xt71zc7rnz8r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71zc7rnz8r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19400716  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, July 16, 1940 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 16, 1940 1940 2013 true xt71zc7rnz8r section xt71zc7rnz8r 100 Tel. Student
Owned & Operated

11

HE l&ENTUCICY KERNEL
UNIVERSITY

VOLUME XXX

Z248

Instead
Of Editorials
A

Ctlumn f Personal Opinion

Bt

ANDREW ECKPAHL
Editor, Summer Kernel

Those who are supposed to be In
the know on such things as International situations pounded away
during the hopeful months preceding the present war, saying that
should the United States ever get
into another war we would become
Fascist nation.
That seems logical to me, as it
must seem logical to anyone who has
read the history of World War I.
We snapped back to democracy then;
but could we do it again? I fear
not.

War for the United States would
bring Fascism; it would be necessary for the most successful prosecution of the war.
Civil liberties would be curtailed.
Freedom of press, religion and
speech would go out the window.
We couldn't change horses in the
middle of the stream, thus, we
would have a somewhat permanent
leader. Business and all economy
would be controlled. .
Fascism would be in sway.
I don't like Fascism. I want to
write what I please, say what I
please and worship as I please.
If war is to bring Fascism, then
I am unalterably opposed to war.
Mr. Mark Ethridge, who you probably know as the husband of Willie
Snow Ethridge, authoress of one or
two good little books, wrote an article in the Louisville Courier-Journ- al
yesterday.
In it he said that isolationism
was close to reason, that isolationism
could lead only to Fascism in this
country. And for a Courier-Journ- al
writer he was amazingly logical about the whole thing.
Now I ish that some kindly old
person would take me off and explain it to me, let me know the
truth. I believe war will lead us to
Fascism. Mr. Ethridge believes isolation Lsra will.
Right now I would be ready to
follow anyone who had a scheme
.to keep this country under the form
of government it has had for the
last hundred and fifty odd years.
And I could take ninety percent
of the American youth with me.

Here and There
By

Patricia Hamilton

bull that turns out to be a cow
prorl
in keeping with the
duction, a dean who is a vinegar
bottle on the pantry shelf of life,
and a great many girls who sleep in
a dormitory but also in pajamas
were some of the features and gags
movie thrillers that
of the old-tibrought laughs to Summer Session LsU Wednesday night on the
Union balcony.
Carole Lombard would no doubt
blush had she been there. Miss Lombard has changed since the days
when she played in Mack Sennett
had
Charlie Chaplin
comedies.
never been compared to Hitler when
"The Tramp" was Hollywood's latest laugh provoker.
We went to chuckle at these resurrected ghosts of early filmdom
and chuckle we did. So did a goodly
number of other people. We left
thoroughly in favor of outdoor
movies or any other sort of similar
entertainment that could be had on
the balcony. It is cool, smoking is
allowed, music, pleasantly subdued
orifted across from the social dancing hour, there was a moon.
Behind us sat staff members from
the museum of archaeology and anThey were Edward
thropology.
Hertzberg and Ralph Brown. Hertz-ber- g
is from Texas and Brown from
Lexington. With them was Lucille
Duncan, education senior from La
Grange who will soon have her B.S.
degree.
She has attended four
Summcr Sessions.
After the show we got to talking to
Kathleen Buhl over a glass of lemonade 'provided with the pictures
as part of an evening of free entertainment). Miss Buhl is from
Williamsburg where she teaches a
school. She is a junior in education and this summer is taking
geology and ethnology.
Downstairs we met Russell Ramey
from Carter. He is a senior in
engineering and this is his second
semester in the Summer Sessions.
He works in the froge shop and
s.
generally goes home on
A

all-gi-

week-end-

Murry, Washington. D. C.
chose the University from all the
colleges in the country for work in
history this summer. In his position
with the Civic Education Service he
is In touch with colleges and universities throughout the nation and
Kentucky was his choice. He has
studied at William and Mary and is
now working on an A.B. degree.
Visiting him for two weeks is his
brother, Larry, a typewriter salesman, also from Washington.
He is
enthusiastic about Kentucky. Says
Bill

