xt718911pf8r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt718911pf8r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19371008  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  8, 1937 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  8, 1937 1937 2013 true xt718911pf8r section xt718911pf8r I

FRIDAY EDITION
SEMI-WEEKL-

Y

VOLUME XXVIII

11

KERNEL

Best Copy Available

Hit MNTUULI

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BEAT
GEORGIA TECH

OF KENTUCKY

UNIVERSITY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER

2246

LET'S GO 'CATS

8, 1937

NEW SERIES NO. 7

'Cats To Grapple Geor QICL Yellow Jackets
ODK Selects Coach Rupp
For Position Of Adviser
To Succeed Roy Moreland

SIXTEEN COEDS

All Invited

ENTER RAGE FOR

To Coed's Dance

Circle Authorizes Purchase
Of Plaque To Be Awarded
To Fraternity Having
Highest Standing

Applications For
Degrees Must

Candidates Chosen Tuesday
At First Regular Meeting
Of Military
Group

CLUB TO CONTINUE
ANNUAL TAG SALE

Be Made

WINNER TO BE NAMED
AT NOVEMBER DANCE

October

Membership Applicants Are
Asked To Get Point Charts
Explaining System

2

Delayed

Ballot Tabulat i o n

who expect to
complete their work for grad-

Will Insure Secrecy

August, are requested U make
application for a degree on
Monday or Tuesday, October
11 and 12. This applies also to
graduate students who expect
to complete their work for advanced degrees. AU applications should be filed in Room
of the Administration building.
As the commencement lists
are made from these cards, it
is very important to file an
application at this time. No.
student can be considered for
graduation who has not filed
an application.
Leo M. Chamberlain

Sixteen candidates for the position of sponsor of Company "C
Pershing Rifles were nominated at
the first 'regular meeting of the organization held, Tuesday night in
the Armory.
Coeds named for the honor are
Marjorie Doyle, Lexington, Alpha
XI Delta; Betty Murphy, Bloom-fiel- d,
Alpha Gamma Delta; Leigh
Brown, Lexington, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Mildred Croft, Hopkins-vill- e.
Delta Delta Delta; Emily
Quigley, New Orleans, La. Chi Omega; Fritzi Jillson Frankfort, Kappa
Kappa Gamma; Frances Sledd.
Lexington, Kappa Delta; Frances
Wood. Ashland, Delta Delta Delta;
Virginia Batterton. Lexington, Kappa Delta; Lucy Anderson, Lexington, Chi Omega; Jeanne Barker,
Louisville, Alpha Gamma Delta;
Marian Johnson Birmingham, Ala.,
Zeta Tau Alpha; Babe Combs, Lexington Independent; Jimmy SanKappa
Delta;
ders, Lancaster,
Sarah Renaker, Lexington, Alpha
Delta Theta; and Ruth Hamersley,
Lexington, Delta Zeta.
"The sponsor will be elected the
night of November S, and will be
announced the following night at
a dance given in her honor at the
Alumni Gym. To insure secrecy,
the ballots will not be counted until
the night of the dance.
Other business transacted at the
meeting included the election of
Eugene Kannaird as 1st Bergeant
of the company for year 1937-3- 8.
Other officers of the organization,
elected last spring, are: Arthur
Plummer, Captain; Sam Nesbitt. 1st
Lieutenant: and Sam McDonald
and Fred Flowers, 2nd Lieutenants.
Pershing Rifles, an honorary organization for outstanding military
men, has won the 5th Corps Area
drill meet for six consecutive years,
and has never been defeated in
Approximarching
competition.
mately 100 freshmen will be tried
out this fall to determine their eligibility for the company.

