xt7d7w674j6j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d7w674j6j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19401011  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 11, 1940 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 11, 1940 1940 2013 true xt7d7w674j6j section xt7d7w674j6j Best Copy Available

The Kentucky Kernel

100 Tel. Student
Owned & Operated

FRIDAY 1SSLE
Seuai-weekl-

y

Kernel

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXXI

FROSH TO
SGA

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY.

Z246

EECT

INGLE WILL OPEN

Volunteer Clerks
Are Wanted

DEEGATES

For Registration

NEXT MONDAY

Acting President Thomas P.
Cooper has issued a call to staff
both
members and students,
men and women, to volunteer
for service Wednesday, Oct. 16.
from seven a. m. to nine p. m.
as registration clerks for students and faculty men who will
be required to register on that
day under the selective service

Candidates
From First Decile
Will Be Eligible

21

Election of two freshman representatives to the student legislature
will be conducted at 4 p. m., Monday, in Memorial Hall. The 21
students ranking in the first decile
on the freshman classification tests
are automatically candidates for the
seat.
Aspirants, from which one man
and one woman will be chosen. Include Betty Edwards Bohannon,
Waynesboro. Va.; Joseph C. Brink-wortLouisviue; Herbert M. C
Watkins Glen, N. Y.; George
E. Dudley, Sturgis;
Dorothy E.
Evans. Russell ville; Charles Joseph
Fritts. Somerset.
John Campbell Goodlett,
Felix Maurice Gossum,
Fulton: Temperance Reed Hazard,
Nashville, Tenn.; Martha C. McCau-leVersailles; Jerry Macke, Newport; Wallace R. Taylor, Hazard;
Darrell E. Ward, Hartford; Hogan
Yancey. Woodberry Forest, Va.
Russell E. Travis and Mary Norma Weatherspoon,
Fulton; and
Celia Bederman, Sarah Ann Mcln-tee- r,
David J. Mahanes, Daniel Parr
Marshall, and Horace Lewis Saurin,
Lexington.
Committee Named
The committee conducting the
election consists of Frank Clark.
Jack Lovett, Roy Tooms, John Conrad. Ben Sublette, Margaret Trent,
and Vernon Albert.
All freshmen are eligible to vote
in Monday's election.
No upper- classmen, except the election com
m it tee, will be permitted to attend
the balloting. Bob Allen, president
of the Student Government associa
tion, stated.
with the election of the two
freshman representatives, the legis
lature will reach its maximum
membership of 25 for the first time
this year. Bob Amnions and Dorothy Angle were last year's fresh
man representatives.

act.
Those wishing to volunteer
should send their names at once
to the president's office. U. K.
students and faculty will register at a special booth set up by
the county clerk in the Alumni
gymnasium.

With Luncheon
Featuring addresses by Mrs. John
Ingle, dean of women of tre University of Cincinnati, and Dr. Willis
Sutton, superintendent of schools,
Atlanta, Ga., the nineteenth annual
conference of the Kentucky Asso- j ciation of Deans of Women will open
today with registration in the Union building beginning at 10:30 aa.m.

TINCHER TO HEAD
ROOSEVELT CLUB
Other Officers,
Committee Named
Marvin M. Tincher, senior law
student from Richmond, was elected
chairman of the University
club at an organi
zation meeting Tuesday night in the

Union building.
Other officers selected to conduct
the Democratic student campaign
drive on the campus were Granville
Clark, Russell ville, men's
a,
Allie Garnet Kendall.
women's
Paul Durbin, Fulton, secretary;
Martha Durham, Greensburg, corresponding secretary; Sam Caddy.
Jr., Lexington, publicity chairman;
and Orville Leach, Lexington, treasurer.
Tincher appointed a speaker's
committee, composed of George Her
man Kendall, Lexington, chairman:
Uhel Barrickman, Bedford;
and
John W. Stevens, Harrodsburg. Ed
Dunn, Jr., Lexington, was selected
to head the political committee.
The organization meeting was ar- The newly-electrepresentatives ranged by Kendall, who recently
will be introduced to the legislature was placed in charge of organization
at the University by Franklin
at its next meeting at 8 p. m., TuesRoosevelt, Jr., chairman of the
day, October 15, in Room 204 of the
advisory committee on youth organiUnion building.
zations. Democratic National Campaign headquarters.
Rally Planned
X