OF KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY. TUESDAY, JULY

Harry Elmer Barnes 250
ARE
Will Give Address
On America, War
..
T
T1K is ocncuuieu
lain CI I I

Dr. Harry Elmer Barnes, noted
historian and author, will speak on
"America's Reaction to the European
War" at 8 o'clock Friday night in
Memorial hall.
Admission will be free and the
address will be open to faculty and
students of the Summer Session and
to interested townspeople.
Dr. Barnes, who is giving a series
of lectures at Eastern state teachers'
college, is being brought to Lexington through the efforts of his friends
and former students.
A member of the Summer Session
faculty in 1937, Dr. Barnes was
brought back to the University by
numerous requests to teach two
courses in the summer of 1039.
Dr. Barnes holds a Ph. D. degree
from Columbia university. He was
graduated summa cum laude from
Syracuse university where he also
took his M. A. degree. He did research work at Harvard. Among the
numerous fraternities and societies
to which he belongs are Phi Beta
Kappa, American Society of Political and Social Science and corresponding societies in England, France
and Germany.
Widely known as an educator, historian and lecturer, he has taught
at some of the leading universities
and colleges of the nation among
them Amherst, Smith, California,
Cornell, Syracuse, and Wisconsin.
In 1918 he served on the Pennsylvania Penal Commission and as
statistician with the war depart-

Classes To Start
Tuesday; Coach

Slated Monday
In Alumni Gym
Registration for the second
semester of the Summer Session will be held 8 to 11:30
o'clock and from 2 to 4:30
o'clock Monday, July 22, in
the Alumni gymnasium on
Euclid avenue, an announcement from Dr. Adams' office
said yesterday.

KAPPA DELTA PI
INITIATES 22
Ceremonies Held
At Kentucky River
o

Oil-lasp-

Scripps-How-ar-

50 Miners Trapped

PORTAGE, Pa., July 1
Rescue
squads tonight entered the blasted
So n man mine of the Koppers Coal
Company, to learn the fate of approximately 50 miners trapped when
a gas explosion rocked the mine
today.
A rescue squad which entered the
mine late today found the body of
"Stump" George. It was the first
death reported.
Company officials believed that
70 men were working probably
to 8.000 feet inside the mine
at the time of the explosion.
Eighteen men made their way to
the surface. Five were burned
slightly. .

With approximately 250 courses
being offered, the second semester
of the Summer Session to last from
July 22 to August 24 will open
Monday with registration in Alumni
gymnasium on Euclid avenue. Class-wor- k
will begin Tuesday.
Courses will be offered in all
seven colleges on the campus. Several courses, originally scheduled for
the first semester, will be offered the
second term.
classes in
The
physical education which proved so
popular the first term will again
be offered. These include archery,
badminton, golf, recreational games,
social dancing, tennis, tap dancing,
modern dance, volley ball, the activity course for physical education
majors and bowling.
A feature of the second semester
will be the annual coaching school
to be held August
with Adolph
Rupp, Bernie Shively, Kirwan and
Carl Snavely as instructors. Mr.
Snavely is head football coach at
Cornell university.
A varied and complete
program has been arranged for the second semester.
Every Thursday night the Summer Session Little Symphony orchestra, under the direction of Alexander Capurso, will present a con-cin Memorial hall. The concerts will be held at 8 oclock.
Two general convocations
are
perek
scheduled during the
players will
iod. The Coffer-Millpresent a play at 9:50 o'clock Friday morning, July 26, in Memorial
hall. John B. Rotto, humorist and
impersonator, will be on the program at 11:05 o'clock Tuesday, August 6.
An
dance and bridge
party will be held Saturday night,
July 27. in the Union building. The
Session's social committee is planning other such events should the
students want them.
The summer commencement program will open Thursday, August 22,
with the commencement dinner. A
reception for graduates will be held
from 3 to 4:30 o'clock Friday, August
23, and the commencement exercises
will be held at 7 o'clcok that night.
extra-curricul- ar

