FRESHMAN ISSUE

The Kentucky Kernel
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
VOL. XIII

LEXINGTON, KY., NOVEMBER 10, 1922

No. 8

SCRAP SATURDAY
WILDCATS INVADE ENEMY

VANDERBILT - KENTUCKY
Kentucky

LINES FOR SECOND TIME; Hollowcll
Ramsey
Martin
Fcst
Pribblc
Cats Determined to Make Good Russell
Showing in Debut at New
Coloitts
Gregg
Dudley Stadium
Ferguson
DEPART AMID CHEERS Fuller
Sanders

TO

FACEVANDY

ELEVEN

Yells Given Team As
They Board Special For

Rousing

RE
LT
LG
C

RG
RT
RE
QB
LH
RH
FB
--

FRESHMEN GAME

Vanderbilt
McCullough
Lawrence
Morrow
Sharpe
Kellcy
Walkw
Neil
Kuhn
Neely
Roundtree
Wakefield

Cisco

Saur T
Montgomery
Stevenson
King
Evans
Thomas
Tracy
Kirwan (c)

--

The Wildcat eleven left Thursday
afternoon at 5:40 for Nashville, where
they will clash with the Vanderbilt
Commodores Saturday. This will be
the first showing of the Cats in tht
new Dudley Stadium and the Blue
and White griders are determined
to make their initial appearance one
About 20
to be long remembered.
men, Coach Juneau, "Daddy" Boles,
Manager Cammack and Doctor Lipscomb made up the Kentucky party
that boarded the special car amid
the cheers from the students gathered to see them off and to wish
them good luck.
The Cats came out of the Centre
scrap in excellent shape and have
been working hard for the Commodore tilt. Although Kentucky has
yet to boast of a victory over Vandy
and has scored only twice against the
Nashville eleven, the Wildcats bid
fair to make history in Saturday's
contest. The Commodores wjll probably outweigh the Cats considerably
and will have the advantage of playing on their home gridiron ,but the
Blur, and White will present formidable opposition and will fight until
the last whistle has blown. This fact
wa.i demonstrated last Saturday when
the Cat line stiffened and held the
Colonels for downs on Kentucky's

'THE THIRTEENTH CHAIR'

on Page
--

Four)

K-

JUDGE W. T. LAFFERTY
IS CRITICALLY ILL
Dean of College of Law Suffering From Lesion of

Brain
BULLETIN
Judge William Thornton
dean of the College of Law
of the University died Thursday
afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. Judge
Lafferty's death came just at tht
time when this edition of tht
Kernel was on the point of going
to press thus making it impossible to give extended notice to
the achievements at this time of
the eminent and beloved jurist and
instructor.
y,

AN EARLIER STORY
Judge W. T. LafTerty, dean of the
College of Law, is critically ill at his
home on Woodland avenue. He was
stricken suddenly Monday night with
an attack of lesion of the brain. To
the many inquiries coming in from
all parts of the state the doctors can
as yet make no definite statement, ex- (Continued

on Page 4)

AT ADA

MEADEN0V

16-- 1

KENTUCKIAN
FRIDAY.

TO

1923

BECIN

NOVEMBER

10

7
Annuals Ordered Before Decem
ber First Will be Sold at ReLouisville youth,
duced Prices

GREGG

Turner Gregg,
Plans Being Made for Spring
made first points scored on Centre
Production by John E. Burkes,
since 1916 when he kicked a
PRIZE OFFERED BY STAFF
Director
field goal in first quarter last Satur
day.
Prominent Students on Campus
BIG AUDIENCES EXPECTED
Gregg is a Sophomore, playing his
to
in Issuing Best
first year on Varsity, and has devel
Year Book
for oped into one of the best field genThursday Night Presentation
erals that the Cats have had in years.
Freshmen Especially; Come
The big drive for the sale of the
te

One, Come All.

Chair," the 1922
'The Thirteenth
Stroller play which was given in Lexington and several Kentucky towns
last season, will be shown in Cyn- thiana Friday night, November 10,
and in Lexington at the Ada Meade
theater, November 16 and 17. The
repeated production of the play is for
the purpose of giving the Freshmen
and new students an opportunity to
see the ability of the student dramatic
club of the University.
Last season "The Thirteenth Chair"
was given at Paris, Georgetown, Richmond, Middlesboro and Pinevillc, besides two performances in Lexington.
Later on in the winter it will probably
be taken on the road again to Frankfort, Maysvjlle and several western
towns. Last year "the Strollers bought
their own electrical equipment which
proved a great advantage in presenting the play.
The cast has been replaced with
only three new members, the vacancies caused by the graduation of three
members of last year's cast. The
present cast in the order of the appearance is: Helen O'Niel, Frances Smith;
Will Crosby, Dan Morris: Roscoe
Crosby, William Finn; Mrs. Roscoe
Crosby, Elenor Morse; Edward Wales,
Troy Lavvson Perkins; Elizabeth
Erskine, Mary Peterson; Mary Eastwood, Ann Hickman; Grace Staudish,
Nan Chenault; Mrs. Trent, Kitty
Couroy; Mr. Trent, Harry Layman;
Howard Standish, Edgar Cans; Phillip Mason, Earl Heavrin;
- - PolRosalie
lack, William Tate;
Mary Lyons; Tim Donahue,
War
John Albright; Mike Dunn,
ren.
The Strollers are doing double work
this year in presenting last year's performance again and making arrangements for a new production.
Thursday night of the coming week
will be the Freshman night, and the
Kernel makes a personal plea to the
students to go to 'these performances,
is the strollers are putting forth every
effort to make this production
the
best.
--

--

UNIVERSITY TO OBSERVE

ARMISTICE DAY; PARADE
BE
U. K. Band Will Lead March
Followed by Battalions and
Their Sponsors.
DR. SCOTT CHIEF SPEAKER
Man to Address
Assemblage Later in Chapel
of University.

