xt7tdz03090b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7tdz03090b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1935-04-26  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 26, 1935 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 26, 1935 1935 1935-04-26 2013 true xt7tdz03090b section xt7tdz03090b Best Copy Available

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

FRIDAY EDITION
KERNEL

SEMI-WEEKL-

UNIVERSITY
VOL. XXV.

MAY QUEEN POST

Daily Meetings Are Held at
Memorial Hall, Henry
Clay High School,
Men's Gym

Election Will Re Held Monday
On Main Floor of Administration building and

ROTC

EIGHT PETITIONS

ARE FILED FOR

Regiment

Will Hold Parade

Present 'Elijah'

Dicker'hall

A regimental parade will be
held this afternoon from 4 to
The annual high school music
5 p m. on Stoll field with all
contests, sponsored by the ExtenROTC companies participating.
sion Department of the University,
Cadets will assemble in the
began Wednesday, April 24, with
area north of Frazee hall. First
the vocal divisions. Following the
call will be given at 3:53 and
procedure Inaugurated last year,
the regiment will move to Stoll
the contestants were rated accordfield. At 4 p. m., assembly will
ing to merit rather than granting
be given and at 4:10 adjutant's
first honor to one group. Because
of the large number of contestants, call will be made. Cadets will
wear regulation white uniform
the meetings are held daily at Henwith white shirt.
ry Clay High school, Memorial hall,
Other dates for regimental
and the Men's gymnasium.
parades, unless otherwise indiThe judges for all the contests cated, will be May 10, 13, 20, and
are: Vocal Joseph A. Leeder, diField Day May 22. The Univerrector Ohio State University School
sity of Kentucky band will
Music; Ernset O. Hessler, direcof
march with the regiment.
tor of music In Cincinnati Public
schools, and Barre Hill, widely
known baritone concert and opera
Ralph E. KERNEL EDITOR
singer. Instrumental
Rush, director of Music at the
Heights
High school,
Cleveland
Cleveland, Ohio; Ernest Williams,
of the Williams School of Music,
Brooklyn, N. Y., and William C.
Bell, of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. Piano Dwlght An- New Head Intends to Uphold
Policy of the Past and
derson, of the University of LouisKeep Paper on Preville. Prof. R. D. Mclntyre, of the
University, Russell E. Bridges, and
sent Level
James A. Caywood will act as
chairmen at the various sessions of STAFF MEETING MONDAY

PETITIONS DUE IN
DEAN JONES' OFFICE
Eight Sororities and One
dependent Group Enter Nominees

festival.

Arthur Smith, Plcadome

High

George Duncan. Russell-vill- e,
and William Ault, Henry Clay
High school, were rated as superior In the baritone solo division
held Wednesday morning. No superior rating was given In the Mezzo
soprano solo.
Dawes Thompson, University-Hig- h
school, Jesse Mountjoy, Henry
Clay High school, Roy Sheetz,
8helbyville, and John O'Dea, Louisville Male High school, were given the superior rating In the tenor
solo. Superior rating was also given to Florence Kaiser Ormsby Village; Betsy Markwell, Plcadome
e,
High school, and Alma Reese,
In the soprano solo.
The following high school students were rated as superior In the
bass solo: Douglas Wilson, Paris,
and David Hlghbaugh, Franklin.
Virginia Marshall, Louisville Girls
High school, was given the highest
rating In the alto solo.
Girls' trios from Augusta, Highlands, Bellevue, Hopklnsville, and
Plnevllle were the winners of the
superior rating. Superior rating was
also given to Ormsby Village and
Owensboro In the male quartette
division. Only one superior rating
was awarded in the vocal mixed
quartette division and that went to
Bellevue.
Wednesday afternoon the contestants who had achieved a rating
of first or superior In the contests
gave a concert In the Alumni gymnasium. Following the close of
Wednesday's program, the visitors
were guests of Pres. and Mrs. Frank
L. McVey at a tea at their home,
Maxwell Place."
Last night the visiting musicians
were guests at a production of
cantata,
Mendelssohn's
"Elijah," given in the Men's gymnasium under the direction of Prof.
Carl Lampert, head of the University Music Department, with the
Mens and Women's Glee clubs and
the University Philharmonic orschool;

n;