O

Cyn-thian-

Tincher reported that the

An ojjxrtunity for every male student and staff member
at the University of Kentucky, between the ages of 21 and
36, regardless of his home address, to register October 16 on
the campus of the University, has been provided by President
Thomas P. Cooper, in cooperation with S. Higgins Lewis,
Fayette county clerk, under the newly enacted selective serv-

Two Day Session
To Close Saturday

y.

11

Will Register Wednesday

OF DEANS TODAY

h.

y.

All Males, Ages 21 To 36

ANNUAL MEETING

newly-- :

4

register.

President Cooper has also called for volunteers from
among faculty, staff members and students to serve as registration clerks that day, and has announced that the booth
will be open from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. for the convenience of those required to register. Students and staff members
wishing to volunteer as clerks are asked to send their names
to the office of the president. The military department has already volunteered the complete 'services of its personnel for
the day.
The University president calls particular attention to the
fact that provisions for registration have been made at the
University so that students and saff members need not travel
to their homes, and quotes the selective service act in regard
to those persons who are required to register and those who
are excepted, as follows: "Except as otherwise provided in
this Act, it shall be the duty of every male citien of the
United States, and of every male alien residing in the United
States, who, on the day or days fixed for the first or
registration, is between the ages of twenty-on- e
,
to present himself for and submit to registraand thirty-six-

pjn.