12-- 17

women were initiated
into the University's chapter of
Kappa Delta Pi, honorary education fraternity, at ceremonies held
last night at Camp Cliff Echoes on
the Kentucky river.
Following the initiation a picnic
supper was held.
Members of the fraternity in
charge of the initiation ceremonies
were Miss Margaret Bunch, Miss
Marjorie Crosby and Miss Jeanette
Malloy.
The following were initiated:
Mary Lee Caldwell, Anna Lee Carpenter, Dorris DeVania, Lucille Ellis,
Evelyn Frazier, Mrs. Kenneth G.
Virginia Griffing, Catherine
McAlonan. Mildred McCarty, Harry
Winfred McClintock and Emma Lou
ment
For several years a member of Neel.
the editorial staff of
Elsie Laufer,
d
Eleanor
Littell.
newspapers, he is the author of Dorothy L. Meyer, Mary Evelyn
over 30 books and more than 200 Phillips. Mrs. Fannie W. Porter,
articles on history, sociology, politi- Evelyn Pyles, Irma R. Reasor, Mary
cal theory, and penology.
Margaret
Sullivan,
Mrs. Marvin
Whipple, May Wyan Locke and
Hope Keeney.

In Pennsylvania

Three Reserve
Officers To Get
Posts at U. K.

Lieut-Co- l.
Donnelly,
Howard
commandant of the R. O. T. C, announced yesterday that the three
regular army officers who have
been attached to the staff of instructors at the institution would be
transferred to duty elsewhere and
would be replaced here by three
reserve officers on extended active
service.
Information
concerning
which
members of the University military
faculty would be ordered to other
posts and when the transfers would
take place was not available yesterday, but it was assumed that the
reserve officers would begin their
CARIO, July 15 Heavy fires reduties at the school the beginning
sulted from Royal Air Force bomb- of
the fall term.
ing raids on Italian stores and barEligibility requirements for the
racks in Eritrea, a R,A.F. communipositions demand that the reserve
que announced today.
officers be the first or second lieutenants, under 35 years of age, and
preferably infantrymen. Graduates
oral section of the masters of the University and men who have
The
examinations in education will be completed at least six months of
active-dut- y
training will be given
held this afternoon in the Education bulding, it was announced yes- priorty. Colonel Donnelly said.
Officers to be appointed also must
terday.
be acceptable to Dr. Thomas P.
Cooper, acting president of the University, it was understood.
Applications
for the positions
TOKYO. July 15 Heavy earth
tremors were felt in Tokyo and in- should be sent to R. O. T. C. headterior and northeastern Japan early quarters at the University, it was
announced.
today.'

Italian Stores Burn

Master Exams

Tokyo Reports Quake

extra-curricu- la

et

five-we-

er

MUSICAL SERIES
TO BE OFFERED .
Student Symphony
To Play Next Term
Every Thursday during the second
semester of the Summer Session a
concert will be presented in the amphitheater behind Memorial hall by
the University symphony orchestra,
according to an announcement made
yesterday by Dr. Alexander Capurso, head of the music department
Dr. Capurso, who will conduct the
orchestra for the second season,
said that anyone interested in appearing with the group is invited
to consult with him at his office in
the Art Center or during registration Monday, July 21, in Alumni
gym.
Last summer the orchestra, composed of 48 instruments, presented
works of great masters and excerpts
from operas, as well as more modern
selections and novelty numbers.
Community singing, in which the
feature of the wekly programs,
audience will participate, will be a
These programs will replace the
band concerts held weekly during
the first semester.

Wolfgang Rebner, Famous Piano Artist,
Will Teach Courses Second Semester
Plans Being Made
For Convocation
Featuring Musician
Wolfgang Rebner. internationally
know artist on the piano, will come
to the University to teach several
courses in music during the second
semester of the Summer Session.
guidance
Under Mr. Rebner's
music majors, advanced students of
music and music teachers who enroll in the Summer Session will have
an opportunity to study music form
and analysis, orchestration and conducting, music history, and other
phases of musical study with one
of the outstanding contemporary

artists.
Plans are being made for the general public to hear Mr. Rebner at a
convocation program to be held during the second semester, according to
D. Alexander
Capurso, executive
!:sd of ths !"U:.ic eceirt:!ie!it.