Bell-evu-

famous

chestra participating.
In the boys' glee club division
held Thursday there were no contestants to receive the highest rating, or excellent. Excellent rating
In the boys' glee club, division two,
was given to Frankfort, MaysviUe,
Georgetown and Bellevue
e,
Berea High school, Carlisle, Owen-to- n
University High and
were rated as superior In the
Pica-dom-

girls' glee club In division two. No
contestants were rated as superior.
In the mixed glee club, division
three, Mayslick was ranked as superior. The following schools received the rating of excellent: Augusta. Midway. Morehead Training
school and Munfordsvllle.
Superior was given to Crescent
Springs, St. Catherine Academy
and Lancaster In the girls' glee club
of division three. Midway, Athens,
LaGrange, Mayslick, Augusta, Sulphur and Newcastle were ranked as
excellent.
No contestant In the mixed glee
club contest of division two was

granted the superior rating; however Frankfort, Carlisle, Plcadome,
University High and Bellevue were
rated as excellent.
In the mixed glee club, division
one, excellent rating was given to
nanvllla and Henry Clay High
school Harlan. Manual High school
of Louisville and Male Hign scnoo
of Louisville were given tne nign.
est rating In the boys' glee club con
in division one.
The following schools received
the superior rating In the girls'
glee club contest of division one:
Atherton Hlgn scnooi ox mhiibvuw,
Danville. Highlands High school of
Fort Thomas, and Shawnee junior

tit

rage rour;

C.
Norman
Garling, recently
elected
of The Ken
tucky Kernel, has named his as1935-3sistants for
the appointments ot become effective immediately. There will be a meeting of
the entire staff In room 50 of Mc
Vey hall, Monday, April 29, at 3
p. m.
The staff Is as follows: manag
ing editor, Frank Borries; assistant
managing editor. Sag Kash; associate editors; Dick Boyd and Jay
Lucian;
assistant editors, John
Christie and Delmar Adams; literary editor, Dorothy Whalen; assist
ant literary editor, Lucy Jean An
exchange
derson;
editor, Bettle
Bos worth; society editor, Nancy
Becker; assistant society editor,
Elizabeth Ann Kriegel; news edi
tor, Tom Atkins; assistant news ed
itors, Dave Salyers, John Darnell,
C. T. Hertsch, and Dot Wunder-licfeature editor, Belmont Ram
sey; sports editor, Joseph W. Qulnn.
The Kernel has maintained Its
moto, "Here shall the Kernel all
students rights maintain." It is
the desire of the staff to conduct
your paper in a credible manner,
and deserve again the title of the
best college paper In Kentucky.
It is compulsory that all staff
members attend a brief meeting In
Room 50, McVey hall, next Mon
day. If it Is Impossible to attend,
send an excuse,
revised, and new bosses assigned.
editor-ln-chl-

Phi Beta, and

ef

nt

staff.

BARRON SPEAKS
TO ENGINEERS
Instructor Gives Illustrated
Lecture Depicting the Development in Domestic

Ar-

chitecture
An Illustrated lecture on "New
Materials and Methods of Construction as Employed In the Demonstration House of the Century of

Progress Exposition"
by Joseph

was delivered

Jwtoto

Y.M.C.A. TO HOLD
i

convocation of students and faculty of the Engineering College In
Memorial haU Wednesday morning.
The Century of Progress demonstration houses brought together
two new innovations; first, in the
of
appearance and employment
synthetic building materials, many
were used which were formerly
considered as Industrial waste, and
second In the employment of radical systems of construction.
For his Illustrations, Mr. Barron
drew upon his unique collection of
photographs of the fair. During
he made reg
the winter of 1932-3ular trips over the
photographically recording the progress, especially that seen In the
demonstration houses.
3,