col-wo- rk

formed club plans to hold a "gigantic student rally" soon. Efforts
are being made to get either Paul
If?
V. McNutt of Indiana or Senator A.
B. Chandler to address the meetBy JIM WOOLDRIDGK
ing, he said.
The club also plans to arrange
Tension on the international front
grew tremendously this week with transportation for all state students
war talk coming from both sides of who are eligible to vote so that they
to cast their balmight
the globe and an inci easing partici- lots in return home
Instructions relapation of this country in the criti- tive to November.voting will be given
absentee
cal diplomatic maneuvers.
This year looks like a big one for
to
voters.
The I niled States . . .
University "book worms."
.
According to figures released by
heard the Japanese prime
library officials, 2556 books were
minister warn that Nippon would
signed out during the month of
declare war on the American nation
September, compared to 2,476 issued
if we should become engaged in the
during the same period last year.
present European struggle or should
And for the first eight days of
continue our attempts to limit
October this year 1,384 have been
"Japanese expansion."
There will be a compulsory
taken from the central desk. Of this
This warning came after the Jap
meeting of the Kernel news and
number, 35 were in the general read-ni- g
government finished signing its mileditorial staff at 3:00 p. m..
class, 85 philosophy, 18 religion,
itary pact with Germany and Italy, Tuesday, October 15, in the news
311 sociology, 15 language, 47 science,
which states that all three will make
room in McVey hall, Jim Cald77 useful artsfi 61 fine arts, 153 litcommon cause if any of them bef,
well,
announced
erature, 37 travel, 84 biography, 94
comes entangled with "a power not
yesterday.
history', 155 fiction, 25 rented fiction,
now in the conflict." The prime
All reporters and staff memand 190 in the browsing room.
minister's statement came also after
bers who are not present or do
Since the beginning of the semesthe VS. laid an embargo on expornot notify the editors previously
ter. 148 new books have been added,
tation of aviation gas to Far East
abif they will be unavoidably
including booklet on statistical reports.
sent,
will be automatically
search by Professor James W. MarIn reply to the Jap warning, this
dropped from the staff, Caldwell
tin, director of the business research
country placed another embargo,
said.
bureau, and 12 volumes of Shakethis one on wheat bound for Asiatic
speare's works.
harbors. The state department also
advised American citizens in the
Far East to return to this country
and avoid a possible complication.
England's C hurchill . . .
..
aimed a blow at the empire of
the rising sun when he reopened the
famous Burma road, the route by
By Patricia Hanauer
which supplies are taken to the
Ominous, or not, there are 13
troops in the in
blockaded Chinese
points that must be observed by
terior. The road leads from India residents of the womens' halls, if
through mountainous terrain into they want to avoid the much
the southern part of China. Supplies dreaded "campus." These 13 "comApproximately 60 members of the
are moved by truck, and the profit muniques" were called to the attenLunch Club will meet for a
is made by the British merchants in tion of approximately 350 residents Dutch
community sing and a luncheon at
India.
as weekly inspection began this noon today at the Maxwell Street
The route was.ciosed three months week.
Presbyterian church.
ago when Britain was having trou
Each week a member of the resiMary Rion is the program chairble on the continent and couldn't dence halls' staff inspects each room, man.
Other committee chairmen
risk another war in the East. Japan checks off the points, and possibly appointed at
the last meeting are
brought pressure at the time and leaves a fateful paper notice pointed
Frances Bogie, membership; Barsecui ed the closing of the road, at correction of one of the "unlucky bara Sniedley, decorations; and Ruth
hoping to starve the Chiensa troops. 13."
Dunbar, telephone.
It seems now that Britain wants
Prepared forms list the "misdeThe guide chairman and menu
an ally worse than the probability meanors," which, according to the chairman appointed for the month
of no war with the Japs. She closed staff, can be wrong in a 10 by 12 of October are Jeannette Graves
the road. She recalled her citizens room with one door, window, and and Catherine Cooper, respectively.
from the danger area Wednesday. closet. Three checks constitute a
Club officers for this year are Ida
Chun-hildeclared that the world "call down," and three "call downs" Schoene, president; Katherine
need hae no fear of Japan as long mean a campus for the unlucky
and Jean Wilat the British and U.S. fleets re- culprit.
liams, secretary-treasure- r.
mained afloat.
The cardinal doctrines listed are:
At this time the official news
1. Bed unmade
Those creatures
of Benito Mussolini broke out who glory themselves in making
The local American Student Union
witli an editorial, saying that Italy the eight o'clocks on the deadline
was ready "to fight" an American-Englis- h will have to hit the deck early be- will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in
alliance if the U.S. did not cause beds must be made before the Room 205, Union building. Peter
Gragis, chapter president, has an
refrain from "Checking the flow student's first class.
nounced.
(Continued on Page Flve
of poods to Britain's opponents."

k

1940 Looks
Like Doom Year
For Book Worms

te

.

.

Compulsory
Kernel Staff
Meeting Set

editor-in-chie-

Beware Unlucky Thirteen9
Council Warns Hall Residents

.

Dutch Lunch Club
Will Meet Today

Pir-ke-

or-t:- an

ASU Will Meet

y,

.

Quarterback Jones
Will Not Play,

Assembly Slated
9 a. m. Wednesday

Kirwan Announces

Prof. Percy Boynton, professor of
English at University of Chicago,
will be speaker at the second general
convocation of the semester at 9
a. m. Wednesday. He will speak
on "Best Books and Best Sellers
Professor Boynton is an author
and poet of note, having written
school and college textbooks on
American literature, history, and
composition. He was Joint author of
the "First View of English and
American Literature," published in