19-1-

School Billed

Registration

Twenty-tw-

.

SECOND TERM

1

For Friday Night
In Memorial Hall

16.

Famous Gilbert And Sullivan Satire
On Jury System Will Be Presented
By Music Department Wednesday

COURSES
SCHEDULED

SUMMER KERNEL
Out Every Tuesday

4- -

Mr. Rebner has accompanied such
recognized artist as Emanuel Feuer-nianRobert Virovai. Garbusova,
Lauritz Melchoir, and Marjory Lawrence.
In addition to his initial studies
at Muster Schule and Dr. Hoch's
Conservatory at Frankfurt am Main,
Gemany, he has studied at the Prussian State Academy, Berlin. He
studied composition under Hide-mitscorereading and playing under Gmeindl and piano under Leonid Kreutzer. He received private
instruction from Arthur Schnabel.
Not only has he toured Europe and
the Far East giving concerts in the
larger cities, but he has Just completed a concert tour of the United
He has transcribed many
States.
piano classics for string ensembles
and other instrumental ensembles
for American publishers.
He has been recently assigned by
O. Shirmer of New York to make a
transcription for their classical music
n,

h,

an American citizen, Mr.
Rebner was born in 1910 in Austria.
His father was for 37 years head of
the violin department at Dr. Hoch's
conservatory.
Press notices for Mr. Rebner said:
"He often gives expression to a
fineness and delicacy of feeling by
means of an alluring lightness of
tone together with spirited pliras
ing." (Politiken, Copenhagen)
"The luxurious harmony of Case
lla's "Sonatina" gave Mr. Rebner
ample scope for delicate contrasts
of color in his fluent and precise
treatment." (The Morning Post,
London.)
Mr. Rebner's courses at the Uni
versity include applied music (piano,
3 credits, by appointment); form
and analysis (2 credits, fifth hour
daily); history of music (music
majors only, 3 credits, second hour
daily); orchestration and conducting (2 credits, hour daily). All of
the courses will be held in the music
seti'j!! cf the At Crter.
Now

GAYLE STARNES

TRIAL BY JURY:

INITIATES

NAMED AID

TO BE GIVEN IN

29 EDUCATORS

TO PRESIDENT

MEMORIAL HALL

PHI DELTA KAPPAI

A total of 29 educators

were

T Aid President

W. Gayle Starnes. assistant director of the extension department,
was named administrative assistant
to Dr. Thomas P. Cooper, acting
of
president
of the University
Kentucky. The new duties willbe
in addition to his present work in
the extension unit.
The appointment was announced
today after a meeting of the executive committee of the University
board of trustees, the first held
since Dr. Cooper assumed the presidency. Judge Richard C Stoll of
Lexington, chairman of the committee and and vice chairman of the
board, presided over the meeting,
held in the president's office, and
Other
Dean Cooper.
welcomed
present
were
Robert
members
Hobson. Louisville: Horace Cleveland. Franklinton; Prof. Lee
Paris, and D. H. Peak, sec-

