xt75736m146r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75736m146r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19351022  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 22, 1935 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 22, 1935 1935 2013 true xt75736m146r section xt75736m146r Best Copy Available

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

TUESDAY EDITION
SEMI-WEEKL-

KEKNELj

jQ

UNIVERSITY
VOL. XXVI.

I.KXIMi

Community Concert Group
To Feature Nino Martini
In Opening Presentation
Slar of Screen,
Ra4k to Re Here Wednesday, October 23

I

ON. KFN

RUPP GIVES CALL
TO NETTERS FOR
INITIAL PRACTICE

I

OF

ALL-CAMPU-

DANCE TOMORROW AT
GYMNASIUM

KENTUCKY

l'CKY, IULSDAY. OCTOBER 22. It.15

NEW SERIES NO

'35
DRIVE

YM, YW BEGIN

Sales Campaign
Of 1936 Kyian
NowUnderWay

FACULTY
F

0

R DONATIONS

Nino Martini, brilliant young
TO
AT UK
tenor star of the opera, motion picwill
ture, concert and radio field
open the Community Concert asDiscussions on Youth Will
sociation of central Kentucky serRe Held During Two-Da- y
ies In the auditorium of the Henry

MEET

Clay High school on Wednesday
evening, October 23, 1935, at 8:15
o'clock. The recital will be limited
to members of the association only
and no single admissions will be
sold at the door.
Millions throughout America listen In on the Martini program each
Saturday evening when he sings
for a half hour on the Chesterfield
program at 8 o'clock. Thousands
who have heard him over the air
will enjoy the privilege of hearing
him personally this season on his
coast to coast concert tour.
Mr. Martini's recent picture,
"Here's to Romance" has been acclaimed by critics as one of the
great pictures of 1935. Music lovers everywhere predict a great future for the young Metropolitan
star in this field.
Mr. Martini's program for Wednesday evening is as follows:
I. O del mio amato Donaudy.
Gia 11 sole dal Oange Scarlatti.
Nori e Ver! Mattel.
II. Reflets dans l'eau Debussy.
Capriccio Dohnanyl.
Mr. Sandoval
III. Vainement ma bien aimee,
from "Le Rot D'ys" Lalo.
du Tambourineur,
La Chanson
(The Drummer-Boy'- s
Song) Arr.
by Deems Taylor.
Je Crols Entendre Encore, from
"Les Pecheurs des Perles" Bizet.

Convention to
ReRin

Friday

The fourteenth annual meeting
of the Kentucky
association of
Deans of Women will be held at
the University October 25 and 26.
Miss Ruth Riley, Dean of Girls,
Holmes High school, Covington,
will preside.
Registration for members will be
at 11:00 a. m. Friday in Boyd hall.
At 11:15 there will be a round table
on "College Problems". Miss Susan
Peffer, Dean of Women (on leave),
Murray State Teachers college, will
lead the discussion. There will be a
luncheon In Boyd hall at 1 p. m.
when Dr. Dorothy C. Stratton,
Dean of Women, Purdue University
will address
the association on
"The Dean Looks at the Problems
of Youth."
Dr. Charles J. Turck, president
of Centre college will speak at 2:30
p. m. on "The Youth Program of
the Federal Government." At 3:10
p.m., W. P. King, secretary of the
Kentucky
Education
association
will talk on "Youth and International Relationships" Dean Sarah
Blanding will act as hostess at the
dinner to be given at 7 o'clock.
At 9 o'clock Saturday morning a
breakfast and business discussion
will be held in Boyd hall. Dr. Everett, Cooper Union, New York City,
Intermission
will speak at 10:30 a. m. on "The
IV. O Paradisol from "L'Afri-canPsychologist Looks at Youth ToMeyerbeer.
day." There will be an Executive
V. Tell Me, Oh Blue Sky Oian-nin- l. committee
meeting at 11:30. Dr.
Irma E. Voigt, Dean of Women,
Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, and
In the Silence of the
President of the National association of Deans of Women will adBlue Are Her Eyes Watts.
dress the association at a 1 o'clock
VI. Papillon Sandoval.
luncheon in the Lafayette hotel on
Spanish Dance No. 1 Sandoval.
"Cooperation with Youth."
Mr. Sandoval
VTJ.
Adlos Granada Barrera y
At 2:30 p. m. Miss Catherine
Morat, Dean of Girls, J. M. Ather-to- n
Calleja.
High school for Girls, Louis
Marlnella Serrano.
ville, ylll lead a Round Table dis
Princes! ta Padllla.
cussion on "High School Problems.
a"

Nights-Rachmani-

Cadets
U. of K. Student
Are Commissioned
Discovers Body

Forty-nin- e

cadets of the local R.
O. T. C. unit were made second
Lieutenants today, according to an
order received from the U. S. Army
headquarters at Washington, D. C.
by Lt. Col. Brewer, head of the
Military department
The cadets who were given the
rank of second lieutenant will have
completed the second year of the
advancd course In military at the
termination of the school year next
Forty-nin-

e

Phillip

"Ticky"

Scholtz,

Le-la-

Stahr, Prank Starks, James

phens, Charles Stoecker, William
Arnold
Terrell,
Claude
Strong,
Prank Wehle, Prank
Thompson.
Willes, Pete Zaharias, and cnaries
Zlmmer.