The annual retreat of the state
Y. M. C. A. cabinets will be held
at Camp Daniel Boone April 26, 27,
and 28.
George Bailey, president of the
State Student Y. M. C. A., a former
student at Morehead State Teachers college, and now a law student
at the University, will preside and
have a part on the program. Other
local men on the program Include
Bart Peak, director of the University Y. M. C. A., and Wilbur Wilson, (Written Exclusively for The As- assistant pastor of the First Methsoclatlon of College Editors)
odist church.
In the early spring of 1917 a GerThe following schools will be rep- - man corporal and a British lieu- resented: University of Kentuckky, ; tenant lay directly opposite one
Eastern, Union, 'other In trenches on the petrified
Morehead, Centre, Pikevllle college, battlefield of Ypres. Eighteen years
and Sue Bennett college. William later corporal and lieutenant faced
Bryan, Leslie Scott, George Bailey, each other across diplomatic tables
Gordon Galther, Everett Stevenson In Berlin: Hitler, dictator of
Germans, and Captain Anand Bart Peak will represent the
University.
thony Eden, British Lord Privy
E. S. Lotspelch, state secretary Seal.
Throwing over the Treaty of Verof the Y. M. C. A. will have charge
sailles with a proclamation, Hitler
of the retreat.
had ordered military conscription
and demanded economic union with
Wednesday
Austria, Inclusion In the Reich of
areas of
Hop Held April 24 German-speakin- g an air force equal Czechoto Britslovakia,
ain and France, an army to cope
Many High School Delegates with Russia's and a navy of 400,000
fair-groun-

VALLEE'S BAND

1

!-

-

IN ALUMNI GYM

-

Jar re Hill, of Chicago Civic
Opera, One of Guest Artists on Program

Special Rates Open to Students for One Day; Tickets on Sale at Kernel
Office, April 30

The Men and Women's Glee clubs
of the University, under the direction of Prof. Carl A. Lampert, head
of the University Music department,
presented "Elijah", a contata by
Mendelssohn,
last night In the
Men's gymnasium.
Soloists on the program with Mr.
Hill included Miss Ruth Hcubach
Best, soprano,
Cincinnati; Mrs.
Leon
Urbach,
contralto, Paris,
Franz Trefzuer, tenor, Cincinnati;
and Miss Ruby Dunn, soprano,

Cynthlana.

The University Philharmonic orchestra of forty pieces accompanied
the chorus, the piano accompaniment being by John Shelby Rich-

ardson.

Students participating In the
high school music festival, now being held on the University campus,
were guests at the program. A
admission
of twenty-fiv- e
cents was charged to others.
gen-ener- al

U. K. GOLF TEAM

BEGINS SEASON
Putters Meet Louisville in
Initial Tilt; Strong Eastern
Normal Four Is Next on

FLOOR SHOW WILL
ACCOMPANY YANKEES

w

NORMAN c. GARLING
Norman C. Garling, above,
is the newly elected
of the Kernel. He is
a member of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon social fraternity, Gui-gnstaff. Board of Student
Publications and Is a Junior
in the College of the Arts
and Sciences.
editor-ln-chl-

editor-ln-chle-

council, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Guignol staff.

Frank B. Borries, appointed as managing editor by
Garling, is a member of Phi
Kappa Tau social fraternity.
Is a pledge to Omicron Delta
Kappa and a member of
Scabbard and Blade. He is
also a junior in the college
of Arts and Sqienc.es.

Kohler.
After Saturday's match there will
be a slight lull In the schedule until
May 4 when the team will go to
Knoxvllle to play the University of
Tennessee. On May 7 the University of Louisville will come here for
a return match. The University of
Ohio, will be
Diiyton. Dayton,
played once there on May 9 and
again here on the fifteenth. Between these two games Western
State Normal will be met here on
May 10. On May
the team
will go to Louisville and play in the
State Intercollegiate Championship.

Dates for return matches with
Eastern State Normal and Western
State Normal have not been decided upon.
J. D. Haggard, the acting captain

Attend; Dances to
Continue

The fourth of the weekly Wednesday night dances held In the
Men's gymnasium Wednesday night
The music was furnished by the
Blue and While orchestra with approximately 800 students attending.
Besides the usual crowd of uni
versity students, there were many
delegates of the various state high
schols who are attending the state
meet at the University.

tons.

