Intramural debate on the un
card.
M- employment Insurance Issue.
(

Tryouts for Debaters
Will Be Held Tonight

ng

ELECTION ERROR
TO BE CORRECTED

department's
equipment to Frankfort has been utilized
road-testi-

to advantage.
A new boiler room
has been constructed with equipment capable of heating both this
building and the new library. The
old boiler was removed
and that
space renovated and used for a new
physics laboratory.
The part of Alumni hall which is
used, and has been used for some
ten j cars as a gymnasium for girls
also has been Improved. In the
basement new partitions have been
erected and new windows put in. A
modern shower bath has been installed and a locker room outfitted
in the most convenient way possible; also a new rest room and space
to be used for a recreation room
or lounge. On the first floor twelve
new windows have been put In for

better ventilation, and the

entire

roof has been realigned, put in good
shape, and painted.
On the first floor of White hall
improvements have been made also.
The partition between classroom
101 and the room formerly used as
a botany library was taken out, and
the whole space made Into a large
laboratory. The room formerly used
as a laboratory was remodeled and
made into a lecture room with a
seating capacity of 125.
One of the greatest of the
on Page Six)

Cast for Guignol's
First Production of

Year Announced
Katherine Davis, Laurence
Kahn Selected by Director
for Leading Roles
Heading a cast "far superior to
those of previous years Katherine
Davis, Lexington,
and Lawrence
Kahn, Lexington, selected from
persons trying out
more than 200
for roles In the Gulgnol theater's
production, "Let Us Be Gay," will
play the leading parts of "Kitty,"
and "Bob" when the university's
dramatic season gets under way
the week of October 26. Final selection of the troupe of 12 was made
Tuesday by Frank Fowler, director,
following the tryout elimination.
Protixsor Fowler, In qualifying
the cast's excellence, also predicted
that the play will be one of the best
of the year. The supporting cast
will Include Mrs. Minna Bloomfleld,
Lexington, in the part of "Madge;"
Iris Hurting, Chicago, "Perkins';
Prof. R. D. Mclntyre, Lexington,
"Townley"; Hugh McGuire, "Wallace"; Bradley Stevenson, Coving
ton, "Bruce"; Puke Joimson, Mont- clair, N. J., "Whitman"; Alfred
Andrews, Lexington,
"Struthers";
Woodson Knight, "Williams"; and
Mrs. W. L. Sulyers, Lexington,
Professor
Fowler
"Bouccicault."
will assign the part of "Dlerdre"

next Friday night.

APPEARS

student

publication of the University High
school, made its luitiul appearance
yesterday under the editorial management of Alice Dougherty, sister
of The Kernel's editor.
The other
members of the stuff are Virginia
Robinson, associate editor; Tippy
Calhoun, literary and feature editor; Mary L. Dunn, society editor;
Carroll Fisher, sports editor; Jane
Turner, excliange editor; and Fred
Pugazzl, Joke editor.
Ming Grace
Anderson is the faculty advisor.