That Man Logan Is In Again;
This Time It's The Book Store

University.
Logan, who recently reported the
annual salaries of fifteen employees
of the university including President Emeritus Frank L. McVey and
acting President Cooper exceeded
the constitutional limit of $5,000,
criticized the privately operated
bookstore in a report Wednesday to
Gov. Keen Johnson.
U. K. GOT 10 PER CENT
"When I came to the university,"
Morris said, "the bookstore was
selling at list price and I offered a
plan to the Bookstore committee
(composed of one member from each
college) to sell at 10 per cent below list." University officials agreed
to this, but requested that I pay
them the 10 per cent and post a
$30,000 bond, Morris said.
At the end of the first year, the
committee was apparently satisfied
and renewed his contract for three
years, Morris said, and since then
have continued to renew it. "I have
a contract for three years, beginning
January 1941," Morris declared.
Two years ago, the University reduced the payment to itself to Vfs
per cent and in return I raised the
payment for old books from 40 per
cent to 50 per cent, Morris declared.
PAID UNIVERSITY $65,000
Morris asserted that he had paid
the University around $65,000 in the
ten years that he had operated the
book store and stood ready to pay
the 74 per cent to the students
whenever the University so authorized.
"Also I want it understood," Morris said, "that the bookstore has no
control over the changing of books.
The text books are selected by the
professors."
The state auditor claimed that the
University could save money U it
made its book purchases through the

-

s

AT CONVOCATION

tion."
Those men not required to register, according to the
Act, are: "Commissioned officers, warrant officers, pay clerks,
and enlisted men of the Regular Army, the Navy, the Marine
Corps, the Coast Guard, the Coast and Goedetic Survey, the
Public Health Service, the federally recognized active National Guard, the Officers' Reserve Corps, the Regular Army
Reserve, the Enlisted Reserve Corps, the Naval Reserve, and
the Marine Corps Reserve; cadets, United States Military
Academy; midshipmen, United States Naval Academy; Cadets, United States Coast Guard Academy; men who have
been accepted for admittance (commencing with the academic year next succeeding each acceptance) to the United
States Military Academy as cadets, to the United States Naval
Academy as midshipmen, or to the United States Coast
Guard Academy as cadets, but only during the continuance
of such acceptance; cadets of the advance course, senior division, Reserve Officers' Training Corps or Naval Reserve
Officers' Training Corps."

By Harold Winn
In reply to criticism by State
Auditor Logan that the campus
bookstore was operated at a "handsome profit," James Morris, operator
of the bookstore, yesterday opened
his accounts to inspection of a Kernel reporter.
Declaring that 30 per cent was his
profit on sales, Morris said, that 7i
per cent of that must be paid to the

Kentucky Favored
In Nashville Tilt

BOYNTON BILLED
r;

booth will be set up in the University gymnasium, and W. Gayle Starnes, executive assistant to the
president has been named assistant registrar by Mr. Lewis,
to be in charge of registration on the campus. It has been
estimated by President Cooper that approximately 1,000 students on the campus will be eligible for this registration,
which will be provided here so that those living at a distance
will not have to leave their duties and classes in order to

Review Slated
Mrs. George Edwin Smith of the
English department will discuss
"William Saroyan and the American ' Theater" following dinner at
7 pjn., Friday in the Boyd hall dining room. She will also review "The
Time of Your Life." The music department of the University will
furnish music.
Dr. Raymond McLaln. president
of Transylvania college, will speak
on "An Awkward Thing" at the
Saturday luncheon in Boyd hall.
Cathrine L. Morat. dean of girls,
Atherton High school, Louisville, and
president of the association, has
announced the following committee
chairmen for the meet: Mrs. P. K.
Holmes, assistant dean cf women,
program; Miss Mary Louise Chase,
auditing; Miss Louise Komfeld,
constitution revision; Miss Chole
Gifford, local arrangements; Miss
Ruth Riley, membership; Miss Jane
Haselden. nominations; Miss Anna
Dell Schoonmaker, publicity, and
Miss Elizabeth Lam, resolutions.
Workshops dealing with deans'
problems in high schools and
leges will occupy Saturday morn-ing. Those of college level will meet
in Boyd hall, and those of high
school level in Patterson hall. Miss
Jane Haselden will lead a college
level discussion of "Objectives of
Student Living Groups" at 9 a.m.
At 10 ajn. Dean Blanding will leac
another college level group discus-sion- e
"Democratization of Student
Government."

