PAGE SEVEN

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
the club are: Mr. Thomas Gower, the
A. B. StaufTer, J. M.
O. L.
Neiding, secretary-treasureDay, Robert Duncan, and R. W,

Alumni Have Active
Club in Cleveland

r;

Meetings Are Held Each Week
Under Leadership of
Tom Gower

SPENDER

EXTOLS

OUR JOURNALISTS

of Grieg, and a concerto by Burch.
Miss Rose accompanied Prof. Lampert on the piano, and played a group

RELIGIOUS

of selections from

DISCUSSION

Schubert-Lia-

zt

Moskwski.
A large number of patrons and

and
pa-

tronesses were present at the concert,
and the financial side was equally

RADICAL PROBLEMS
Departing for England, He Says
LAW SCHOOL HAS
Impressed
Their Idealism
FIFTEEN NEW STUDENTS
Wc have previously stated that to
Him on Visit Here; Criticizes
One of tho largest ami most acti'e
follow Josus' way of life, or to apply
Publishers.
alumni chapters of the university is! Fifteen novv students are enron.
located at Cleveland, Ohio. The chap- - Jed in the Law College this semester,
the principles of love, of .humanity
j

tr

meets each Saturday for lunch- - j of whIch threo nre women. The
under the leadership of Mr.)ferinfr of afternoon classes by the
Thomas Cover.
L&w College hag mnde it .possible for
Each month a social affair is ar-- ', persons outside the regular student
ranged by an entertainment commit-- 1 body to take a course in the College
tee, usually a dinner dance or a of Law. These afternoon calsses are
bridge. The ladies arc the guests of well attended and are becoming very
honor at these affairs.
popular. They will be continued in- Among the prominent members of definitely.

n,

'

I

Whether you wear a
hat jauntily, or whether
you wear a hat soberly
and sedately, Stetson
offers yon a choice for
your every mood and
fancy.

Eight to
Ferty Dollar

Among the passengers who sailed
recently for Cherbourg and London, was J. Alfred Spender, English author and former editor of The
Wesminstcr Gazette, who came here
last October as tho first American
Newspaper Fellow, under the ausg
Union.
pices of the
iur. oreuu, wiiu
by his wife, said he had traveled
through the United States from coast
to coast, making a study of American
social and economic problems, Dut
giving most of his attention to American newspapers.
"There is much in the newspapers
that I like," the English journalist
said, "but there is also much that I
do not like. One thing stands out
paramount in my mind, and that is
the idealism of the American newspaper man. If he had complete control of the American newspapers they
would, I believe, be truly groat.
"It is unfortunate that commercial
men, for the most part, and admirable men at that, have got hold of the
American press and conduct it along
the lines of 'advertising first' and reporting and editorial leadership as a
secondary factor."
He expressed amazement at the
space given to crimes and said that
in England it would bo impossible for
a newspaper to print long details
about either the Snyder execution or
the Hickman trial. American publishers he had talked with on the subject were agreed, he said, that to protect the better newspapers, America
would sooner or later adopt the English law against violations of good
taste.
"I want to say in departing," he
declared, "that I have been treated
with the rarest courtesy and I leave
with the conviction that your journalist, if anything, is superior to the
g
publishers. It must be
for them to realize that real ability is subordinated to the prestige
of advertising and tho rule of the
advertiser." New York Times.
English-Speakin-

......

Judge

What's your name?
Smith.
Judge Your occupation?
Smith Locksmith.
Judge Locksmith up.
Oklahoma Whirlwind.
Man