3

WILLIAM ARDERY CHOSEN
FALL PLEDGING
DIRECTOR OF STROLLERS EXERCISES CLOSE

BY U. OF K. BOARD

William Ardery, senior In the
College of Arts and Sciences and
member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity,
yesterday
afternoon was
elected director of Strollers, student
dramatic organization, to serve during the coming year. The other
were
officers of the organization
elected at a meeting last spring.
Members of the organization decided at the meeting to produce a
play this fall and a revue next
spring. It was also decided that
preparatory work for the annual
should begin under
Stroller
the direction of the new director
and a committee appointed by him.
The play which will be used in
will be chosen In the
the
near future, It was announcel for
participation In the
a fee
pf 75 cents will be charged each
students.
was taken in
Mr. Ardery
Strollers last spring after his work
as a dialoglcian on the revue which
was produced by the organizatidi at
Woodland auditorium under the direction of T. L. Riley. Mr. Ardery Is
associate editor of The Kernel, a
member of Phi Mu Alpha, honorary
The board fills all vacancies.
At the meeting Tuesday, one music fraternity, president of the
atKentucky
Intercollegiate
Press
member of the board also called
tention to the fact that because she Association,' and an assistant anupon the work of a nouncer for the university exten- has entered
graduate student, the position of
editor of The Kernel, held by Miss
Virginia Dougherty, is also automatically vacant and that at the
meeting on Wednesday, September
30, steps should be taken to appoint
her successor.
that brought
The circumstance
about his situation affecting the Position of Alumni Member
Kentuckian was that at the time
of Board Will Be Filled by
the editor and the business man
Governor from Group Seager for the Kentuckian offered
lected at Meeting
their petitions to the Junior class
last March, both were below stand
Nominations to the position of
ing for the previous semester. Since
the rules of the university require alumni member of the board of
that no students shall fill such po- trustees of the university were ansitions who are below a standing of nounced at a meeting of that body
The per1, the semester previous, the board held Tuesday afternoon.
felt that the oversight should be son elected will assume office Jancured now, before the officers have uary 1, when the term of office of
taken up seriously the work of pub E. B. Webb, present alumni memlishing the annual.
The board ber, expires.
Those nominated are: E. B. Webb,
frankly admits that an oversight
was made when it neglected, at the Cliff Thompson, Dr. George H. Wilson, I. J. Miller, L. K. Frankel all
time of application, to ascertain
whether the petitioners were eli- of Lexington, and W. H. Grady,
Louisville.
gible for election.
Alumni members entitled to vote
Upon motion, it was decided to
ask for applications from such eli- will do so by mail. All ballots must
gible students as desire the position be returned to Dr. Wellington Patof editor of the Kernel, and that rick before the December meeting
these applications, accompanied by of the board. The three receiving
the necessary eligibility certificates, the highest number of votes will
be presented to the governor of the
(Continued on Page Six)
state for final selection.
According to law, the governor of
the state appoints one of the three
nominated to him by the alumni
voters. The law also provides that
all voting must be done by mail
only and on ballots provided by the
board of trustees.
Ballots are to
University Pep Organization be sent to the qualified voters by
1, Doctor Patrick
To Have First Pep Meeting October case two or more announcIn
members
Maryville ed. the winner will be decided by
Night Before
tie,
Game
lot. Only alumni members who
are citizens of Kentucky are perfirst pep meeting of the year mitted to hold the position.
The
will be held at the Kentucky theater at 10:30 o'clock, Friday, Octo
ber 2, the night before the Mary
ville game as a part of the theater
party given for the benefit of the
SuKy band fund, It was decided at
a meeting of SuKy circle Tuesday Session Will Mark First Step
Cheer leaders will be
afternoon.
in Program to Unify
selected, the feature to be shown
Cadet Groups
on Saturday will be released at this
performance, the band will play
Major Owen R. Meredith has anand speakers will give. pep talks to nounced thatall men who are takKentucky football fans at the
the
ing the advanced military science
initial session.
course are
The night before every home foot- at a meetingexpected to be present
McVey
ball game the Kentucky theater hall, called tonight in 111 purpose
will present a midnight show be- of discussing for the double
the work of the pres
ginning at 10:30 p. m. The reguent year and of looking
lar Saturday show will be shown material for officers. The over the
and proceeds from the performance will be held at 7:15 p. m. meeting
will be donated to SuKy circle to
"It Is urgent that every
be used to send the band on football course man be present," advanced
said Major
trips. Mr. Herman Bamberger, di- Meredith,
"as
rector of the theater, has loaned only meeting ofthis probably be the
the kind this year."
the theater to SuKy for that purIt is the desire of Major Meredith
pose.
and his staff to organize the cadet
Committees were appointed at the officers as early as possible into a
Tuesday meeting to take charge of
t,
cooperating group. Tothe refreshment sales at the foot- nights' meeting is the initial step
ball games and plans were formu- in this direction.
lated to donate a cup to the fraFaculty members and parents of
ternity and sorority whose tryOuts advanced course students are corfor the circle sell the greatest dially invited to be present at the
amount at the games. The con- meeting.
test will terminate at the close of
the basketball season. Concessions
at the first
were also awarded
meeting.
Ted Cassldy Is president of the
organization, Ben LeRoy Is
The Board of Student Publicaand Mary Elizabeth Price tions of the University of Kenis secretary.
tucky hereby calls for applications for the positions of editor
and business manager of the
Kentuckian for the session ending 1932, and for the
of the Kentucky Kernel
These applications are to be
The nt'W agricultural engineering
experiment station addressed to Clarence R. Y eager,
building on the
farm is now open for classes. This secretary of the Board of Stubuilding was erected at a cost of dent Publications, and left either
with him or with Prof. Enoch
$75,000, which was appropriated by
Grehan, department of journalthe last legislature.
ism, by not luter than
In the new building are offices day noon, September 30. Wednesfor the agricultural engineering secThe suld petitioners are Intion, two classrooms, a drawing
structed to include in their aproom ,a farm machinery laboratory,
plications a full statement of
a shop, a motor testing laboratory,
their qualifications for the poa tractor luboratory, one luboratory
sitions here Indicated, and acdevoted to agricultural entomology,
companied by a certified record
and the offices of Prof. J. B. Kelley of
their scholastic standing for
of the section of agricultural engi
the previous semester by the
neering, Prof. Howard Matson, in
registrar of the university.
structor In agricultural engineering,
(Signed)
and Prof. Earl Welch, field agent
Student Board of Publications
This structure Is the newest addi
Clarence R. Yeager,
tion to the university campus. It
soul Treas.
was first opened tn classes Septem
ber 10.