AH seniors

Of Election

uation in January, June or

Adolph Rupp, University basketball coach, was named faculty advisor of the Nu circle of Omicron
Delta Kappa, national leadership
fiatornity, at a meeting of that
group Tuesday In McVey hall.
Coach Rupp will succeed Roy
Moreland, professor of law, who
as advisor but will remain an
acme member of the organization.
The circle authorized the purchase of a plaque to be awarded the
fraternity having the highest scholhe
astic standing if and when
practice of publishing such standings is resumed by the University.
Rules for the awarding of this
plaque m ill be made by ODK In conjunction with the University ad-

ed

Registrar

ministration.
In cooperation with fraternities,
tororities and independents, ODK
will sponger the sale of tags, at the

BROWN APPOINTS

five home fotball games.
Proceeds from these sales will be
used to help furnish the new student union building. Approximately
$7,000 has been colelcted by campus
organizations and this money will
be added to the fund the University
has lor furnishing the building.
Cups will be awarded to the fraternity and sorority selling the
largest number of tags during the
five games. These cups will be put
on display in the campus bookstore
in the near future.
The circle invites any student Interested in the poirtt system flD
stop by the Kernel business office
lor a point chart. Election of new
members will be held in November
but applicants are advised to begin
fathering their points as soon as
possible.
. At the meeting Tuesday the Nu
circle passed the following resolution in connection with the edath
of Robert Freeberg:
RESOLUTION
While returning with comrades
Ut Saturday from aa occasion
birh had been a gala event to
I'rjvcrsity young men and women, without warning and to
apparently without mercy, death
aimed at and struck a shining
mark in the person of our friend
ar.d fcUow student, Robert Free-ber- g.

YEARBOOK STAFF
Chooses Buckley, Houlihan,
Tatum Associate Editors;
Books To Be Distributed
May 1st
Announcement of the Kentuckian
year book staff for the ensuing year
by Roger
was made yesterday
Brown, editor-in-chof the publication.
Assisting Brown as associate editors will be Sidney Buckley, Neville
Tatum, and Robert Houlihan, Serving in the capacity of assistant editors Will be Donald Irvine, George
Kerler, and Edward Muehsler.
The following departmental editors have also been appointed: Tom
sports editor; Frances
Watkins,
Woods and Elizabeth Ligon, sorority editors; Helen Markwell and
Alice Wood Bailey, honorary and
club editors; Ellen Coyte and Clementine Cooper, activity editors;
Dave Lewis and Mack Hughes,
snapshot editors; Jack Nuxol and
Robert Hansen, fraternity editors;
George Booher and Betty Elliot,
class editors; and Mary Lou Stark
and Betty Jackson, secretaries.
Members of the general staff include: Martha Hume. Betty Jane
t,
Sellers, Virginia Richey, Jane
Elizabeth Daniels, Virginia
Eversole, and Ruth Ware.
Based on the theme of the history of the University, work will
start on the publication immediately and the books are expected to
be ready for distribution on or before May 1.
All staff members are requested
to be present at a meeting next
Wednesday at 4 p. m. in the basement of McVey hall, at which time
instructions will be given and the
general outline of the procedure of
work explained.
ief

u

lew young men connected in
any capacity with the lniversity
of Kentucky through out the' last
quarter of a century showed more
.

11-1-

PERSHING QUEEN

God-bou-

poMtive promise of broad, helpful,

and useful citizenship than this
manly ycung man from a sister
state.
So all inclusive were his qualities and so eminently fitting was
it. that he should east his lot with
those committed to real leader-ttii- p
in this institution that Omi-ert- in
Delta Kappa would have un-

'Sour Mash Gag Magazine,
Tardy On Publication Date
4r- -

Patterson literary society will hold
a short meeting and luncheon for
all members' and candidates for
membership at noon Friday, October 8, in Room 231. McVey hall.