in-

itiated into Alpha Nu chapter of
Phi Delta Kappa, national professional fraternity for men in education at services held Wednesday afternoon in the Education
building.
A fish-fr- y
atCastlewood park followed the service. One hundred and
twenty-fiv- e
men attended the function.
The initiation services were in
charge of the committee from Eastern Teachers College, Richmond,
consisting of Dr. W. J. Moore, Dr.
Noel B. Cuff. Dr. D. T. Ferrell and
Dr. F. A. Engle.
Those initiated included:
Henry A. Adams, superintendent
of
schools, Owenton;
John H.
Bailey, biology instructor, Ashland
senior high school; Edward E. Ball,
vocational agricultural instructor,
A. J. Jolly high school, California,
Ky.; Lewis Wtliam Berger, vocations instructor. Southern junior
high school, Louisville; Marshall
Berry,
principal,
Marion junior
high school.
Christopher,
Maurice
assistant
principal,
Somerset high school;
A. N. Duke, Jr., vocational agricultural instructor, Finchville; Lloyd
A.
Dunbar,
commerce
teacher.
Kanawha county high school, Gau-le- y
Bridge, W. Va.; Bernard T.
teacher, Lafayette high school,
Lexington; A. L. Hart principal,
Russell Springs high school; Wesley Haverstock, teacher of simple
mechanics at Southern junior high
school, Louisville.
William H. Haynes, principal of
Russellville high school; William
S. Haynie, principal of North Belmont school, Belmont N. C; E. H.
Heaberlin, principal
of Fairview
junior high school. Ashland; E. R.
HoIIey, teacher. Technological high
school, Atlanta Ga.; W. P. King,
executive secretary, Kentucky Education Assiciation, Louisville.
M. P. Laster, assistant principal,
Butler high school; Thomas C. Little, principal, Lebanon elementary
school; Albert J. Meade, teacher.
Coles junior high school. Ashland;
Milburn V. Mills, graduate student
Florence; Foyster Sharpe, principal, Pleasant View high school;
Charles R Steele, principal,
school; Clay bourne Stephens,
principal, Prestonburg high school;
Carl i H.
Stinson,
agriculture
teacher. Clay county high school,
Manchester;
M.
Brutus
Taylor,
principal. Little Rock high school;
Maurice L. Tribell, superintendent
Bell
county
schools,
Pineville;
John L. Vickers, principal, Newcastle high school; Auburn J. Wells,
principal, Athens high schol, and
S. E. Wheeler, agriculture teacher,
Kirksville high school.
Alpha Nu chapter officers for
1940 are W. Gayle Starnes, rresi-den- t;
Louis Clifton, secretary; V.
F. Payne, vice prisident; Wellington Patrick, editor, and Maurice F.
Seay, faculty adviser.

Fa-ga- n,

Ca-wo-

Noe To Publish
Book of Poetry
Seventy poems which outline the
homespun philosophy and insight
into human nature of Kentucky's
poet laureate, James Thomas Cotton Noe, emeritus professor of education at the University, are included in a volume titled "In Kentucky" which will come Trom the
press of the Kentucky Kernel, University of Kentucky, in July.
The book, his eighth publication,
is dedicated to his wife. Many of the
poems in the book have been previously published in various poetry
magazines and anthologies, but the
collection, under one binding, will
appeal particularly to Kentuckians
and lovers of Kentucky, as the
verses included deal largely with
Kentucky localities or personalities.

if

:

'

-

W. Gayle Stan.es was appointed- by the Board of

Kirk-patric-

ir
Trustees to serve as
asssistant to the
President.
admin-istrate-

retary.
Bryant M. French, who recently
was graduated from the University
of Iowa, was appointed an instructor' in the English department
Other appointments made were:
Miss Georgine Rumrill. clerk in
the Department of Public Service:
Miss Mildred Wallerstein. clerk in
the residence halls for women:
Miss Sarah Radcliff. clerk in the
Miss Fern
extension department:
Ratliffe, assistant
agent in Breathitt county;
George W. Boyd, graduate assistant in English: Virginia Chase,
graduate assistant in social work:
Frank Winchester, graduate assistant in the College of Agriculture;
Laurance tGar land. Homer Milton
and Ralph Gardner, laboratory assistants in psychology, and Anna R.
Harris, psychology casework as-