The university is proud of its new - i
buildings. But their construction Is
Group
not the only sign of progress in the Student Publications
VWHI Meet in McVey
Improvement of the physical makeup of the university.
Hall Wednesday
During the pnst year an extensive
program of remodeling and reconTO CHOOSE EDITORS,
ditioning of old buildings has been
BUSINESS MANAGER
carried on by the department of
buildings and grounds. It has as Its
of Organization Will
object the utilization of space the By-LaBe Amended; Applicamoving out of old and possibly use
less equipment to give place to a
tions Are Asked
new and more modern arrangement
designed to meet the constantly In
Because of a technical oversight
creasing needs of a growing uni- in the election last March of the
process which is editor and the business manager of
versity. It Is a
constantly moving one which goes the 1932 Kentuckian, student anon about us possibly without at- nual, the board of student publicatracting much notice, but one which tions, which has complete control of
Is
In its results; for all such matters, at a meeting held
space comes at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon dewith new available
greater opportunity for expansion cided to declare both offices va
in each field, and with expansion cant and call for petitions from eli
comes more of that broadening of gible students desiring to offer them.
our field of knowledge which is the Petitions must be in the hands of
real object of the university.
Clarence Yaeger, secretary of the
Nowhere is this process better il- board, not later than 12 o'clock
lustrated than in the Agriculture noon, Wednesday, September 30.

building, where extensive rearrangement has been made. The basement space left by the removal of
the dairy department to its new
building last year has been made
Into a foods laboratory and balance
room for precision instruments. The
place has been completely
overhauled and plastered, with a partition to cut off the room from the
boiler room, and with plate glass
construction for the protection of
delicate instruments. On the first
floor the large laboratory has been
rearranged, with the laboratory
furniture reworked to better advantage, and soma new equipment added.
Laboratories on the second
floor have been rearranged also, so
that the home economics department is now in better condition
than ever before.
In the Civil Engineering
and
Physics building the space left by
the removal of the State Highway

NEW SERIES. NUMBER

-

FOR SORORITIES

t.

Nine Sororities Announce List
of New Members for

First Semester

t

i

New Rules of
Council Followed by
Organizations
Pan-Hellen-

try-ou- ts

try-ou-

WOMEN ARE NOTIFIED
AT PATTERSON HALL

Informal pledging exercises last
night closed the fall rushing period for the various sororities on the
campus. All women students to be
pledged this semester wwp nntlflort
at Patterson hall after a day of ab
solute silence between them and
their upperclass mates.
The rules sponsored by the Women's Pan Hpllenir CnuncW nm.
vlded that all bids were to be In
the office of the dean of women
last night and the aspirants were