BULLETIN
Flash! Flash! Editor George
Kerler, between quaffs of a 32
ounce stein of beer, said that
"Sour Mash will probably be sold
at the Georgia Tech game SatAlA stag party will be given by
urday, maybe, I hope, after all,'
pha Gamma of Alpha Chi Sigma, in a statement made to the press
professional chemistry fraternity, at at 11:59 o'clock last night.
8 o'clock Monday night, October 11.
Well try to break the news to you
are invited to the
All chemists
and
party which will be held In the easy like,too, too,we're hoping you
disappointed, but
wont be
fraternity's room in Kastle ball.
orphan of the journalistic
that
Recognition
services for new world, "Sour Mash" is late again!
members of Y. W. C. A. will be held Yours not to reason why, yours but
at 7:30 o'clock Thursday night, to moan and sigh, til it doth put in
October 14. in Memorial hall. This an appearance, sometime next week
we hope, we hope, we hope.
ria'e has been changed from TuesHowever, if you're one of those
day, October 12.
curious people that Just have to
Any student with snap shots con- know the why and wherefore of
cerning the University, its activi everything, choose, one of the exties, its alumni, its students or its planations listed below and let it
personnel; and who wish to have go at that.
a. Press room congestion. .
them placed in the next issue of
b. We lost our scissors.
the Kenturkian. please leave picc. The editors got drunk.
tures at the Kernel office with
d. We don't know no jokes.
Mack Huges. Any pictures taken of
We assure you, though, that this
Ftudents at the races, trots, or any
other outside place will be greatly concoction of humor is well worth
t waiting for, seeing fes how the Uni- appreciated.
,

eU

ma

UK ALUMNI CLUB

WILL HOLD DANCE
SATURDAY NIGHT
Bryant's Band To Play
For First Winter Formal

Gene

From 9 To 12 In
Alumni Gym

miss Mclaughlin

heads dance group

Band Dance To Be October 16,
Followed By SuKy Formal
Hop
And

versity's
laugh-provoki-

most talented writers

literature

SuKy Pep Club Will Conduct
First Rally Of Year At
7 O'clock In Alumni
Gym

of

have

combined forces for the opening
barrage of gags and giggles.
Littering the pages of the "pulp"-mabe found several interesting
photographs including snapshots of
swingsters at work in the "Big Apple," domestic life in our sorority
houses, and one entitled, "Six Legs"
guess who belongs to numbers
three and four.
The scandal column, "Biological
Dirge." containing enough dirt for
a dozen or so libel suits, will again
be featured, as will the humorous
creations of cartoonist Don Irvine
"The Tale of a Single Maiden,"
written in a morbid mood, will send
you to the depths of despair, while
"The Wages of Gin" will drop you
even lower. "A Pledge's Prayer,"
however, will lift you to the heights
of mirth, as will "Perfect Lover." a
didactic treatise on the characteristics an eaxcting girl demands in
her date.
Also appearing In the October Issue are several short stories, and
"The Mash Barrel," a regular feature know to readers of yore.

WARREN IN CHARGE
OF ARRANGEMENTS

With the initial purpose of promoting enthusiasm and school spirit
among the students at the University, the SUKY pep circle, prior, to
the Kentucky Georgia Tech game
Saturday on Stoll field, will conduct
the first pep rally of the school
year, scheduled for 7 o'clock Friday,
in the alumni gymnasium.
Completed plans for the affair,
made Tuesday in regular weekly
meeting of the circle, consist of an
assembly of all students in the
alumni gymnasium at 7 o'clock followed by a parade through town led
by the University's "Best Band in
Dixie," which will end its line of
march back at the University stadium. It Is posible that a fire engine may be secured to head the
parade.
Warren in Charge
In charge of arrangements for the
pep rally will be Eugene Warren,
president of SUKY, assisted by a
committee composed of C. D. Morat,
Jack Clinkenbeard, Alice Bailey,
and Danny Terrell. Cheerleaders
that will lead the yells are C. D.
Morat and the new appointees.
Stephenson, Manuel Schof-maand Roland Lamb.
Since Saturday's game is the first
to be held at home this year, SUKY
wishes to announce to all freshmen
n,

LAW STUDENTS
ARE PUBLISHERS

us

Home Economics Club Elects
Representative To Forum
At Business Session
Miss Byrd Kendall will represent
the Home Economics club at a convention of the American Country
Life association to be held at Man6,
hattan, Kansas, October
it
was announced
at the business
14-1-

meeting held Monday night. Miss
Kendall will give a demonstration
of Block Printing and will lead a
discussion on Family Living,
Julia Hall, president of the club,
presided at the meeting, and appointed various committees for the
year. Minnie Ruth Ryle, Bina
Baird, and Beebe Wayne were
placed in charge of Home Economics at the Fall festival. Jane Schaf-f- er
was appointed chairman of the
Freshman initiation which is to be
held November 26. Assisting her
with the arrangements are Lula
Guardhouse and Margaret Crom

well.

