THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Y.M. A Y.W.C.A.
...

NOTES

...
;

the International Committee of the Y.
M. C. A,; Dr. Paul Harrison, Fellow
of the American College of Surgeons,
known as the "Apostle of the Desert"
in Arabia where he tworks; Rev.
Ilhaaskar Hivale, Bombay University;
Rev. Toyolikp Kagawa, Settlement
worker in Kobe, Japan; Dr. Willis J.
King, Wiley College; Prof. Andres
Osuna, Director of Public Education,
Coahuila, Mexico; Dr. John R. Mott,
General Secretary IntcrmMonal Committee Y. M. C. A.; Rober tP. Wilder,
General Secretary and foimJc; of the
Student Volunteer Movement for For- cign Missions in America, and Rev.
Edward S. Woods, Rector, Holy Trin
ity Church, Cambridge, England.
The delegates of the Univers'ty of
Keivtticky having the opportunity to
hear the above distinguished speakers along with others
were Misses
Katherine Elliott,
Wilson,
Lucy
Frances Coleman, Elizabeth Snapp,
Ruth Tucker;
and
Ruth Foglc
E. McClurc, Harold Stenken, Thomas
Messrs. John O'nan, Edwin Jesse, J.
Baird, Raymond Wilkey and Charles
Cooper; Prof. E. A. Bureau, R. D.
Bowden, student pastor; and Bart N.
Peak, Secretary of the University Y.

The Ninth Student Volunteer Convention held at Indianapolis, Ind., December 28 to January 1, was an affair
commemorate to the lives of all students who attended. There were
delegates present from all over the
world, including 368 foreign student
delegates, 4,891 white student delegates and 124 colored student delegates. The other 768 delegates were
composed of Y. M. C. A. workers,
faculty members and special visitors.
The University of Kentucky had sixteen delegates present, given below.
A highly constructive lecture program was rendered. Some of the
leaders and speakers at the convention
were J. E. K. Aggrey, native of the
Gold Coast, West Africa; J. Kingsley
Birge, recent missionary to the Near
East; Dr. Ching Yt Cheng, National
leader of the Student Christian Movement, China; Rev. Andrew Thakar
Dass, pastor of the Presbyterian
Church, Lahore, India; G. Sherwood
Eddy, Associate General Secretary of M. C. A.
j
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Page Seven

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NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETAILING
A GRADUATE SCHOOL
Retailing is a field of opportnity for the trained mind. The
School of Retailing trains for executive positions.
Training
Merchandising
Sendee
Advertising
Finance and control
Personnel
Teaching
are attractive fields.
SERVICE FELLOWSHIPS

What a difference
just a few cents make P

FATIMA

Class room and the store are closely linked together. Students may
enter second term February 4, 1924. Illustrated ibooklet upon application. For further information write.
DR. NORRIS A. BRISCO, Director
New York University, School of Retailing, 100 Washington Square,
New York City.

MM

4f
MM

M

"REINCARNATION THE KEY," Mon., Jan

14, 8

are you sure
you deserve it?

p. m.

"INVISIBLE FORMS AND FORCES," Tues., Jan. 15, 8 p.m.

I

"THE GREAT CREATIVE PLAN," Thurs., Jan. 17, 8 p.m.
Subjects discussed

:

Evolution and Religion, The Life After

Death ; the Mechanism of the Higher Consciousness, etc.
::

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"Give me a log with Mark Hopkins at one end .
of it and myself at the other," said, in effect,
President Garfield, "and I would not want a
better college."
But if Mark Hopkins was an inspired teacher, it
isjust as true that James A. Garfield was an inspiring student.
Sometimes Garfield's praise of his professor is
quoted in disparagement of present day faculties
the assumption being that we as listeners are .
sympathetic, all that we ought to be and that
it is the teacher who has lost his vision.
Is this often the case?
It is the recollection of one graduate at least
that he did not give his professors a chance. Cold to
their enthusiasms, he was prone to regard those
men more in the light of animated
than as human beings able and eager to expound
their art or to go beyond it into the realm of his
ks

own personul problems.
This is u man to man proposition. Each has to go
half way. Remember, there are two ends to thelog.

kstern Electric Company
Wherever people look to electricity for the
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Western Electric Company offers a service as
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Number 33 of a

striti

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