Best uopy Available

The Kentucky Kernel

VOLUME XXXV

zaw

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, AUGUST

Approximately 120 Undergraduate And
Graduate Students to Receive Diplomas
At The Summer Commencement
Services At 7:30 P.M.,
August 24 In Memorial

Hall Amphitheater,
the registrar's

This year marks the first time a
summer commencement has been
held since the beginning of the war
made the holding of this ceremony
impractical.
Grades and results of senior comprehensive examinations must be in
the registrar's office by 9 am. Monday, August 20, the registrar's office
announced. Correspondence courses
must be completed by graduate students by August 18.

University Students

Attending Meetings
under the Lanforth fellowships this
summer
c-

include

.

'

-

c

.

.

F

t ,i

two Juniors, Re--.
ducah, and Asa
"Mirg, who are at-- "leetings at the

;
:

I

-

'

'

5

;

V

'

ri

.

.J

-I

I

two-we-

in technicolor

of the North
will be presented tonight at Memorial hall by Jack
Lamb, internationally famous
sportsman. Lamb is the narrator for the film which shows
wild Alaskan scenery, rivers full
of fish, bears, caribou, bighorn
sheep and wild birds.
Country

Proposed

I

JOHNNY KENFRO

Dr. C. C. Carpenter,
Who Has Been On

compositions of Mr. Madison, which
were introduced in France before
the war by the famous Dolly sisters.
The set of the play was built entirely by Henry Foushee and the
antique furniture was loaned to
Guignol by Lexington residents.
The time for the performance is
8:30 p.m. and admission is $1.50.
Proceeds of the show will go for
the rehabilitation of returning
veterans.
Members of the cast are Lucille
Little, former student of Frank La
Forge, Jewell Doyle, Margaret
Ed Mills, Johnny Renfro,
Robert Wright, Evelyn Bennett,
Larry Snedegar, and Jesse Sun.

at

ek

New York University.

'SO THL7
By Shirley Meister
Question: What is your reaction
to the atomic bomb?
Glenm 8. Mills, ASTE: It ought,
to be great stuff in getting rid of
a lot of Japs.
Larry Lodewich, Eng., freshman:
I hope I'm not around for the next
war.
Dorothy Paar, Commerce, senior:
The monkeys will have to start all
over again, there isnt going to be
any more civilization.
Charles Hatcher, Eng., freshman:
It's unbelievable.
John Stephens, ASTE: I'm afraid
of it but I hope it will eventually
be used for the good of mankind.
Beverly Brown, A AS, freshman:
I think it's too horrible, even for

the Japs.

r

James Hisle, senior in engineering,
Maureen Taylor, senior majoring in
German, and Casey Goman, Junior
in Journalism, will take the positive
side of the question, and Ed Bary,
junior with a topical major in religion, will defend the negative.

Three Squad Members
Have Been Selected
to play in the West Virginia

37

Three New Staff
Members Will Join
Department Of
Psychology

This Fall, It
Was Announced
by Dr. M. M. White, personnel director.
Dr. P. L. Mellenbruch, formerly
of Miami University, Oxford. Ohio,
has been appointed an associate
professor. He has published a me-

chanical aptitude test. Mellenbrwh,
whose specialty is the testing field,
has had experience working with
juvenile courts and with the paper
industry in the personnel

Dr. H. H. Humphries, formerly of
Michigan State College, has been
appointed assistant professor. Hum
phries, who will teach child psychology, received his PhJ. from the
University of Kansas,
Dr. A. D. Warren, who has been
doing research for the School of
Business, Harvard University, for
the last two years, has been named
an assistant professor in experimental psychology.
-

All-St- ar

football game August 17 at
Charleston, W. Va, according to
word received by Coach Bernle A.
Shively.
The boys, Jimmy Barnett, fullback, Huntington, W. Va, Ike
Weaver, quarterback, and Dick
J. Horlacher
Hensley, end, both of Williamson,
assistant dean in resident teaching W. Va, attended the first term of
in the College of Agriculture, will summer school, and will return to
attend the state encampment of the Lexington for fan football practice
Kentucky chapters of the Future around September 1.
Farmers of America in Hardinsburg.
Weaver and Hensley, as members
of the 1944 West Virginia state
championship football team at Williamson, formed a famous passing
In
combination in high school, with
four-inc- h
Weaver flinging and
Hensley catching.
the new University publication, is
off the press, and copies are available upon request to the office of The Importance And
the director of public relations.

L

Post

degree

Post-Wa-

le,

and then go- leave from the University since
leadership camps April. 1943, resigned his post as disat Camp Miniwanca, Shelby, Mich- trict price executive of the Lexingigan.
ton district Office of Price AdminNell Bogie, Houston ville, and
'Your Place
The
George Campbell, Franklin, each istration,' announced E. Reed Wilspent two weeks at Camp Mini- son, district director.
War World
wanca In the Freshman leadership Dr. Carpenter plans to resume his
groups.
as professor of economics at
These fellowships are. granted work
through the College of Agriculture the beginning of the fall quarter.
on a basis of excellence In scholar- Before joining the OPA staff, he
ship and on a definite promise of taught courses in business adminThis book "may be considered a
future leadership.
istration and economics.
sampling of the courses the UniThe various groups meetings exversity is offering and which bear a
Previously a professor of economtend through July and August.
ics at Marshall College, Hunting- close relation to the needs and diston, W. Va, Carpenter went to coveries evolving from the war. . . .
Washington, D. C, in the summer These courses represent but a small
Donald Irvine
of 1941 to serve as business econo- portion of the total curricula availinstructor in the English depart- mist in the OPA and Civilian able at the University,' states the
ment, who resigned his post on the Supply.
foreword.
University staff recently, will go to
New York to work on his Ph. D.
ing on to