The date for the annual Ellen H.
Richard's banquet was set for December 18. The chairman of the

banquet is Virginia Dyer, Marion
Miller has charge of the food,
Eleanor Snedegker the invitations,
and Mary Jane Braly, decorations.
Julia Wood and Frances Young are
in charge of arranging for the
programs of the Spring meetings.
The Social Work of the club will
be arranged by Mary Jordon Odor
and her committee. Louise Tucker
will have charge of the refreshments for all of the meetings this
semester.
were passed concerning
freshman girls and the transfer
students.
It was decided that
Freshman students should work off
fifty points while transfers need
only earn twenty-fiv- e
points before
the initiation exercises.
By-la- ws

AG DEAN ANNOUNCES

CURRICULUM CHANGES
Changes in the curriculum of the
College of Agriculture have been
made and approved. It was announced Tuesday by L. J. Horlach-e- r.
assistant dean of the college.
Home Economics 34, Dietetics for
Nurses, will be changed from three
to four credits while English requirement 3b may be changed to
English 3a.

Kittens Out To Avenge Defeat
'Cats Suffered In Vandy Game

Mosely Rates Freshman Team
As One Of Finest That
"Best Band In Dixie" To Lead
He Has Seen At
Gigantic Parade
In
University
Downtown

Opening the formal winter season, the Lexington Alumni Club,
in cooperation with the University
Alumni Association, will sponsor
a dance from 9 to 12, Saturday
night, October 9, at the Alumni
gymnasium. Gene . Bryant's orchestra will play and subscription will be
one dollar, couple or stag.
This dance is an annual affair
and follows the first home football that are interested in trying
for
game. Alumni comprising the com- membership In the circle, to please
mittee in charge are: Miss Margue(Continued on Page Four)
rite McLaughlin, chairman; James
Shropshire, Miss Helen King. John
LeStourgen, Colonel B. E. Brewer,
Miss Willy King and Eugene Myers.
Other dances for the months of
October and November are: dance
sponsored by university band October 16; Suky dance, October 23;
hop, October 30; Pershing Rifles dance, November 6;
dance sponsored by W. A. A. and Of Law Journal For 26th
swiming team. November 13; and
Year; Moreland To Direct
the Alumni Association dance, NoWork With Students Asvember 25. The Kentuckian dance
sisting On Publication
will probably fall on December 4 or

Hall Chosen As
11.
Leader Of Pitkin
Club Discussions Miss Byrd
Kendall
Dr. Warner Hall, of the Maxwell
To Attend Meeting
Presbyterian church, will lead the

Kampus
Kernels

Armory.

on the campus are
invited to attend
being given Friday
Patterson hall by
the Patterson and Boyd halls,
and the organized house girls.
Music will be furnished by
"Smoke" Richardson, and his
Lexington band.
Managing the danee are:
Elizabeth
Loula Gardhouse,
Brown, Dorothy Santen, Ca-bWood, Miriam Gardhouse, Louise Watts, Billy
Vance, Sarah RansdeU, Jimre,
my Sanders, Runelle
Mary Scott, and Thei-Clark.
All men
cordially
the dance
night in

Pal-mo-

Pitkin club in its discussions of
religious and social problems for
the coming year, it was decided at
a meeting of the group held Tuesday in the Woman's building.
This is a resumption of the custom followed in previous years. Last
doubtedly selected him for comyear's leaders were chosen for indiradeship. Indeed so deeply do we
vidual meetings.
this momrnt fuel this loss that,
Under the sponsorship of the
therefore, be it resolved:
Presbyterian church, the Pitkin club
That in his passing, Omicron
meets every Wednesday at noon.
(Continued on Page Four)
Membership of the gnjup is limited
to 75 students.
SOB SISTERS MEET
Present officers of the Pitkin club
Theta Siema Phi. honorarv fra are as follows: Bob Evans, presiI dent; Clayton
Young secretary, and
ternity for women in Journalism.
held their first business meeting of Ruth Ecton,
the year Tuesday night at 8 o'clock
IIAXDICRAFTERS TO MEET
in Boyd hall reception room. Leslie Lee Jones, president, presided
All girls who are interested in
There will be a meeting of the and plans were made for a pledge
B. S. U. Council at 5 p. m. Monday tea. Miss Margaret McLaughlin, handicraft, leather or metal work,
Miss Juliet Gallo- will meet at 3 p. m. Monday in the
in the Woman's building. All mem- faculty advisor; Ed
way, and Mrs.
building
Parker,
Susan
with
bers are urged to be present and to advisors, were also present. alumni Woman's
Jackson presiding.
bring a visitor.
Baptist students
are cordially invited to attend.
Try outs for all those Interested
in joinuie SUKY will be held at
5 p. m. Friday in the Y. M. C. A.
room on the second floor of the