7

Wildcats Migrate Southward
Seeking First Conference Win
Over Vunderbill Commodores

ice act.
A registration

The two day session will close with
a luncheon at 12:30 p. m., Saturday.
Mrs. Ingle will speak at a lunch
eon meeting at 12:30 p.m., Friday in
the Union on "Our Changing Goals."
Dr. Sutton will address the afternoon session at Riverside Farm, the
home of Miss Sarah G. Blanding,
dean of women. His talk is to begin
at 3 p.m.. and will be followed by

a tea at

NUMBER

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1940

Ab Kirwan and his troup of Wildcats, after crashing football's selected ten this week as a result of
last Saturday's great offensive demonstration, headed southward at
9:20 this morning in quest of a
victory over Red Sander's rejuvenated Vanderbilt Commodores tomorrow on the Vandy turf.
Despite the defensive weakness
evidenced by Kentucky last week
against Washington and Lee. Ab
Kirwan said yesterday that he believed his boys had an "even chance"
with the Vandy aggregation.

MARY CLARE HOWARD
...

One of "The

11

omen".

1909.

The speaker has served as a member of the staff of the Chatauqua
institution, and as principle of summer schools. He was dean in the
colleges of arts, literature, and
science from 1912 to 1923 at the
University

FOUR ARE ADDED

Following the Kentu:ky-Van-derbi- lt
football game tomorrow in Nashville, a dance will
be held In the Vandy gymna.si-uto which all University students will be admitted free of
charge. Willie Cornelius, president of the Student body there,
informed Jim Caldwell, Kernel
editor, and Sam Ewing. SUKY
president, by telegram yesterday.
Earlier in the week. Bob Allen,
student government president,
received a letter from Delbert
Mann, Jr.. Vandy student council head, concerning the same
arrangement. The evening hop
will be held in the Commodore
gymnasium on the campus near
West End avenue and Twenty-Fourm

TO GUIGNOL CAST

Rehearsals Set
For 'The W'omen'

of Chicago.

BAND ANNOUNCED

Guignol theater officials com
pleted their largest casting job in
history yesterday with the addition
of four persons to the cast of "The
Women." first production of the
year.
Rehearsals
for the 44 female
characters will be held three times
this week, four times next week.
and every night from then until the
opening, October 28.
The last minute changes in the
cast were the substitution of Julia
Johnson. Lexington freshman, for
Olga Pennebager in the role of the
debutante: substitution of Sara
Elizabeth McLean, graduate of the
University,
for Margaret Ellen
Smith; Mimi Wiedeman. Lexington
senior, for Florence McKay; and
Christine McBrayer. Lexington, in
the unfilled role of the Countess
Delage.
Work on the stage sets and other
properties is progressing rapidly.
Frank Fowler, director, said. Set
designs have been completed by
Clay Lancaster and plans are being
made to set up props and background soon.
House manager Howard Moffett.
Lexington, has named students Jene
Margaret
Crawford.
Arnsparger.
Louise Brightwell. Anna Ray Penne-bake- r.
Betty South. Elizabeth
and Jack Taylor as ushers
for the theater this year.

FOR UNION HOP
Smoke Richardson
To Play Saturday
"Smoke" Richardson and his band
of nine colored swingsters will furnish the music for Saturday night's
Union hop from 9 to 12 o'clock in
the Union building.
Admission to the affair will be 25
cents for couple or stag and dress
will be informal.
A band which has rained populari
ty In this section recently, Richardson's group has been playing out-o- ftown engagements for the past few
weeks. They were at a University
dance two years ago during the sum
mer session.
Tne band uses "Lady of the Nile"
for both its opening and closing
theme song. Leaning toward swing,
the orchestra has made a number
of its own arrangements on popular
favorites. The leader. Bill Johnson,
and J. B. Edwards are the vocalists
on the sweet tunes.
A feature of the band's show is
"Pap, the drummer," who gives several specialty numbers.

n.