M'NASH TO DELIVER
ADDRESS OVER WLAP
Capel McNash, president of the
University of Kentucky Aeronautical Association, will speak from
5:45 to 6:00 p. m.. Wednesday, October 23, over WLAP on the subject
"America Takes Off" In observance
of National Aviation Week.
McNash, who has built and
flown gliders for the last six years,
is the author of several articles on
the subject which have been printed by "Popular Aviation".
speech will cover IntercolHI
legiate gliding, now being organized
on a national scale, and various
other phases of flying In this country, as well as personal experiences
in the field.

CLUH WILL DISCUSS
ITALIAN (JUESTION

Next Campus Hop
To Be Tomorrow

dance
The third
will be held In the Alumni gymnasium Wednesday night from
8 to 10:30 o'clock. Andy Anderson and his orchestra will furnish the music. The dance will
be Informal and the price of
admission will be 25 cents. Dean
Sarah Blanding and Dean T. T.
Jones will be the chaperones.

STIFF SEASON IS
AHEAD FOR CHAMPS
Coach Wants All Players of
Experience to Report
for Practice
By JOE QTJINN
With a stiff schedule looming up,
probably the hardest any Kentucky
team has ever been called upon to
face, the first official varsity basketball practice of the season was
held yesterday afternoon In Alumni gym.
Yesterday's opening session was
devoted mainly to limbering up and
shooting practice. The candidates
were allowed plenty of freedom and
did little more than break Into the
routine.
Head basketball
Coach
Adolph F. Rupp, announced after
the initial workout that he would
like to have all players with any
experience report as soon as pos
sible for the daily drills.
Three regular members of last
season's Southeastern conference
champions were missing yesterday.
Dave Lawrence and Jack Tucker
were lost through graduation and
Leroy "Big Ed" Edwards failed to
return to school. Coach Rupp will
be faced with the necessity of finding capable replacements for these
performers and his task will be no
easy one.
Practically a new team will have
to be built with Captain Andy Anderson and Warfield Donohue, reg
ular guards, and Garland Lewis,
Ralph Carlisle, Jim Goforth, and
Duke" Ellington as a nucleus. "Red"
Hagan, Billy Spicer, "Red" Craig,
and .1. Rice Walker, recruits from
la.' , year's learling unit, also will
be available for duty. Harry Bliss
and Bob Taylor, both lettermen,
are expected to be in the thick of
the fight for positions.
Although the opening game Is
still almost two months away, the
difficulty of the schedule will make
plenty of strenuous practice lm
peratlve and lt Is Coach Rupp's
idea to have his team in the best
of shape before the season gets
underway.
Included on the Wildcat 1935-3- 6
slate are such powerful teams as
Pittsburgh, New York University,
Michigan 8tate, Creighton, Butler
(Continued on Page Three)

UK Girls Attend

Cabaret Party or
New Campus Club
Gail Hacker Is Selected As
President of Transfer Group

Ken-tuckl-

now under way, and
plans for contests have been completed. The winner of the Beauty
contest and the Most Popular man
will be presented at the Kentuck-ian-JuniLeague dance, November 18.
Jim Bersot and Ralph Hughett,
In charge of the sales campaign
representatives
for the contests.
The boy and girl who sell the most
yearbooks will each be presented
with a plaque. Each social order
can enter a candidate for every ten
books sold.
The Kentucklan Beauty Queen
and her attendants will be selected
League
at the Kentuckian-Junlo- r
Dance, which will be held In Alumni gym, November 16. The Most
Popular man will be chosen by
popular ballot at the dance.
The sales campaign will be the
same as In former years. A deposit
of $1.25 may be made now, and the
remainder, $3. paid later. In the
event that this precedure is not
followed, the price of a book will

e

(INS) FuSmith,
famous cartoonist, will be held here
Wednesday.
Smith, who gained world-wid- e
fame through his creation of "The
Gumps." was killed early yesterday
when his automobile collided head-o- n
with anoyier car near Harvard,
Chicago,

Oct.