NORTH TO TEACH
TWO COURSES
Ohio Sociologist
On 2nd Term Bill
Dr. Cecil C. North, professor of
sociology at Ohio State university
will teach two courses in the sociology department during the second
semester of the Summer Session.
They are Social Origins and Population Problems.
A native of Iowa. Dr. North received his bachelor's degree from
the University of Nebraska. He attended Yale University a year, and
received a B. D. degree from the
University
divinity
of Chicago's
school. He later received his Ph. D.
from Chicago.
After serving for a short time as
director of the Gan.d Rapids Y.M.
C.A., Dr. North became professor of
sociology and economics at Miami
university, and later he taught at
DePauw. Since 1914 he has been
connected with Ohio State.
He is the author of several sociological works, including "Sociological Implications
of Ricardo's
Economics,"
"Social ' Differentiation," "The Community and Social
Welfare' and " Social Problems and
Social Planning."

sistant

10,000 Fight Fire
In Northwest

MISSOULA. Mont., July 15 Begrimed firefighters battled desperately today a new wind-borforest
blaze that swept out of Canada into
northern Idaho, but elsewhere in
four northwestern states major
fires mountain timberlands were
reported under contol.
While from 8.000 to 10.000 men
sought to quench a myriad lightning-se- t
blazes that sprang up along a
front stretching through
three states, a stiff wind bore the
new fire threat swiftly through a region leading into the Kaniksu forest, in northern Idaho.
200-mi- le

UK Delta Zetas

Students May Keep
Present P.O. Boxes

Attend Convention

Students who are planning to remain in school the second semester
are asked to notify the pestoffice
so that their present letter boxes
will be reserved. Miss Carrie Bean.
University postmaster,
announced
yesterday.

Miss Gene Morton Jones of Lexington and Miss Gean Tye of
attended the 17th national convention of Delta Zeta sorority at Mackinac Island, Mich.
Miss Jones was a delegate from the
University's Alpha Theta chapter.
Miss Tye, a former president of the
chapter, was graduated from the
University in June.
While returning home they were
tour of
taken on a sight-seei- ng
Detroit as guests of the Michigan
city's Delta Zeta alumnae

ille

9,000

Tank Cars Taken

BUCHAREST. July 15 The Rumanian government requisitioned
today all the country's 9.000 tank
cars, including 1.000 either owned
or leased by United States interests.

Miss Chloe Gifford Named

Community Service Head
Miss Chloe Gifford, prominent
Kentucky club woman who served
for 12 years as dean of girls and
instructor in English at Sajre College here, has assumed her new
duties as executive secretary of club
and community service at the University, it was announced yesterday.
She succeeds Mrs. W. T. Lafferty,
who announced her retirement recently after many years of activity
as head of the University extension
department's
division.
Among the functions of Miss
Gifford's work will be that of giving service to the approximately
two hundred women's clubs of Kentucky. This service will include the
preparation and suggestion of study
programs, and the furnishing of
speaker lists. Bibliographic material also will be furnished upon request.
Besides the services to the Kentucky Federated Woman's Clubs,
similar aids will be furnished various parent-teachgroups, garden clubs and similar organizations,
and also to various service clubs
of the state.
Miss Gifford is president of the

,

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club-servi- ce

Students May Get
Deposit Fees
Thursday, Friday
Students who attended the
University during the regular
school year of 1939-4- 0 can get
their general deposit fees if
they will call at the University business office Thursday
and Friday, the office
yesterday.
Fees not called for Thursday
and Friday will be mailed to
the students' home. No refunds
will be given after the two
days.

er

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WWPM

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Miss Chloe Gifford
tucky, and is a
of
the Lexington branch of the Amer
tit

ican

Association

of

University

Forty-Voic-

e

Chorus

Will Support
Six Principals
"Trial by Jury", a musical
satire on the jury sytem by
Gilbert and Sullivan, will be
presented at 8:15 p.m., Wednesday, in Memorial hall under the direction of Prof. Carl
Lampert, head of the music