In Pail Hall

Dixies Big Game Finds Locals
In Stoll Field Debut Tomorrow;
Giant Pep Rally In Gym Tonite

For the 26th consecutive year, the
quarterly edition of the Kentucky
Law Journal will be published in
November by students in the College
of Law.
Under the direction of Prof. Roy
Moreland, faculty editor, members
of this year's administrative staff
are: Joseph Freeland of Paducah,
Ky., student editor; Sam Milner,
Paris, business manager; James
Terry,
Williamsburg,
circulation
manager;
and Dorothy Salmon,
Paducah, note editor.
The staff is chosen from among
seniors in the Law school, solely on
the basis of scholarship. Appointment to this board, and satisfactory
work therein, and selection for the
"Order of the Coif" are the highest
honors to be obtained in the College of Law.
Other students, who are not seniors, are also selected for their
scholastic standing to contribute
notes to the Journal. For the current year they are Jo Ferguson,
Charles Gadd, Bettie Gilbert. Vin-ecKclley, Louis Levitt, B. T.
Moynahan Jr., Paul Oberst, El wood
Phillip
Rosenbaum,
Schiff, and
Steve White.
Consisting of articles by leading
men in the profesion. and notes
and comments on legal topics, the
journal is published four times a
year, in November, January, March,
and May.
It was stated in a bulletin issued
by the faculty staff that in addition
to the honor and experience which
an appointment to the board brings,
these students chosen have an opportunity to render valuable service to the law school In turning out
a creditable law review.
The law review which the modern
school publishes does much to add
to or detract from the respect and
prestige which it enjoys, not only
among the practicing attorneys of
the state, but with teachers in other
schools throughout the nation.
The advisory board from the
State Bar Association includes
William Gess of Lexington, chairman; King Swope, Church Ford, J.
B. Snyder, Perry Miller, Robert
Hatton,
Robert Caldwell, Bruce
Morford, James Stites, Osso Stanley,
Richard Stoll, John Bull, C. E. Rankin, Jack Lott, Jr.,Coleman Taylor,
W. T. Drury, Leer Buckley and
Brady M. Stewart.
nt

DISCISSION PLANNED
"Our Stake in the Far East" will
be the subject of a disucssion, by
the World Fellowship group of the
Y. W. C. A., at three o'clock Monday
afternoon in the Woman's Building.
Mary Jane Roby, leader of the
group, will lead the discussion.

By MARVIN N. GAY
With high hopes of avenging the
12 to 0 shellacking
handed their
big "brothers,' the 1937 Kentucky
Kitten eleven opens its season
against Vanderbilt's yearlings Saturday afternoon at Nashville.
Head frosh coach Frank Moseley,
former Alabama quarterback, rates
the present "greenle" crop aa the
finest he has seen at the University. Unlike most football mentors, he is anything but pessimistic
as he believes his team capable of
holding its own against the best
frosh evelens In Dixie.
Featuring a fine blocking forward
wall that averages 190 pounds, the
first year men will be tough to stop
as they have an unusually fas: and
powerful backfleld. These backs also know more than a smattering
ooncerning
the "gentle" art of
blocking, passing, and punting.
The Kitten aggregation, driven
hard by Coach Moseley, has improved rapidly and has shown great
defensive strength during its scrimmages with the varsity.
Among the players showing varsity promise are two Hazard boys.
Combs and Fitzpatrick. Central
Kentucky basketball fans will remember both boys as they starred
during the last state high school
tournament. Combs is a tricky.
shifty, Davis type of back while
Fitzpatrick is a powerful center.
Ishmael, former Pikeville flash,
and Weigand are two hard driving
backs very adept at smashing op'
position lines.
Other Kittens showing promise of
developing into future Wildcats are
ends, Scott, McCarthy, Gholson,
Riggs; tackles. Eibner, Jacobs, Huddles ton, Johnson; guards. Willough-b- y.
Dowdy, Fannon, McEneely, and
center, French.
Because of a new Southeastern
conference rule, this fall's aggregation will play a schedule consisting
of three rather than the usual two
games. After the Vandy encounter,
the greenies will face Tennessee,
November 6, at Knoxville, and
Morehead Teachers college, November 20, on Stoll field.
No definite lineup for Saturday's
tussle has been selected as Coach
Moseley says that he will start those
boys who look best during the final
practice sessions.
The 30 players selected for the
Nashville trip will leave early Saturday morning, and will return
Sunday.