ts

try-ou- ts

slon studios of radiophone WHAS officially notified from that office.
The list of pledges announced by
As a member of the university debating team last year he was the sororities are:
Alpha Delta Theta;
chosen as one of the forensic reEvelyn Metz, Lexington, Ky.
presentatives for the debate with
Dorothy Martin, Lexington.
Cambridge University.
Frances Fitzgerald, Lexington.
Helen Lacy, Lexington.
Dorothy Lykins, Lexington.
Isabel Norman, Lexington.
Barbara Bauman, New Haven,
Conn.
Marcella Payne, Eubank, Ky.
Marjorie
Powell, Long Island,
Dedication of New Building New York.
Alice Francis, Newport, Ky.
to Feature November
Fern Osborne, Ashland, Ky.
Anne Hope Rupley, Perryville,
Issue of Magazine
Delta Delta Delta
Virginia Lee Pulliam, Leitchfleld.
EXERCISES OCTOBER 23 Mary
Linn, Paducah.
Ruth Rogers, Paducah.
The keynote of the next issue of
Poily Lee, Louisville.
Letters, university literary publicaHelen G. Morrison, Louisville.
Margaret Walker, Lexington.
tion, will be the dedication of the
Mary Lyter Robinson, Carrollton.
new university library. Dedicatory
Louise Johnson, Lexington.
exercises will be held on October 23
Mary Stuart Blackwell, Hender
and the next issue, which will be son.
Susan Whitehouse.
off the press about the first week
Cincinnati.
in November, will carry many arti- Ohio.
Nancy Reynolds, Muskogee, Oklacles on the architectural features of homa.
the structure.
Mary Jo Armstrong, New Smyrna,
The dedication speech of John Florida.
two
Findley will be reproduced and
Florence Forquer, New Castle.
Ann Meyers Ross, Berry.
sketches of the building by Rita
Evelyn Merrell, Lexington.
Mount agraduate of the university
Ann Hilton Carter, Lexington.
department of art, will be produced.
r,
(Continued on Page Six)
Letters, according to Prof. E. F.
who is in charge of the publication, might well be preserved as
a souvenir of the dedication.
The usual features of the magazine will Include an article by Mrs.
Frank L. McVey on the achievements of Miss Ellen Churchill Sem-pi- e,
the first woman to receive the
Doctor of Laws degree from the uni- Pictures for 1932 Kentuckian
versity. Miss Semple Is a geogra-phi- st
Will Be Taken from Sepof international repute and
tember 28 to October 5 by
recently gave the school her library
Cincinnati Firm
a gold medal awarded her by
and
the National Geographic society In
Photographs for the 1932 Kentucrecognition of her work.
must
The usual articles on political, kian, university annual, period be ar
Moneconomic, and literary subjects ranged for during the
day, September 28 to Monday, Octo
will be continued. The poetry section of Letters, with such contrib- ber 5, according to an announceutors as Cale Young Rice, famous ment by Frank Stone, acting ediKentucky poet, and George Russell, tor. A representative of Young and
better known to readers as A. E., Carl, Cincinnati photographers, will
also will be continued. George Rus- be in the basement of the men's
beginning
Monday
sell, who occupies a commanding gymnasium
Seniors may appear for
position In the field of poetry, paid morning.
high tribute to the university pub- photographs at any time during the
any university
lication when Interviewed last year period. Although
students whose pictures will appear
while a visitor at the university.
may apply for
Miss Elizabeth Maddox Roberts, In the annual
Monday, specified days haye
a contributor to Letters, received
second prize in the O. Henry Memo- been set aside for members of frarial Award for her story that ap- ternity and sorority groups. Offi
peared in a last year's issue entitl- cial days for the organizations are:
28, Alpha
Monday, September
ed "The Sacrifice of the Maidens."
Other stories by Miss Maddox In- Delta Theta, Alpha Gamma Delta,
Sigclude the best seller, "The Great Alpha Gamma Rho, and Alpha
Meadows," which was recently film- ma Phi.
Tuesday, September 29: Alpha Xi
ed in Hollywood. Miss Maddox is a
Delta, Chi Omega, Alpha Tau Omeresident of Springfield.
Plans for a subscription campaign ga, and Campus Club.
Wednesday. September 30: Delta
are being formulated and class
rooms are to be canvassed in order Delta Delta. Delta Zeta, Delta Chi,
to present the plan to university and Delta Tau Delta.1 :
October
Kappa Delstudents. The magazine is publish- ta,Thursday, Kappa Gamma, Kappa
Kappa
ed to encourage literary effort Alpha,
and Kappa Sigma.
among Kentuckians and to encourFriday, October 2: Zeta Tau Alage discussion among local writers,
pha,
Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa
and as such a publication deserves Alpha,LambdaPhi Delta
and
support from university
students Saturday, October 3: Theta.
Phi
and the Intelligentsia throughout Kappa, Phi Psi Phi, Sigma Sigma
Alpha
the state, according to Dr. Farqu-ha- r. Ep.silon, and Sigma
Beta Xi.
Monday, October 5: Sigma Nu.
Voluntary subscriptions can be
given to Dr. Farquhar in his office Sigma Chi. Tau Epsilon PI, and
Triangle.
in McVey hall at any time before
the beginning of the regular campaign, according to an announcement.
A blank which may be used for
subscription will be found on an
inside page of this issue of The
Kernel.
Sinma Delta Chi. men's professional journalistic fraternity, meeting at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon
in the Journalism dopurtment, elected James Rundoll as advertising
manager for the Kampus
durThe entries of the university ex- ing the current year. It Kat
periment farm in the stock shows cided that the first issue was deof
at the Kentucky State Fair last publication will be published the
for
week were very successful.
the Washington und Lee football
Among the awards taken by the game. October 10.
cattle of the experiment stution
Pluns were made for the letting
farm were: the grand champion of a contract for the sale of the
steer, the reserve grand champion Kampus Kat to Theta Sigma Phi,
steer, the first prize Angus calf; women's Journalistic fraternity, on
the first prize steer herd, second a 20 per cent profit basis. The moprize shorthorn calf, the becoud tion that any students desiring emprize shorthorn herd, and every ployment be allowed to sell copies
first prize for cross breeds.
on such a basis was passed by the
The two foremost steers of the organization. Information concern
Aberdeen-Angus,
experiment station are
ing such employment will be given
full brothers. They are Jock by any of the officer of the fraWaverly, the grand champion ternity or by the faculty advisor,
and
and the reserve grand champion, Prof. Victor R. Portmann, of the
respectively.
journalism department.