Such was the ultimatum presented to Sir John Simon, barrister and
British Foreign Secretary, and his
aide the Rt. Hon. Robert Anthony
Eden. They had flown from London
to Berlin In an attempt to pacify
the leader of a nation conscious of
powers and Its
Its
pride smarting under fifteen years
of humiliation. European peace and
disarmament had ended In a pitiful
expose of armed hatred and
terness, and what Europe had
ic

night.
Student tickets will be sold only
on presentation of student athletic
ticket books. Charge for students
will be $1.13 per person, and the

tickets will be on sale for only one
day. April 30, at the offie of the
of the Kentucky
Kernel in McVey hall.
A floor show of thirty persons
will accompany Rudy Vallee and
his Connecticut Yankees when they
appear for the first time in Lexington. Included In the company are
the Stewart sisters and Al Bernle.
In honor of the University "On, On
U. of K." will be featured during
the Fleishmann Yeast hour which
the orchestra will present over NBC
network on Thursday.
Preceding his appearance in the
University gymnasium, Mr. Vallee
will be the guest of honor at a
JOHN F. DAY
banquet given at the Phoenix hotel
in celebration of the first anniversary of radio station WLAP in
Lexington. Music will be furnished
by Hugh Adcock and his "Blue and
White" orchestra, featuring Miss
Phyllis Caskey, vocalist. The floor
show which will appear in the
evening will give a performance
during the banquet. MuMc played
U. K. Thinlies Will Engage by the Yankees during the evening
dance will be broadcast over WLAP.
Hanover College in Third
Rudy Vallee and his famous or
Meet of Season
chestra have been traveling and
Saturday
playing together since .1927 when
they secured their first big engage
18 MEN TO MAKE TRIP ment at the Helgh-H- o
Club in New
York. Since then they have played
After having lost last Saturday In countless cities throughout the
to the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets states and have appeared in three
by the score of 81 to 50, Coach feature pictures made by outstandBernle Shlvely and his varsity ing movie companies. Broadcasts
track men will conclude their work- have been a part of the regular
outs today In preparation for their schedule of the band since 1928
third meet of the season Saturday when they played over station
afternoon at Hanover College, In- WABC. Mr. Vallee was permitted
diana.
to announce and direct his own
Little is known of the calibre of program during their initial per- -;
the Hoosler tracksters, but the formance over the ether.
After leaving' Lexington the comWildcats are expecting some difficulty In outpointing their op- pany will go to Louisville where
they will play the entire day at
ponents.
Churchill Downs on Derby Day.
Coach Shively announced that Sunday, May 5, the' orchestra will
the following men will make the play In Cincinnati.
trip: Walker, Willis, Gates, Miller,
Craln, Ledrldge, Travis, Ford, Coff-maHocker, Spragens, Hay, Carlisle, Olney, Sympson, Rupert and
Nevers.
The Kentucky thinlies have
broken even in their previous meets
this year. In the first one they defeated the Vanderbilt squad by a
count of 85 to 32 and lost their
second last Saturday by 81 to 50.
Willis, crack dash and hurdle man,
scored first places in both the
All FERA work sheets must be in
dashes and second in both the
the offices of Dean of Men and
on Page Four)
Dean of Women by Tuesday, April
editor-ln-chl-

ef

Guignol Closes
TRACKMEN PREP
Season Week of
y
April
4 FOR NEXT MEET
29-Ma-

L. Cass Robinson Has Chief

Lead In "Counsellor
At Law"

Guignol's sixth and final production of the season, "Counselor-at-Law- "
to be presented the week of
April 29 at the little theater, will
have a cast made up chiefly of
members of the University faculty
and student body.
Cass

L.