LOCAL
HEAR SNAKE LECTURE

TURNSTILES EXPECT
TOP OPENING CROWD

Kentuckian
Picture Schedule
Extended
Schedule for the 1934 Kentuckian pictures wiU be extended another week due to
the fact that more pictures
will be taken this year.
The photograher is in the
basement of Memorial hall
every day from 9 a. m. to 5
p. m. and until noon on Saturday, October 16.

ENGINEER GROUP
TO HEAR BOYDEN
Famous Authority On Ileat- ine and Ventilation To
Speak Before Senior Engineers Wednesday
Col. D. S. Boyden, president of the
American society of heating and
ventilating engineers, will address
the senior electrical and mechanical students at 11 a. m. Wednesday,
October 13, in Room 202 Engineering building.
A technical discussion on the
economic use of steam from a Central generating plant will be given
by the Colonel. He will describe the
district heating system of the Boston Edison company with pictures
and charts showing the boilers, the
electric load, the steam consumption and demand, the distribution
system and operating conditions.
e,
Born December 28, 1872 at
Mass., Col. Boyden attended
the public schools for his preliminary education.
After leaving
school Mr. Boyden specialized in
the field of light, heat and power,
and his entire business career dating from 1890 has been devoted to
this work. For two years he was
with the Suburban Light, Heat and
Power Co. in Boston, and then for
fifteen years was chief engineer
and superintendent at the Block
Plant Electric Light Co., where he
laid out and specialised the extensive heating business carried on by
this company.
Mr. Boyden has acted as a consultant on numerous district heating projects and since 1907 has been
superintendent of the steam heating department at Edison Electric
Illuminating Co. of Boston, now the
Boston Edison Co., where he supervised the development and operation of the company's extensive
Steam Heating Service System.
Wal-pol-

Dr. W. D. Funkhouser, dean of TWO PLAYS ADDED TO
the graduate school, gave a lecture
RENTAL COLLECTION
Monday at the luncheon meeting
of the Lexington
Club
at the Lafayette hotel in which he Two plays, the stage versions of
told the group of the harmlessness which are still running in New
of the general species of Kentucky York, have been added to the rental
collection of the University library,
snakes.
Dr. Funkhouser said that the it was announced yesterday.
"Having a Wonderful Time, by
creatures proved their worthiness
of life by the amount of insects Arthur Kober. and "Room Service."
by John Murray and Allen Boretz.
they destroy and called it poor
sportsmanship for humans to kill are the plays. They are rented to
any snake on sight whether harm- students of the University for three
cents a day.
less or poisonous.

