HOME PERFORMANCE

FOUR QEOLOQY STUDENTS TO
OF WORK FOR STATE IN SUMMER

S ROLLER P LAY APR. 23
Dates

Changed
From
2425 Owing to

April

George Pirtlc and 11. D. Crider,
Seniors, and Kay Miller and Cecil
Lane, Sophomores, of the Department
of Geology of the University of Kentucky, will be engaged in making traverse maps of the State under the State
Geological Survey, according to a
statement given out iby Professor A.
C. McFarlan, of the Geology Department, the first of the week. The first
two mentioned were with the State
Geology Department 'last summer and
arc well learned in that field. The
men will leave as soon as the present
semester has closed.
Pirtlc and Miller will be engaged in
mapping Hardin and Bullitt counties;
Crider will map LaUtie county and
will probably be connected with the
licld party under the direction of Dr.
Stuart Wcllep, of the University of
Chicago, into the Western Kentucky
sections.
It is not known where
Lane will spend the summer.

The Lexington date of "Seventeen,"
play, lias been
5
changed from April
to April
This change was brought
about, due to a conflict in dates, by
Harrison Scott, manager of Opera
House.
The cast has been working night and
day under the supervision of advisers
and critics who say that the 'Jfhurs-dai- y
night rehearsal was as nearly perfection as anly Stroller organization
has ever given. The interest seems
to be on the increase especially since
the time of presentation draws near.
William Blanton, (business manager
of the Stroller organization, will leave
Saturday, April 12, for Cynthiana, to
Kclose the contract for the performance
Patronize the advertisers in the
there. The date is set for April 21.
Contracts have already been clrfsed for tucky Kernel.
shows in Richmond,
Harlan and
Pineville. These dates arc as follows:
Richmond, May
Harlan, May 8;
Pineville, May 9.
All presentations
have Ibcen made
for the itinerary. The troupe, composed of twenty-fiv- e
persons, including
cast, stage crew and chaperons, will
go to Cynthiana in automobiles provided by members of the organization'.
They will go to Richmond in busses.
At Richmond they will take the boarding car (Which has been chartered,
and thence to Harlan and Pineville.
According to Phillip Rush, business
manager of the stage crew, the scenery will be ready for use ini rehearsals
a week (before the first performance
of the play.
The costumes are being designed
iby the Art Department of the
under the supervision of Miss
Ann Callahan.
K
the annual Stroller

24-2-

23-2-

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Ken-

JUDGE

t

DEBATE IN PARIS

Dr. Edward Tuthill and Messrs.
Roberts 'and Chalklcy, of the History
Dopartmctit and Law iCol'lcge, respectively, went to Paris last Friday night
to judge a debale on the subject of,
"Resolved, That the system of direct
primary nomination is preferable to
that of nomination iby caucus and convention."
A number of .professors of the University have been going to different
parts of the State during the last
three weeks to judge debates of a
similar nature.
--

;

i:

The Best Sandwiches
and Sodas in Town
McGurlc and

MM
MM

K-

DIPLOMAS WILL BE GRANTED
CLASS IN JUNE
TO LARGE
The University of Kentucky will
grant diplomas to 290 (graduates this
June according to estimates made by
school officials, ibascd on the number
who have done satisfactory work to
date. The class graduating from the
University is larger than the combined
numlber 'from lall other Kentucky

STUDIO OF

Clyde

E.

226

-2

E. Main Street

The History Club held its regular
monthly meeting Monday, April 7,
at 3:45. In the absence of the President and Vice President, Estelle Kell-sa- ll
presided.
Following the announcements and
usual .business, an interesting program
was gtven. Ellery Hall gave a good
esrmate of "Wilson the Historian,"
citing his most important works and
giving a few extracts from them.
Ruth Kennedy sketched clearly the
place of Wilson at the Peace Confer
ence. William BUnto.i in his talk,
"Wilson the Educator," showed the
important place Wilson held in the
field of education.
In keeping with the month, W. D.
Bryant discussed "April, Our War
Month." The meeting then adjourned.

Phone 4125

Read The Kernel Ads

for the
First Time

FORMER STUDENT HONORED

HISTORY CLUB HAS REGULAR
MEET MONDAY AFTERNOON

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MMMMMMM

Harnessing
Niagara Falls

It will be of interest to the students
of the University of Kentucky to know
that James H. Gardner, a former stu
dent and major in Geology, has had
the honor of being elected president
of the American Control of Petroleuin
Geologists, at the ninth annual meeting, which was held 'last month at
Four
Texas.
Houston,
hundred
members were present at this meeting
and he received a unanimous vote.
Gardner received his Master's Degree from the University of Kentucky
in 1906 and was s student of Doctor
Miller's in the Department of Geology.
The American Control of Petroleum
Geologists' Association, which has for.
its memlbers America's foremost geologists, is the best of its kind in the
world, and it is quite an honor, not
only to Gardner but also to his university, that he has Ibeen elected president of such an organization which
ranks so high in America and in fact
throughout the world. This organization has over 1,000 members scattered all the way to the antipodes.
Gardner is also president of his own
petroleum company, im Tulsa, Okla.
At the meeting in Houston, David
White, former chief of the United
States Survey, and Andrew Lawson,
of the National Research Council,
were present.

Foushee

PHOTOGRAPHER

;

y,

O'BRIEN

What Engineering
Owes to Faith

harnessing of Niagara Falls
great engineering feats,
of many
of the
was the result
minds. There were no
able and constructive
"older engineers" on this work, with younger
assistants, as is now common, because there
were no "older" engineers then. All of them were
young men in a young business, optimistic,
enthusiastic and willing to take long chances.
pioneer
THE1892, like all

The original Niagara installation represented progress based largely on faith because there were many
features of construction proposed at that time which
Westinghouse Engineers refused to accept, and which
time has shown to be utterly impracticable.
Thus, in effecting a compromise, the three fundamental features of heating, insulation and regulation
machines as built, were vastly different
of the
from the original designs. Time verified their judgment, the ten original generators operating successfully for more than a quarter of a century.
Looking back, it is gratifying that those young men
served engineering so courageously, because truly it
was an undertaking that taxed their faith to the limit.
le

Westinghouse
ACHIEVEMENT 8 OPPORTUNITY

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