Robinson,

geology

in-

structor, leads the cast In the difficult role of George Simon, the part
played by John Barrymore on the
screen and Bela Lugosi In the stage
production of the same name. Mr.
Robinson will be remembered for
his outstanding part in "What the
Gulls Knew" as the hunch-backe- d
lighthouse keeper.
Ruth Budd, member of the University Library staff, also has a
leading role In the production. Miss
Budd, a graduate of the University
of Texas, Is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority, and though this is
her first appearance on the Guignol
stage, she is not a novice In amateur productions. She will play the
part of Reglna, better known as
"Rexle," secretary to George Simon.
A new and original set has been
erected for the last play of the
season. There are nine different
scenes. Through the efforts of Malcolm Shotwell and his assistants
the scenes have been worked out
so that the scenes may be changed
in less than one minute. Frank
Fowler, director of the Guignol, devised the new sets.

trimmed, tall,

black-haire-

d

and

he is the English genThat the scholarly Sir John Sim tleman at his best.
Captain Eden did not have to
on should be accompanied by Eden
was no surprise to diplomats who face the Labor Exchange nor the
have spent the past few years at dole with Its cold demolition to
Bue he Is an Index into the
Geneva. At the League he was
looked upon as the spokesman for post-wmind of one type of genGreat Britain, because of Sir John's tleman Eton, Cambridge or Oxtoward
the ford, the army, government service
growing skepticism
League and disarmament.
and Family. In Oeneva he took his
As Lord Privy Seal In the Foreign work seriously. Against the play of
Office, he Is the opposite of his su- wills, futile gestures and national
perior In background, talents and complexities in the League of Naenvironment. Sir John was already tions, he fought for the ideals Ina man of some years when the corporated in disarmament.
He Is not a fighter, but talks with
World War broke upon Europe, and
events since have made his lawyer's a modulated voice, unhurried, cerlogic the more penetrating and con tain of the details of his subject.
cise, his mind the more complex His deference to others, the courand sophisticated, but left his dip- tesy and gracefulness of his address
in assembly as he replies to queslomacy as blunt as ever.
He has consistently championed tions put by M. P.'s In the absence
the tenants of the Locarno Pact, of his superior fill the seats In
accomplished In the office of Sir Commons when "Eden Is up."
He carried out his duties, often
against the
Austen Chamberlain,
older Tory troup. But that he Is a contrary to personal beliefs, comTory himself he would be the last petently In Oeneva, and members
to deny. Even though he received of his Majesty's Government have
his share of gentlemanly kicks, he now recognized his talents and imis a born aristocrat with the pride portance. Without any diplomatic
of family, wealth and tradition be- training his place In the House and
hind him. A descendant of Lord the Foreign Office Is based solely
his work In
Baltimore, always freshly groomed, on accomplishment;
his homberg at a careful angle, his Oeneva can only be summed up In
guardsman's moustache neatly that he Is a bom diplomat.
ty.

viMI.

V

ot the team, announced that the
four players making up the team
did not have permanent positions
but that between matches round
robin tournaments would be played
between these players and the alLances, Junior honorary, will hold
ternates to decide who will make Initiation ceremonies at the Teacup
up the players for the next match. inn at 5 p. m. today.

feared since the treaty was a real

will

inizton on Friday. May 3. and will
play for a dance to b? plvr-n- . in the
University Alumni gymnasium thsv

A.

John F. Day, right, retiring
f,
is a member
of Alpha Tau Omega social
fraternity, Mens Student

mond.

Little has been heard of the
strength of the Falls City team but
one of its members, Billy Woodford,
is the State Intercollegiate champion. Eastern State Is reputed to
have one of the strongest, if not
the strongest, teams in the state.
John Eversole, J. D. Haggard,
Louis Hillenmeyer,
and Charles
Roggenkamp will make up the team
that plays In Louisville and Richmond. Due to bad weather which
halted playing, only one of the
alternate players, Walter Hillenmeyer, has been chosen. The other
alternate position will go to either
Bill Hund, Jack Howard or James

Rudy Vallee. famous crooner and

orchestra maestro,

ol

Schedule
The University of Kentucky golf
team opens Its season this afternoon with a match with the University of Louisville in Louisville.
Tomorrow afternoon they play the
Eastern State Normal four at Rich-

Feature School's Song,
"On. On. II. K.," During
Chain Program

Will

FRANK B. BORRIES

ef

Two Men, Former Antagonists on Field of
Battle, Meet Again Over Diplomatic Table

Fourth

WILL PERFORM

A5

In Men's Gym

n,

h;

Yearly "Retreat'? of Organization to Be Held at Camp
Daniel Boone on April 2G,
27, and 28

Y.W.C.A.