Seay Will Serve
On Committee

Frosh Assembly

State Purchasing division, but that
Prof. Maurice F. Seay, director
Mock Meet
it was doing 42.06 per cent of its the Bureau of School Sen-ic- of
buying under the "emergency clause" and president
of
Kentucky EduA mock meeting of the agriculture
of the statutes. He doubted if the cation association,the
will serve on the student council was the highlight
emergency existed.
State Committee on Education and of the freshman agriculture assemCOOP MENTIONED
the National Defense as a represen- bly yesterday morning in Memorial
The official made reference to the tative of the K. E. A. and of the Hall
new students cooperative book or University.
The council explained its funcganization which claims to save its
g
This
committee, tions during the mock proceedings.
members 20 to 40 per cent on new composed of representatives of all It is composed
of the presidents of
books and sell their old books for levels of public education in Ken- agriculture
clubs, the agriculture
50 cents to a dollar more than they tucky, will be Interested
in the conthe student legiscan sell them to the University tributions that public schools can representatives tofreshmen
lature, and two
and two
bookstore. This fact, he continued,
sophomores appointed be Prof. L. J.
Indicated that the bookstore owner program. Professor Seay said.
Horlacher. assistant dean of the
was making a "handsome profit'
John W. Brooker, state superin- - college,
from his business.
tendent of public instruction, has
Margaret Trent, Lexington senior,
Mr. Morris's original supply of called the first meeting of the com- - ' explained the election of representa-mitte- e
books Was inventoried at $41,653.61,
on Saturday, October 19. in tives to the student legislature,
the auditor said, and the stock is the State Department of Education Group singing was led by Prof,
now valued at $38,366.63.
office, Frankfort.
Donald Allton. instructor of music.
At Patterson hall, girl's dorm, the
official stated the net operating
profit was 28 per cent, an "enormous
figure." If the University could
operate establishments at such a
profit, why did taey farm out the
book store to a private manager, he

Hears

th

street.

Kentucky's hopes of defeating
Vanderbilt in tomorrow's game were
given a sudden jolt late yesterday
when Coach Ab Kirwan announced
that Junie Jones, quarterback of
his "A" team, would not play in the
Vandy game. Kirwan decided that
Jones, who has a severly bruised
right shoulder, would be withheld
frcm Saturday's game in an effort
to recover it completely before the
George Washington game. October
19. Dave Brown. 155 pound junior
quartet back will replace Jones in
the starting eleven. He will be relieved by Jchnny Hurst, a soph
back, who has played in only one
game this season.
Kirwan hasn't sent his charges
through any actual scrimmage this
week, but they have been studying
Vandy's plays as depicted by the
Z club in dummy scrimmage.
Cats Favored
Supporters of the Cats here in the
Blue Grass section rule Kentucky
a one touchdown favorite over the
(Continued on Page Three i

Kampus
Kernels

policy-formin-

Lamp, Cross Dance To Recall
Hustle, Bustle Of Ga y Nineties

asked.

The auditor also questioned the
placing of the University cafeteria
In private hands. "The book store
and cafeteria should not be commercialized and any profit realized
from the student body should accrue to the benefit of the Institution and not to an Inner circle established by contract," he added.

Archaeologists
To Meet Tonight
To acquaint members with the
progress of the University-WParchaeological projects under evcava-tio- n
in the state, a meeting of the
society
Archaeological
Kentucky
will be held at 7:30 p. m., today, in
the lecture room of the Physics
building.
The second Friday of each month
has been set as the tune for regular
society meetings.
A. S. Hendrick is president of the
archaeology group, and W. G. Haag,
curator of the University museum,
is
A