and of justice would mean for us:
"To practice brotherhood toward all.
To remember that every human being
is a person of infinite worth, deservStranger
ing the fullest opportunity for
Where are the shower
To participate in no
baths in this hotel?
Blouch I don't kow. I've never
secret order or fraternity if it tends
been here on Saturday. Exchange.
t0 exclusiveness prejudice or strife.
To seek justice for every man without distinction of caste or color."
In the light of these ideals what
is our actual practice in the matter
ALL ALIKE
of race relations?
There are some
710 million members of the white race
"I sure hate
and 1040 million of the colored races.
"I bate women too."
Tho white race is increasing so much
WHUams Purple Cow.
faster than the others that before
present rate of increase,
1950, at the
it will outnumber all other races com
and Miss Edith Rose, of the music
bined. While the older countries of
department of Hamilton College, was
Asia nre almost stationary in popuGives Violin
an event of Tuesday evening at the
lation, the white raco by its political
Romany Theater. Tho recital was
of the habitable
control of
Englobe, and of the bulk of the world's Miss Edith Rose Assists in
given for the benefit of a fund to purtertainment Given to Aid
food supply, is rapidly outgrowing all
chase an organ for the new Memorial
Memorial Fund
others. It occupies the best portions
building to be erected on the campus.
of the earth; it exercises control over
Prof. Lamport was excellent in his
more than half of Asia and all but
Anoint recital given by Prof. Carl three groups of numbers on the vioof tho continent of
Lampert, of the Department of Music lin. Especially good were the sonata
."

Prof. Carl Lampert
Recital

nine-tent-

This is

Parker

Looking at the world as a whole,
wo do not find that the fooling of
race and color prejudice exists to any
ippreciable extent among the Slavic
Like an infection
or Latin peoples.
it has spread chiefly among the Engpeoples, due probably
to the political and economical posi
tion they occupy in the world. No
where is this feeling more intense
than in the United States, where the
"Nordic" element, haVing come first
into possession of the natural resour
ces, has developed a defensive attitude

toward other racial groups.
A survey shows conclusively that
in many instances where the colored
population filtered into the white res
idential sections, making them ulti
mately colored sections, thero was no
loss of real estate value, and in many
cases the rentals and sale prices in
put to creased.
Clever is the man who can
Corand to together and get "toot."
If, in any section of the country,
nell Widow.
the greater proportion of appropria
tions for education and the best fa
dlities aro given to the ruling race,
and the worst conditions to the sub
ject race, what moral conditions will
it inevitably beget and who is chiefly
responsible for them? Lynching has
become a national disgrace in America. Since 1885 a total of more than
4,250 persons have been lynched in
the United States, of whom over 3.20Q
were Negroes. This was an average
of two per week for over 40 years.
I
Delicious and Refreshing, j
The number of lynchings has been
declining in recent years; in 1925 the
number was 17, in 192G it rose to 31,
a little more than one every two
weeks. In many sections the majority who constitute tho lynching mob
are professing "Christian" church
members who see no contradiction between this practice and their religion.
Is the solution for this or any problem to be found in the use of violence
Othello had his faults. But wc can
and the appeal to fear? The anforgive him everything because he
swer will depend upon whether our
gave us a perfect caption for an
position is to bo Christian or frankly
opinion the United States Supreme
pagan.
Court was one day to hand down on
Mr. Oldham maintains that from
Coca-Colthe Christian view of God certain con"The name now characterizes a bevsequences in regard to the relation of
erage to be bad at almost any soda
man with man inevitably follow: The
fountain. It means a single thins
'.Christian's business ia to seek first
coming from a single source, and
the Kingdom of God and his rightwell known to the community."
eousness. God's love for all men
gives to each human personality an
Tlx CooCoti CofMj, Ailiou, Ga.
inestimable worth. Since God loves
man and seeks their good, Christians
T O GET WHERE IT I S
are dedicated to the service of their
fallow men. Their religion demands
from all that they should sacrinc ft
nnrtion of their own Uvea for others
Since the race problem is dealt with
so fully and so fairly in Mr. Oldham's pamphlet in this series, we
shall not attemDt here to enlarge
upon it. Let us only ask ourselves
whether individually we are prepared
to recognize and to endeavor to root
out any raco prejudice that still lurks
IS
within each of ub. snerwooa rjauy,
Studeat Leader and Spokesman.

Pressureless
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But don't forget to make yourself
good on Valentine's Day.
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1.

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2.

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OUR

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MAIN and MILL

*