'Cats Out To Keep Clean
Record Of Opening Wins
By L. T. IGLEHABT
i
When the Wildcats meet the
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets tomorrow on Stoll field, they'll have
recbroken an almost
ord.
Beginning way back in pre-wdays, the 'Cats always opened hcir
season by entertaining at home.
Then in 1918. when war talk and
war victims from overseas caused
college football to beconv; a
instead of a page affair, the
University team's first game was
canceled, and the season wa3 begun
in Indiana.
They brought back a 23 to 7 victory and from that tim? on
at home for the opening
games until this year.
That record Is shattered, but
there is another: Since 1917 the
Wildcats have never Been defeated
in a first game on Stoll field, although they were tied once, 6 all,
with Maryville ten years ago. In
ar

one-colu-

Wynnemen Rated Underdogs
In Southeastern Gridiron
Classic; Tech Brings
Veteran Squad

that fifth of a century of victories,
Kentucky amassed a total of 700
points and held her opponents to
24, not allowing them to score In
15 out of the 20 games.
Peculiarly, on this year's schedule
are none of the teams which the
'Cats have met in opening games
during the past 20 years. Maryville.
was
heretofore,
"opener"
chief
wiped out 54 to 3 last year, and 60
to 0 the year before.
Presbyterian UniSouthwestern
versity and Wesleyan College were
also among those who couldn't come
through on top. taking 68 to 0 beatings in 1920 and 1921, and Virginia
n.
Military Institute,
Sewanee, University of Louisville.
Marshall College, Georgetown College, and Butler.
They made a mighty good record
for Kentucky. It's 20 years old and
still in good condition. Tomorrow,
in its 21st year, will the Yellow
Jackets credit or crush it?
Carson-Newma-

Golden Tornado May

Famous

Razzle-Dazzl-

Feature

e

Offense
By GEORGE KERLER
Kernel Sports Editor
Georgia Tech. the team that devastated Kentucky's 1934 championship dreams, will swoop onto the
Rose and Euclid playground tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock bent on
wrecking Kentucky's victory hopes
in the Wildcat's first act before local patronage.
The eyes of Dixie will be upon
us in this top Southeastern conference dish, generally labeled. "The
Souths Biggest Oame." Graduate
manager. S. A. Boles reports an encouraging advance sale of pasteboards and expects a house crowded with guests, despite the radioed
World Series and the hoofs at
Keeneland.
Record books show Kentucky and
Georgia Tech have tangled five
times, net result being three wins
for the "Cats, one for the Yellow
Jackets and one battle was a draw.
Most vivid in the Kentucky mind
is the 34-- 0 walloping the Atiantans
administered last year on Grant
Field.
Coach W. A. Alexander win roll
into Lexington with a starting lineup of nine men who routed the
Wildcats in "36 and two sophomores
at the tackle gates.
The engineers have never beaten
Kentucky on StoU Field. In 1933.
Ralph Kercheval placed-kicke- d
the
'Cats to a 7--6 triumph and in 1935.
Bob Davis toured up and down
Euclid Avenue with abandon leading Kentucky to a 23-- 6 victory.
The only new face in the Ken
tucky chorus will be Walter Hodge
whose running talent blossomed In
the Xavier slugfest. Hodge will replace Red Simpson at the fullback
post. Red is suffering from" uncertain ankles but will see his share
of action before the fray has ended.
The betting? Consult your friend
and arrange the odds. Most wagers
have been cautious but the general
run take Georgia Tech. six points
at even money or Georgia Tech. 8--5
to win. All of which puts Ken
tucky in psychological prime.
The Stoll attendance will be Wait
ing patiently for the Tech exhibition of razzle-dazz- le,
an offensive
process in which the backs time
feeding the ball to one another or
dipping it to and fro in the enemy's
secondary.
From spectator point
this style of play keeps the game
wide open for excitement.
So far this season Oeorgia Tech
has demolished Presbyterian (you
can't count that high) and Mercer
by a 28-- 0 count last Saturday.
Last year Tech won five, tied one.
and lost five. Nationally, they
ranked 74th. Kentucky ranked 76th.
Probable starting lineups:

KEJTrt'kY

I'.arland
f:of

Svtlnor
Hinkrbrin
Skatctes

Spirkard
HnKan

ax.
?. ........ trrri
....... Jirin
T.K

LT

LI
C
Tt'1

UT

(Capl.) . I:R

Kr,l.m!on
rtovia. It.
(""((imail

l!

I'M
KH

Kimmr

Wilms
ChivinKton

Nixoff
........ Cuhin

..

....