All campus organisation are requested to turn in the names of
their presidents at the office of the
Dean of Men by Tuesday. October
15. it was announced yesterday.
The Kentuckian staff meeting will
be held at 4 p. m. Tuesday in Room
54 of McVey hall, not today, as was
erroneously
stated in Tuesday's
Kernel.
Any senior woman wishing to enter an essay contest sponsored by
Vogue's Prix de Paris, come to Room
127 of the Union building for full
particulars. Any student interested
in a similar contest sponsored by
the American Youth Movement, cal'
at Room 127 of the Union building
for more information.
IMON NOTES
Today
Student Cooperative. 3 to j p in..
Room 205.
American Student Union. tt t 10
p.m.. Room 2C5.
Graduate Women's meeting 6 p.m
Football room.
Saturday
Patterson Literary aOciety. 12.43
p.m.. Room 205.
Student Union dunce, "o cents
per person. 9 to 12 p. m.. Biuegrass
room.
Sunday
Dr. Ceciiu Shcppurd
pacifist.
2:30 p. m. Y Lounge.
Monday
Phi Beta. 5 to 6 pjn.. Room 206.
Alpha Lambda Delta. 5 to 6 p.m..
Sports Committee. 5 p. m . Room

By GENE RIDDELL
;
And the villain still pursued her
skirls, leathers and droopy rat birds
The sinister Dalton with his ri in order although not necessary,
waxed mustachios has made plans while the during young Dick Dares
to creep into the ballroom of the are to fasten tl!
buttons on their
Student Union Saturday, October suits, ue a loose kuot in a higii still
19, to collect the mortgage on thr
collar, and top it all ofT with a
ole homestead or know the reason slick and devilish middle aisie hairwhy. Why? Well, just rest your foot do, to say nothing of a s ray lid comeasy-lin- e
on the old brass rail and plete with
And don't !et
take special heed.
it out. but perhaps black droopy
In celebration of their founding mustaches will be furr.isred: e' en
on the campus. Lamp and Cross, a gal and her
will - ..t be
men's senior honorary, are giving a forgotten m the hustle.
gigantic "Gay Nineties" ball from Blue. While To Play
9 to 12, following the somewhat earlIf you're worried about those hoop
ier historic event of sinkin' Georte
Washington
right in the middle skirts and jive music mixin' forget
it. cause the Blue and White boys
of the Delaware or Stoll Field or will be
well prepared to offer some
what have you.
real "take me out to th bull game"
Surprises Planned
jobs in audi! ion to a little barberMany surprises are m store tor shop quartet harmony. Of course, 204.
those who would reach into their codern melodies will shaft also in Tuesday
breeches and extract the terpskhorcan activity.
Art Committee. 4 p.m.. Room 1'05
one buck, which is to cover admisSo all you dashing d.uuhes dare
Student Legislature, 8 p.m.. Room
sion, stag ir couple, and is to include a dapper damsel to fill the front 204.
20 copers for beer (root or other seat on your tndem and Seep your
OTHER NOTES
"softy" drinks at the ole fashion eyes open for the announcement
Today
of the advanced ticket sale in next
bar in the ballroom.
Dutch Lunch Club. U to
For the fair damsels, bussels. hoop Tuesta s Ki rnel
Maxwell Street Church
.

.

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hat-cord- s.

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
PrBMPHFTl SFMI WFFKIV nt'RINO THE SCHOOL YEAR
EXTEPT

HOLinAVS

EXAMINATION

OH

ffftrfiy Shall The Kernel

PERIODS

Entered at the Pom Office a Leinnon, Kenturky.
aaeoncl rla
matter under the Art of Marrh S. 1979

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Suggesting

A

Dispose Of A
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Stunt

Mnnmritm
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CKOU'DI'S
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Business

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SGA Scholarships: Solution To
"1K I ,1 Vsi. V.
III'I I
.1

MINTA ANN HOCKADAY
Proofreader
AONES JENNINGS. FRANCES POLLOCK, Cartoons
Assistant News Editor
JJM VV'OOLDRIDOE
Assistant Mansions Editor
BOB AMMONS