Rosemary Cllnkscales, Wllllams-towis a member of W.A.A., the
Glee club, W.S.G.A., and Y.W.C.A.
Dorothy Williams, Lexington, Is a
member of WS.O.A., and Is a Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Dorothy Martin, Waddy, Is
of Zeta Tau Alpha, Y.W.
CA., W.A.A., and Is a member of
Pitkin club.
Lillian Holmes, Lexington, Is an
Alpha Gamma Delta, a R.O.T.C.
company sponsor, Kentucklan,
Cwens, Pitkin club, and Kentucklan

6,

ANNUAL MEETING

In-

Eight petitions for May Queen
were filed yesterday In the office
of the Dean of Men. from which
the May Queen will be chosen in
an election Monday from 10 a. m.
to 3 p. m. Balloting will be on the
main floor of the Administration
building and Dicker hall.
Those nominated are as follows:
Esther Brlggs, Paris; Eliose Carrel,
Lexington; Andrea Skinner, Lexington; Goldie Bell, Monticello;
Williams-towRosemary
Cllnkscales,
Dorothy Martin, Waddy;
Dorothy
Williams,
and Lillian
Holmes, Lexington.
Esther Brlggs, Paris, Is a member of Delta Delta Delta, W.S.O.A.,
Y.W.C.A., W.A.A. and was a beauty
attendant In 1933. Miss Brlggs Is a
junior in the College of Education.
Elolse Carrel, Lexington, Is a
member of Alpha XI Delta, Home
Economics Club, W.S.O.A., Y.W.C.A.
W.A.A., and Alma Magna Mater.
Andrea Skinner, Lexington, Is a
member of Kappa Delta, Strollers,
and Y.W.C.A.
Goldie Bell, Monticello, Alpha Delta Theta, Is a member of W.S.G.A.,

SELECTS STAFF

I

NEW SERIES NO. 53

U.K. Glee Clubs

MEET TO END SATURDAY

(Continued on

KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1935

Annual State High Schools
Music Contest Opens at U.K.;
Sixty-Si- x
Schools Competing

the

OF

REGIMENTAL
PARADE WILL RE TODAY
AT 3:55 P. M.

handsome,

ar

n,

Kampus
Kernels

ed

30.

LEGAL

Sigma Pi Sigma will hold an important meeting In room 103 of the
Civil Engineering and Physics
building at 1 p. m. today.

SOCIETY

HOLDS PLEDGING

Students who have their pictures
in the Placement Bureau bulletin
their
have not
Four Students of U. K. Law and who the bulletin received so by
may do
copy of
College Are Appointed to calling for it in the Placement Bu"Order of the Coif," Legal reau office in the Training School
building.

Honorary

The faculty of the College of
Law announces the following appointees to Order of the Coif, national honorary legal fraternity;
Harry I. Stegmaier, Cumberland,
Md., Robert E. Hatton, Jr.,
Ky.; Thurman Todd,
Berea, Ky.; and Robert T. Caldwell,
president of the Kentucky State
Bar association, honorary member.
Mr. Stegmaier Is student editor of
the Kentucky Law Journal and
chairman of the Law School council. His scholastic average Is 2.7.
Mr. Hutton Is managing editor of
the Kentucky Law Journal, presi
dent of Phi Alpha Delta, national
professional law fraternity, and is
a member of Omicron Delta Kappa
and the Athletic council. His standing is 2.4.
Mr. Todd is business manager of
the Kentucky Law Journal, and a
member of Phi Alpha Delta. He
has a 2.0 average.
Order of the Coif was Installed n
the campus in 1930. It was founded at the University of Illinois In
1923 and now has 35 chapters in
law schools of the country. Only
the upper tenth of the senior class
are eligible and they must have a
2 0 standing average.
The appointees will be formally
inducted at the Law School banquet
to be held at the Lafayette hotel
on Monday, April 29.
g.