Jon
Sims
Applfhy

Capt

K"nmann
Mtirphvy
FI.
HHle
Lu S. Ervin.
Trake, rrtrrre : Joh
Pill., Atlhurn. umpire ; B. W. Harkny,
Jr.. North Carolina., head linNmaa ;
Koy Streigel, Tennessee, field judge.

Band To Strut
In New Stunts
For First Game
When the Big Blue meets the
Yellow Jackets on Stoll field Satur
day for the first home game of the
season, the "Best Band in Dixie will
turn out one hundred strong to entertain the "guys and gals from
here and there" in their well known
fashion.
Among the formations will be
"Hello Folks" and "Hello Coeds"
with a novelty feature number as a
surprise for the spectators.
The band is planning a dance for
the night of November 18 to be held
in the Alumni gym. The committee
in charge of the dance includes
Percy Lewis, Karl Vogel, George
Duncan, and George Yancey.
FACULTY TO HOLD MEETING
A special invitation Is extended
to the new members of the University faculty to attend the first meeting of the Faculty Club of the University, to be held today in the club
rooms on the third floor of McVey
hall.
The usual business session
will be followed by a reception and
dance for the new members.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
OFFICIAL REWSPAPSR
THC UNIVERSITY

OF Till STUDENTS
OF KENTUCKY

Scrap Irony

OF

v

at the Post Offtc at Lexington. Kentucky, M
claaa Bailer under tha Aea al March J, ltTt.

tnlnrf

roll hatiomal lovwmHit

National Advertising Senrice, Inc.
NlwYM.M.
;OMCHtol AVI.
CKW - MM . W UIWI
..

ROSS J. CHFPFI.FI F
RAYMOND T. l.ATHRFM

Y.

Editor-in-Chie-

f

Managing Editor
Acting Business Manager

Eik.ar I'fxn

STAFF
Oscar Patterson

ADVERTISING
Al Vopel

ivte

J.ihn Morpan

Smith

Manager

Circulation

NEVILLE TATUM

CLIFF SHAW
ANDREW ECKDAHL
Associate News Editors

COPY

EDITORS
Alice Wood

Donald Irvine
Marvin Gay

Sldnry Buckley

BPORTS WRITERS
Mack Huirea

Tom Watklna
Bob Rankin

Bailey

Loula Havnei
J. B. Fulkener

Joe Crrasin
REPORTERS
J pan McEIroy
Martha Moore
L. T. Ielehart

Jatnea Treada-aIrvine Danaiper
Virginia Chase
Grace Silverman

Editor

Sport

GEORGE H. KERLER

Meyer Godhelff
Jane Levi
Marie Marney

Mary Cast)

ITls Campbell

COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE
two past

the
Issues of The

The

Students'

is-

Kfr- -

several editorials
Iiave been directed at
Duty
the faculty, inviting
in establishing more
them to do tlicir share
voikable relationships with the students by subscribing to, and reading the school paper. They
were further invited to feel free to constructively
criticise the contents of the paper at any time.
In fact it was mentioned that it wa their duty
to make necessary criticism.
It is appropriate at this time to direct several
words at the student bcxly, and solicit its conjuration. How amusing, yet unfortunate, it
is to watch a great many students "read" The
Kfrnfl when it appears on Tuesdays and
Invariably, the scandal column will be
read first. Some of the lieadlines are then
vanned. Then the sports column is read. Later,
some few will read the pajier more thoroughly.
Still fewer will )erhaps read and digest the editorials.
The Kfrnfi, a student newspaper edited and
written by students, is designed to give as well
of student life, probas possible
to
lems, and opinions. Its purpose is three-fold- :
keep students posted on activties of the campus;
to entertain with amusing and philosophical
colmuns: ami to present campus problems inviting thought and action.
In jHcscnting controversial matters to the student Ixxly, it must be remembered that an
is written by one jierson. Thus it cannot
accurately xrtray the position of the entire student body. It is merely the tlvought of a writer
or a small group, designed to commend worthy
action, repiimand undesirable action, introduce
a problem, or give information on a subject.
To le of full service to the student bcxly of
the University by acting as intermediary between students and the jjeople with whom they
have dealings is the main responsibility and pur-jos- e

nfl

Fri-dav- s.

cross-sectio-

bfinc; "National Fire Prev