Film

of August 13 at Guignol theater. Compulsory Training
The play, a musical comedy about
life in Kentucky, was written by a will be discussed by four University
Lexington resident and the songs students with Dr. Hobart Ryland,
were composed by Mr. Maury Madi- head of the romance languages department, on the University Round
son, Lexington.
program as 12 p.m. Sunday
The play was built around the Table
over WHAS.

"N

-

ur

public.

Presented During The Week
-

Two-Ho-

The show will be free to the

'Out Of The Blue' Will Be

office announced.
Dr. Ellis Adams Fuller, president
of the Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, Louisville, will give the
commencement address, and the Invocation and benediction will be
pronounced by Dr. William Clayton i
Bower, professor emeritus of religious education at the University of
Chicago, now of Lexington. Dr. H.
L. Donovan, president of the University, will present the diplomas.

A

NUMBER

10, 1945

six-fo-

Meaning Of The Church

will be included in the Baptist student discussion to be held at the
home of Libby Landrum, president
of the BSU, Saturday night. The
group will leave from the steps of
the Union at 7:15. Rev. Othar O.

Smith, Baptist student secretary,
will lead the discussion.

UK
The 1945-4- 6
Catalogue Is Available
in the registrar's office upon- request. This catalogue, just off the
press, contains general information
to the student concerning curricula,
faculty, and degree requirements. A
general information bulletin, to also
available, designed to answer specific questions concerning the University. Also available is the Graduate School bulletin.
-

Prof. E. T. Wightman
assistant professor of poultry at the
University, has been invited ' to
teach in the Army schools in France.

In Case You Wonder,
This Is Rocket
makeup, and strictly on the ex- -,
perimental side as far as The
Kernel staff is concerned. It
looked interesting, and we
thought we'd try it. but we
thought we better ten you what'
this innovation is all about . .''

A Collection Of Godey's Ladies Books In The Library
Prove That 19th Century Women Weren't Without Advice

on feminine charm.
What the Ladies Home Journal
and the Good Housekeeping are to
the women of the 20th century, the
Ingenious Mr. Godey's book was to
the fairer sex of the 19th century.
The Godey book was full of ad- vice on lood, fashion, family, faith,
and fiction. Hand painted drawings
of the latest fashions of the day
filled many pages of every issue of
the book.
"Every lady should be a careful
and lovely seamstress," according to
Godey, so the latest embroidery designs were always included. Patterns for novelties like knitted bird
cage covers and net covers for
horses heads and ears, complete

with tassler and fringe behind the
ears were given In each issue.
Feeling that woman was a lovely
flower which had to be well cared
these
for, Godey recommended
beauty treatments. Cold cream:
Take one pound of lard, S ozs. of

spermaceti and melt to gentle heat.
While cooling stir in 1 oz. of orange
flower water. Night cream: Scrape
root of one horseradish into a pint
bf milk and let it stand for 2 or 3
hours in a cool oven. Use after
washing the face and before retir
ing. Hair wash: One oz. of pow
dered camphor, 1 qt. of boiling
water. Apply with a piece of flannel
or sponge once a week.
Fiction filled many of the pages
of the Lady's Book. The more pop
ular stories of the day included
Bachelor's Darling, Irish Heiress,
Memoirs of a Gentleman and the
Adventures of a Bachelor.
Godey's favorite subjects on which
to editorialize were hope, death,
faith and tears. Of the latter he
said that there was "Nothing more
beautiful. They are always the
meek and silent effusions of sincere
feeling."
The crusading spirit was felt by

Godey when it came to unfaithful
husbands. He wrote many articles
on this subject. In one of these he
said, "Many an unhappy wife sits
friendless and alone, during all the
hours of the evening when her
faithless husband is seeking pleasures in other society and returns at
breathing the fumes of
wine and steaming with the smoke
of segars. Call him a BRUTE."
mid-nig-

By Sue Fenimore

Elizabeth Faulkner,

-

graduate of the University in June,
'45 and Betty Tevis, University student, are editing The Camp Courier,
weekly

publication

John's and Camp

of Camp St.
Nagawicka in

Delafleld, Wis.
Miss Tevis will return to the University in the fall where she will
serve as news editor of The Kernel.

Lt. J. R. McCord,

Correction, Please

agriculture '41, is serving with the
Military Government of Bavaria, he
writes Dean Horlacher. Assigned to
the Department of Food and Agriculture, his duties consist of distributing the food in the governed
sections to the places where lt is

The Kernel reporter writing
of the new Guignol play last
week was misinformed when she
spoke of the composer of the
melodies, Maury Madison, as

needed most.
Lt. McCord was county agent in
Shepherdsville
before he entered
the army.

blind.
Mr. Madison is not blind, and
we are sorry that this error

*