Northwestern

The foremost event of this week on
the campus of the University of Kentucky will be the annual observance
of Armistice Day, November 11. It
will be featured by a parade, headed
by the University band, followed by
battalions and their sponsors, a portion of the Lexington police force, disabled war veterans, American legion,
Boy
mtin,
Transylvan'ia
Scouts,
members of labor unions,
war mothers, American Legion Auxiliary and members of the Rotary,
Lions, Optimist and Pyramid Clubs.
The principal speaker of the day will
be Dr. John A. Scott, of Northwestern University, who will speak to the
assemblage at 11 o'clock at the
chapel. "Kentucky Day" will
also be observed on that day with a
given by the alumni of
luncheon
Transylvania and University of Kentucky at the Phoenix Hotel.
The parade will be formed on South
Limestone street in front of the University campus and it will march from
there to Maxwell, west on Maxwell to
Broadway to
Broadway, north on
Main, east on Main to the Kentucky
Theatre where the public is invited to
attend the patriotic exercises to be
held there. The battalion will inarch
immediately to the exercises at the
Dr. Scott, who
University chapel.
ha been recommended to the commit
Uni-vers-

(Continued

on Page 5)

ARE

TURNED

K-

DRIVE FOR SALE OF

STROLLERS TO PRESENT

EYES

Centre Freshmen
LE
Snoddy
BABY CAT BATTLE
LT
Priest ON
Long
LG
C
Secly STAGED HERE SATURDAY
RG
Smith
RT
Burnham
RE
Glenn Kitten Scrappers, With Sharpen-ene- d
Claws, Eagerly Await
QB Reibenstein c
the Word to Attack
Spurlock
LH
RH
Summers
FB
Leonard ENTIRE SQUAD IN TRIM

K-

Southland

(Continued

ALL

Ky. Freshmen
Mclntyre
McFarland

Kentuckian, the annual year book of
the University, started Friday, November 10, and will continue until November 20. During that time and un
til December 1, an annual can be
bought for $4.00 cash or for $4.50 by
paying a deposit of $2.00 down and
$2.50 on February 15. After Decem
ber 1 the Kentuckian will cost $5.00.
Every student who wishes to buy an
annual is requested by the manage
ment to order it during the drive or
by the first of December as there
will be no annuals ordered unless they
have been subscribed for. Consequently if you want an annual you
must subscribe now.
To each student who. sells as many
as 50 annuals one will be given and
to the student selling the greatest
number there will be a prize of $10.00
and an annual, and a second prize of
$5.00 and an annual.
Prominent students on the campus
have shown their interest in the book
and their willingness to
with the staff in making it the best
annual ever presented by a class in
the University.
William G. Finn, president of the
Senior class, says: "To a senior, the
k
of the year of his graduation should be the greatest treasure
of his college life. It holds for him
a record of all the faces of the members of his class. To every other student in the University it should mean
as much."
John E. Burks, director of the
Stroller dramatic organization and a
Cirprominent member of the
cle, indorses the Kentuckian and says:
year in th'.'
"This is an
In numhistory of the University.
bers and extent of activities we have
excelled any mark ever before attained. Our undaunted Wildcats are
on the verge of a success that prom
ises to surpass the good old days of
We ourselves have
"Doc" Rodos.
seen them make the Colonels pray
We will always
and pray hard!
cherish the memory of that day.
"The Kentuckian is our only record
of these conditions and ten years hence
year-boo-

Largest Crowd Ever Seen At
Similar Conflict Expected to
Witness the Struggle.
One of the most interesting games
of the season will be played Saturday
afternoon on Stoll Field, between the
Kittens and the Centre College Freshmen. The big attraction is the fact
that both colleges will be showing
their varsity material for the next
three years, and due to the ancient
rivalry existing between the University of Kentucky and Centre College
the competition is naturally very keen.
Captain Kirwan says, "We are not
but we are going to
win.
It will be a fight all the way
through."
This year we have the
strongest freshman
team in the
south. It is said by critics that this
eleven is better than any first year
team seen at the University of KenAll this week
tucky for some time.
Coaches Webb and Rodes have been
running the squad through hard practice in preparation for the big game
Saturday.
Evans, Tracy, and Cap
tain Kirwan are in better physical con
dition than when they were for the
last game with the Centre freshmen.
With all our former line stars back
in the game we will have a combination which should easily avenge the
defeat of three weeks ago.
The Kernel wishes to announce
again that the entire proceeds of the
game will be used in the building of a
new club house to be erected on Stoll
Field. All students and faculty are
asked to pay admission and help the
University build a club house which
they will be proud to show the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
K

j

$

NOTICE!
Any students or groups who
have not had their pictures taken
for the 1923 Kentuckian can
have them made by seeing Billy
Williams on the campus, or in
tudio on second floor of Education Building, after Oct. 13.

COMMERCIAL FRATERNITY
11 PLEDGES
ANNOUNCES

Su-K- y

epoch-makin-

(Continued

g

on

Page Four)

Delta Sigma Pi, national commercial fraternity, during the past week
pledged the following men majoring
in economics: Gardner Bayless, Lowell
Truitt, Wayne Faust, Karl Rohs, Dan
Baugh, L. B. Hall, A. Atchinsou, Sam
Caldwell, Jesse Gilltim, J. C. Johnson
and Graham McCormick.
K

An invitation to President Frank L.
llcVey to speak from the Courier-Journbroadcasting station Saturday evening, November 11, has been
received from the director, Cercdo
Harris.
Hundreds of alumni will
time in for a Kentucky Day mesiage.

al

*