Breckinridge Inn of Phi Delta
Phi will have a luncheon for members and pledges today at noon
at the Patio.

The Kernel news staff will have
a meeting in Room 50 McVey hall
at 3 p. m. Monday. All members
must be present to remain on the
staff or present a good excuse.
An Important meeting of Mortar
Board will be held at 8 o'clock
Monday night at the home of Lucy
Jean Anderson, 235 Stone avenue.

Former Managing

Editor Gets Post
Frank Adams, graduate of the
University, has accepted the editorship and general management
of the Georgetown News
While attending the Unlver-bitMr. Adams was a member
of Omicron Delta Kappa, the
Glee club, Lamp and Cross, Big-Delta Chi, SuKy, and was
managing editor of the Kernel
He Is a member of Phi Kappa
Tau fraternity.
He took charge of hit new duy.

ties Monday.

� Best
ON nnWDAYS AND HUD AYS

PITBU8HKO

Mrmbrr
Board o( Onmmrrc.

Lrlnaon

free-itnr-

of expression of Mndent
viewpoint and we hope to be able
ti rnntlnne this policy. To this
end, therefore, any advice or fair
crltlrl-iwill be duly appreciated.
The Kernel will endeavor to
present news and Information
Impartially on all questions of
Import upon the campus. There
will be a continuation of the
"Student Opinion" column on the
editorial pate, and there any student may express his views and
Ideas frankly on any subject that
merits publication. This column
will be edited to conform to
recofnliied standards of newspaper publication.
We realize the need of a Student 1'nion building at the University and will do all In our
power to aid the erection of such
a building. All campus organizations will be riven support and
publicity, but without favoritism.
We believe that an organized
and efficient personnel bureau
should be maintained for the ex- press purpose of placing students
in employment upon graduation.
We will try to stimulate Interest
in all campus affairs, especially
Intramural athletics. We will do
our best, with the cooperation of
the students, faculty, and all concerned, to make the Kernel the
best college newspaper In the

National CoIl
Prrs Aoclt1on
Krnlurkf InttrcnllpRlate Press Association
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OFTTOIAL NKWBPAPF.R OF THE
OP THE UNIVERSITY
KENTUCKY. LEXINOTON

or

HriftF. SHALL THE KERNEL ALL

STUDENTS RIGHTS MAINTAIN

Year. Knterrd at
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Managlnt tdltor
Managing tdltor

AfWOCIATE EDITORS
Dick Boyd

'y

EDITORS

ASSISTANT

John Crlstl.

Delmar Adanu
NANOT BECKER- ELIZABETH KRIEOBL
BELMONT RAMSEY

Editor
Socletf Mlfor
Feature tdltor

...Society

Af.

preciated by the people of th state
and to of material benefit In draw
ing increased support to our uni
versity.
The students of the University
should feel honored by the presence
of these younger studenU and
should accord to them the full
privileges of the Campus, in order
that their stay may be both pleas
ant and profitable. In this manner
will these students get a finer conception and greater appreciation of
our school.
A (rain students, we say welcome.
May you enjoy your brief stay with
us to such an extent that you will
give first consideration to your state
university in your choosing an In
stltutlon in which to pursue your
higher education when you leave
high school walls.

continue the best of Its ability
to maintain this attitude.
Thns far there has bern no
family Interference, and the Ker-n- rl
n
ha enjoyed the ntmnot

Hie Kentucky Kernel

Neiot tutor !
THOMAS ATKIN- SASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
C T. Hcrtwch
Dot Wunderltcft

nal life. If the proper type of men
to act as tutors can be found, there
seems to be no reason why groups
on this campus should not give the
plan a try. Daily Student, U. of
Indiana.