department.
The production has six major roles which will be filled by
Harriet Abraham. Lowry Koh-le- r.
Cay wood Thompson, Owen
Wiley, William Anderson and
David Welch.
Supporting
them will be a chorus of 40
voices and an orchestra of 20
instruments, especially organized to accompany the operetta by William Echols.
Members of the chorus are sopranos Frances Benge. Alma Black.
Christine Coppage. Lucille Haney.
Nellie Bach Hollon. Lucy B. Horn.
Louise Jones. Alice M. Kruse. Carol
Landreth, Elsie Laufer. Ethel Miracle. Mrs. Howard Pence and Helen
Williams: altos Margaret Jacqueline Baker. Evelyn Crick. Irene
Merle D. Guard. Ruth Hopper. Lou Anna Knuckles Buelah
A. Marsh. Velma Katherine Murphy. Velma Newkirk. Grace L. Oliver.
Anne Phelps, Beatrice Stone. Frances Wake and Mabel Warnecke:
Tenors Ward Miles. OrviUe Tros-p- e.
and Julian Orville: Basses
Carl Althaus. B. B. Mclnteer Jr..
and Nash.
Those in the orchestra are: I violin Lee Crook. LeQford Gregory.
Elizabeth Miles and Howard Pence:
II Violin Mabel Gum and Mamie
Viola Viola Dorsey:
Mosearlino:
Cello Robert Waite and Martha
Jane Stone; Bass Dr. L. H. Echols:
Flute: Charles Dickerson; Oboe
Mary Robertson:
Clarinet: BUly
Lipscomb and Dick Schubert: Horn

Oal-brait- h.

John

McFarland

and

Stewart

Trumpets Sam Rainey
Urbach:
and Donothan
Piano
Burdris:
Susan Sweeny.
The sequence of the play is briefly :
The chorus tell, in their sturdy
song, how Edwin is sued by Angelina.
The Usher gives the Jury the judicial
counsel to heed the Plaintiff.
Greeted with scorn the Defendant
appears and explains that losing interest in the Plaintiff he is "anboy".
other's love-siThe jury have no sympathy. The
Judge, having been duly hailed,
says he jilted a young lady in his
youth but now he is Judge. Angelina, escorted by bridesmaids, enters.
Her counsel tells how she has been
deceived. Thereupon Edwin agrees
to marry both young ladies.
The judge upholds him but th
counsel objects. Edwin tries to tell
the Court that he is a bad lot.
but when the Judge suggests that
Edwin get "tipsy" to see if his assertions are true, objections are
raised.
The judge goes into a rage, for he
is in a hurry to leave, and settles
the case by declaring he will marry
Angelina himself.
In charge of costumes is Miss
Marcia Lampert, assisted by Miss
Laura Topham. Miss Lampert is
also tn charge of the stage sets assisted by William Echols, assistant
director of the production.
ck

List Activities
For Coming
Week
Following is a list of acfor the
tivities
scheduled
wek of July hi to 23:
Wednesday
"Trial by Jury." Memorial
hall. 8:15 o'clock.
Junior league htirse show
opens.
Thursday
Band concert. Memorial hall
Amphitheater. 7 o'clock.
Saturday
Examinations.
Sunday
Vesper services. Memorial
hall amphitheater. H o'clock.
Monday
Registration for second se- -