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Perhaps The
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Aid, Cooperation

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Into This

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over from ilio previous ve.ir. According 10 ilu
most reliable estimates. SIS00 was added lo ihi-fund at registration lasi month, noi all of which
will Ix? sjifiit. if current budgetary trends

co-op-

,

This newspajtrr has never lelieved thai the
SGA should be a monev saving institinion. This,
oltviouslv, does noi mean that monev spent
should le wasted, hut rather that, with so mam
r
student aids mi drasiieallv needed, anv large
surplus can onlv indicate a lack of soc ial
resxnsil)iit. Such, to n. is the meaning ol
ihe present large hank account.

"

end-oi-vca-

poll.
There are several cjiieslious we vonl-l !'ke
questions which we
to ask concerning the
answered bv ihe Studem
lxlieve mav IxStandards commit tee of the SGA. who.e ::ice ii
is to investigate such mailers and repot
in

1) That SGA Prt'sidcnl Allen's proxsal (made
r
in his letter to the student bodv in the
20 Kernel' to establish an SGA student
loan fund, be adopted and SI. 000 appropriated
as the beginning principle.

2) That there Ix- established ten SGA scholarships of $50 per semester, to be awarded as follows: three to sophomores, three to juniors, and
four to seniors. These grams would Ix made
on a basis of scholarhip. economic need, and
service to the campus.
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Thai to adininisti ate these services

SGA-chose-

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sx-cia-

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hoard lx established, with an
memlier of the faculiv to act as ad-

non-partisa-

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viser.

I'erhaps scholarships amounting onlv lo tuition and loans of S2V.S0 do not seem inixriani
or esce iall Item-li- ial to main on the campus.
are those the conscientious,
students who earn their ways through
school and can do it on S100 a year to whom
tlie-s- e
sums mav mean the difference Ixtween
cherished degrees and bitter disapjxiiniment.
And in times like these, when reason at its
lxst can barelv keep its head alxtve water, ii
seems foolhardv. ve's even ciimiii.il. to keep idle
monev which if proM-rlsxnt could accomplish
so miu h.
But there

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profit-purpose-

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his hangc has oiiii- alx ml is the slorv cj
a hanging voi Id. l old tiadiiioiis Ix ing broken,
of new morals and sent iiiienls. In the old liuie
college, in deference lo motalisis the college
theatre we nt classical oi iniKx u'otisly laicical
Sli.ike spe ate and "(.hat lev's
oscillating lxlve-eiAunt.'' And in niaiiv sectatian sdnxtls the stage-waconsidered lalxxi. Giaduallv, there- evolved
iheorv ol chaiua which is
a
still held in vune cjiiarters. thai the college theatre should consciously devede- itscll lo tlavs
which the crass materialism of the commercial
Mow

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V.

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The Vice Of The People
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theatre keeps Irom the stage. It was generallv
accepted that the college theatre must stand loi
all thai was sweet anil gexxl. and abhor the bad
in the drama.
To plav Shakespeare was all line, though he

i

larianne Hewitt

And so. life goes on. as it inevitably will. Keeneland has once
more become the nucleus of college
life students seem more given to
rubbing shoulders with fellow classmates at the race track rather than
in academic buildings. Reckon Tiny
Perry will clean up with another
$25,000 like he did at the Derby last
year uh huh while the rest of us
order water and toothpicks from
the Grill.
The old, old adage of "When man
bites dog, that's news" has needed
a substitute for ages here's one
that should rate headlines. Gene
Riddell and Frank Allen Rogers
were found at the Kappa house recently, their tongues hanging out
the side of their mouths, knitting
desperately on sweaters one a darling baby garment, and the other a
lovely Shetland pullover. Looks like
the Phi Delts will sit home and work
for the Red Cross when the time
comes for the shouldering of guns.
Betty Ann Queen, of campus renown of days gone by, took the
dying test last Friday night with a
Phillip Morris sales