TROGRAM
FOR FRATERNITIES

A

TEN-rOIN- T

Dean William L. Sanders, dean of
men at Ohio Wesleyan University,
in a luncheon address before the
Indiana Interfraternlty conference
at Bloomington, outlined to the
group a
program which
he believes would establish the
American fraternity as an instrument of great educational value,
He stated that America Is heading
toward the type of education gen
erally associated with Oxford Uni
verslty and that the fraternity must
adjust itself to the new mode In
education. His program, as outlined,
follows:
1. Establish
an Interfraternlty
council within the university.
2. Establish a faculty and alum
nl fraternity council to closer relate
the fraternity with the university.
3. Unite the fraternity treasur
ers into a group that could promote
cooperative buying among the
houses.
4. Require monthly examination
of financial accounts by a university official or professional auditor.
5. Sponsor periodical house inspections to eliminate fire hazards
and unsanitary conditions.
ten-poi- nt

Hoi Polloi
By CAMERON COFFMAN
Squirrel Food
been more than a week
since we took our shot at this task
of writing. .. .Yes, says we. ..There
should have been a bit happening
over the holidays. .Quite so, friends
We dashed off to Atlanta for
the vacation period with that
bunch of Incomparable good fellows the track
team.... It was
worth two months of labor on the
cinder path for the Jaunt down to
the OeorRla city.... Even the ole'
timers of football fame, Joe Rupert,
Harry Walker, Red Sympson and
Ernie Nevers said It was the best
trip had ever taken with the athletes.... Even Ralph Carlisle, varsity basketballer, said his trip to
New York did not compare with
it
and so on into the night we
might rave about the Atlanta trip
....but we dare not.... we might
incriminate ourselves or some of
the boys. .. .Anyway here goes....

It has

Shades of Atlanta
Our surprise In seeing so many
of the Kentuckians who chose that
REPORTERS
Mary
city as their vacation spot
Martha Moore
Bettr Earl
Cary Maynard and her cortege of
OapeJ HoNatt
Erwln Oillenwater
high school lads who cheered KenTheodora N adelsteln Thelma McClaln
tucky on with futile victory yells..
Catherine Jon
William Evans
Ike Moore and Ernie Shovea courtLealle Scolt
Ida Rosemen
ing a couple of Agnes Scott coeds,
Mildred Webb
RUey
one of whom was Kadee Jane AlEaiubeth MUllar
Haxel Douthltt
len Webb, who went here last year
Lawrence Edmonson JkmeI
....Ida Oreenleaf with her group
Burton Ltt
Rom Chepeleft
MUSIC FESTIVAL
of admiring Kentucky trackmen...
Mary B. Bart
Evil stahr
Alphagam Logan Van Meter walkBdmond Thompson
Betty A. Pennington
During the past two days and
ing arm in arm with her courtee
Carl Camentach
Woodford Webb
tomorcontinuing thru today and
Hugh 91111am, who received his deBob Header
Raymond St. John
row, the University has had and
gree here in January. ...Roy Hahn,
Roger Brown
Thomas Warner
another Kentucky product, dropped
will have as its guests a large numAudrey Forstsr
Belmont Ramsey
out to the field to pay his respects
ber of high school students of the
Henry WUeos
Anna M. Parton
to his fellow students
The pretstate who are participating in the
ty blonde, who thought that Harry
.Sporit Editor annual music contests sponsored by
JOB QUTNWalker Is ace high
Our tour of
SPORTS WRITERS
Atlanta with this blonde in comthe department of University
Bill Huston
Max Lancaster
pany with Harry Walker
Her
Extension.
These students have
Mack Hughes
Roger Brown
personal acquaintance with multi
gathered from all parts of the state
tudes of Central Kentuckians....
to demonstrate their proficiency In
Business Staff
The two young ladies from Detroit
IKS MOOR- Ewho attracted, so much attention
Bilnei Manager vocal and instrumental music.
8. Eliminate
."
.Adrertiting Manager
from the Kentucky boys during the
DAVE DrPFORD.
The Kernel takes this opportun7. Train pledge masters in the trip down on the train
Circulation Manager
SHOVEA
Grant
ERNIE
ity of welcoming these students to art of handling and guiding fresh- Campbell, another former Ken
tucky student and his attentiveness
the Campus and hopes that all of men.
NEW REGIME
to the visiting fellow statesmen....
them will enjoy their stay,