* Tuedav, Juiy

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Pag Two

Dixiana Farm, Named For Famous Mare,
Is Home Of Thoroughbreds, Saddle Horses

Southeastern Loop Seeks
Man To Boss Athletics

Review Of Books

lfi, 1940

The Southeastern Conference, one
of the nation's most important ath- ,
:
... ..
letic bodies, is on a hunt for an
book.
commissioner to take over
athletic
Frankly adopting many Americanon Sept. 1 the job of bossin? all its
isms, preferring the tang of New
intercollegiate sports.
York to the mere subtle flavor of
"Yes, we have decided to go totalLondon, saying "swell" more often
NO MORE GAS by Charles Norditarian; we are going to have a
hoff and James Norman Hall. Lit- than "devine" and 'guy" more often
'dictator'." That statement came
than "chap." Thompson realizes aftle Brown Co.
from
Dr. W. D. Funkhouser.
On far away Tahiti the Tuttles ter his tour with the King and
faculty chairman of athletics and
By VIRGINIA HAYDEN
as carefree and thoroughly Queen, "two simple, honest people
live
Two southeastern Kentucky in- - 4
the conference's veteran secretary.
pleasant life as we can Imagine. who work hard because they believe
"One man in his time plays many
dustries will be featured on Univerto employ a commisThe decision
Ihey have no concern with the that their work is achieving some- parts." The audience never thought sioner :in the Southeastern was sity radio programs over WLW,
pressing
economic and military thing for the land they love," that of Dr. Bob Jones Jr., as one man reached at a special conference Cincinnati, on Sundays, July 21,
jroblems of the present western he will never deny himself to Eng- in his presentations of "Curtain meeting Saturday in Atlanta. Dr. and July 28, respectively, 3:30 to
land and that he has not entirely
vorld.
Calls" Monday at the last convo- Funkhouser said, and already a 4:00 p. m. Central Standard Time.
lost his English accent.
cation of the first term of the Sum- committee has gone to work lining The industries are the McCracken
No More Gas isn't as the title
Patricia Hamilton
and McCall lumber mill near Ptne-vill- e,
mer Session. It seems impossible up candidates for the job.
r.ilfcht imply, some problem novel of
and the Creech Coal Mine in
war's altermath. Rather it relers to
that one actor could be capable of Ihis committee is composed of the
A
turning on and off such a wide loop secretary and four college pres- Harlan county.
the eld fishing launch that seems
..
:i
i
These broadcasts will form units
to run out of gas at the most critirange oir unrelated . cnaratHvi. wnu idents designated during the Atlanta
cal moments. The Tuttle boys are
out once letting one personality session. These' presidents are Dr. of the "Visiting Kentucky's Industhe best fishermen on the island but
carry over to the next This fine R. C. Harris of Tulane, Dr. R. C. tries" series during which a dozen of
Kentucky's leading industries are
v. hen the gas runs out just as they
ability was displayed throughout his Foster of Alabama, Dr. O. C.
of Vanderbilt and Dr. H. being portrayed. The broadcasts are
tre approaching a school of fish, the HEADIIXIXG AMERICA. Edited entire program.
being made from the actual
Ir.mily fare is light. But then again, by Frank Luther Mott, assisted by
Dr. Jones' first interpretation was W. Caldwell of the University of all
scenes of Industrial activity, and
had the Zimba not gone dry at an- a board of
editors and of the money grasping Jew Shylock Georgia.
inThis committee is to interview scur.ds of the various processes,
other time they would never have and Kins ton Allard. The Dryden from 'The Merchant of Venice".
terviews with executives and workhad their greatest bit of good for- Tress.
The use of a blue green lighting ef- and weigh the qualifications of can- ers, and sidelights, constitute the
for the
tune.
It has long been the contention of fect depicted the mood and char- didates prepare acommissioner's job. program material.
'
r
report and recomCoirfe.j
Th Tuttle clan is a rolicking members of the Fourth Estate
acter of the money lender. Of in- and to
In the case of the Bell county
Charles T. Fisher's Residence at Dixiana
outfit that includes-ul- i and I for one share it that some terest was the costume, which Dr. mendations to be presented by Aug.
By JOE JOBDON
the Polynesians with whom the of the best writing in the world to- Jones explained after the perfor- 20 at another conference meeting. lumber camp, theIs story toof timber
cut
time
the moftardy New Englanders have inter- day is done in the daily American mance, had been worn by David The report will be acted upon at from thegoes it
Editor's Notr: This is one in s series is another
thoroughbred
stallion. July 16 and 19 to repeat their
into a new house will of stones on central Kentucky bnrse (rams.
whoever is chosen for ment it
married. In the years since the first press.
1936 son of Blue Lark- - orite roles in Puccini's "La Boheme."
Warfield in Belasco's production of that time and
When
commlssionership will take up be detailed. During the coal mine will be the series is incomplete, thei stories spur and the Patroness, a product of Marjorie Hess, a charming newcom- the
kook form,
Tuttle settled down on Tahiti, Polyassembled
"Headlining America," which con- "The Merchant".
Dixiana
Sept. 1 to be in control of bro