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Bill Tilden Tells

tunity of being passed by his opponent before he could recover.
The university tennis squad had
I npardonahle Sin
a short session of excellent coachThe unpardonable sin in tennis,
ing Tuesday afternoon under the the squad was told, Is the doubles
tutelage of "Big Bill" Tilden. The fault. It is the sign of a conceited
point away
who
famous tennis star was brought to player game isorgiving a
According to
so.
courts by every
university
tennis
the
be no
service
Coach Downing primarily as an aid Tildrn, the to permitshouldserver to
the
to his tennis material, but it was harder than
or
out
only a short time after his candi- place about oneserves of three
play.
dates had assembled on the bleach- four of his first a poor Into
bounce, the
In the case of
ers to listen to the star that stuadvised to "pray
dents began to drift over to listen tennis men were try to shovel
it
also, and in ten minutes a hundred to Heaven and were
warned by
observers were watching the strokes back." But, they
and listening Intently to the com- the veteran in mast iscases the the
poor bounce
due to
ments of Tilden.
player's watching his girl In the
Borrowing a racket from one of bleachers or thinking of the crowds
the players, "Big Bill" demonstrated on the sidelines and thus taking his
his strokes and commented on their eye off the ball.
"Tennis," he said, "Is
execution.
The chop stroke should be intera defensive game played with an spersed with the drive to be the
offensive attitude." He explained most effective, but the player must
that the player must wait his op- not think drive and play the chop,
portunity before rushing the ball Tilden said. He illustrated this by
to determine the point.
going through the contortionist-lik- e
When asked the requirements to antics of the player who attempts
play the ball from the shoulder on such a play. "Niles told me when
the back hand, he Informed his he came over, 'Well, you will never
questioner that "prayers and medi- make a player with both a chop and
tation" were required. "Never play a drive.
Big Bill" smiled as he
above the shoulder or below the repeated his reply of "Oh, Yeah I"
"Unless one and then paused to light another
knees," he cautioned.
is lazy he can easily place his waist cigarette.
where his knees were," he stated,
In the above manner he answerand gracefully executed a back ed the questions that were shot at
hand drive In a crouching position, him from all angles for nearly an
his long body lowered so that his hour. Then, taking out his watch
waist was even below the space pre- and noting the time, he remarked
viously occupied by his knees.
that he "had to go home and get
In illustrating the back hand some supper," and tossing the borrowed racket back to its proud owndrive, he emphasized the
and the stiff straight wrist. er, he headed back to his car, folHowever, he warned his listeners lowed by a throng of admiring stuagainst the "swan stunt" and show- dents.
His parting shot to his companed them that by throwing out his
chest and extending his left arm ion, Bobhy Sellers, was that he
Into an amusing grandstand pose, "would probably hang himself on
the player was allowing the oppor the backstop Wednesday afternoon.
By JOHN M. KANE

ed

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