21

neral services for Sidney

111.

re

HEAR

EDWIN H.EMBREE

STUDENTS OFFERED
VARIED ACTIVITIES

Noted Journalist and Author
States that FootbaJI
Is Losing Its
Plans Are Made at Meeting
Place
of Advisory Hoard at
4 p. m. Monday

or

The annual Y. W. C. A. and Y.
M. C. A. Faculty
Contribution
drive, held every year In October,
will begin on Wednesday, October
23 and continue through October
30, during which time an effort
will be made to reach a goal of
$1200 in contributions
from Interested members of the faculty.
An apportunity is given the faculty during the drive to support
a student organization which has
religious, social, and Intellectual
activities to offer a large student
group. Every year the faculty has
offered cooperation and financial
support, and last year a sum of
$1150 was attained by the faculty
solicitors.
Plans for the drive were made
at a meeting of the Y. W. C. A.
and Y. M. C. A. advisory board at
4 o'clock Monday In the "Y" Rooms
at the Armory. These boards, presided over by Mrs. E. G. Trimble
and Dr. Hume Bedford, respectively, are compsoed of faculty members and interested
townspeople.
Faculty solicitors were appointed
In various University buildings, and
the date of the drive was fixed as
Wednesday, October 23.

be $5.

Several new features are being
employed in the Kentucklan this
year, outstanding ones being a section of House Mothers, a section
of Sorority and Fraternity houses.
The snap shot section is to be larger and better this year than In recent years. All persons having snap
shots please turn them in to Bob
Hess at the Phi Delta Theta house
sometime soon.
Work has already begun on the
book. The colors used this year are
blue and brown. They signify the
bluegrass and the burley of the
state. The theme this year is the
traditions of Kentucky, such as
race horses, mint Juleps, beautiful
women, and Colonels.
The contests will close at 4 p. m.
Thursday, Nov. 14.

Senior Honorary
Has First Meeting
James L. Atchison, Malcolm
Shotwell and Champ Ligon
Chosen as Officers

U. K. PROFESSOR

HEADS

!
I

MERGER

The first meeting of the year of
Lamp and Cross, senior men's honorary fraternity was held Thursday night, October 17, at the Alpha
Sigma Phi fraternity house.
James Atchison was elected
president of the organization, Mal- -

Victor R. Portmann Is Presi - '
notweii
dentof New Consolidation C01
President,
,

i

j;

noaa

ACC-5-

,.I

retary.

tions
Victor A. Portmann, professor of
Journalism at the University, was
elected president of the Associated
co egjate press,
tne
Collegiate Press association, which
organizations merged at the recent
meeting In Chicago.
Norman Garllng,
of the Kentucky Kernel, and Frank
Borries, managing editor, also attended the conference. At a business meeting Saturday morning it
was voted to merge the Associated
Collegiate Press and the National
Collegiate Press association. Mr.
Portmann was chosen head of the
new organization, acting as chair
man for the proposed consolidation. Prof. Fred Kildow of the
University of Minnesota Is the ex
ecutive secretary.
A committee will be appointed
from the two former organizations
for the purpose of drawing up a
s.
Mr. Portconstitution, and
mann was also guest critic of the
Indiana High School Press association on Thursday and Friday of
last week.
editor-ln-chl-

,
.

was chosen

and Champ Ligon,

vice
sec

Mr. Atchison is a Phi Sigma
Kappa, a member of Lances and a
senior In the Commerce college.
The feature of the meeting was
a talk by Mr. Thompson Bryant,
unmvu of the University, and
m member of the staff m tn
agr,
cultural experiment station.

ef

girl transfer students representing almost as many
colleges met at a cabaret party In
Patterson hall last Thursday night
to launch the Transfer club, a new
organization started to promote
the Interests of the transfer students upon the University campus.
After dinner, Martha Fugett,
president of the YWCA, presided
over the business meeting
until
Gail Hacker, transfer from Franklin College, was elected president of
the new organization. Tentative INTERFRATERNITY
plans were made for a dance and
COUNCIL CONVENES
a faculty party, to be given 60on,
council held
and the problem of welcoming fuThe
ture transfer students was dis- Its weekly meeting Monday, Octo
cussed.
ber 14, at the Kappa Sigma house.
Other officers of the organiza- The annual Greek conclave and
tion will be elected at the next several systems of deferred rushing
regular meetnlg to be held next for the next rushing season were
Thursday night in the Boyd hall discussed.
Charles Zimmer was appointed
reading room directly after dinner.
Further plans for the dance will chairman of the committee to plan
dance.
the annual
be discussed then.
This dance Is the first formal
dance of the year and is an outstanding social event.
Ninety-thre-

STUDENTS

Is

Inter-fraterni- ty

Sidney Smith, "The Gumps' '
Creator, Is Killed In Crash

ar

Inter-nation- al

Hold
of Yearbook Will Gym Annual Campaign Will Regin Wedon
Dance at
nesday; Effort to Re Made
November 16
to Reach Goal
of $1200
The campaign of the 1936

Inter-fraterni- ty

He was driving alone, and was
farm near
en route to his 2200-acShirland, Wis.
The celebrated cartoonist's death
11e International Relations club came only a few hours after he had
will hold a meeting Wednesday, signed a new five-yecontract
OcUAer 23. in Room 203, Adminiswith the syndicate handling his
tration building, at S p. m., It was famed comic strip. It called for a
announced by Dr. Amry Vanden-bubcsalury of $150,000 a year.
The program for the meetHubert Sidney Smith was born In
ing Is an open discussion on the Bloomlngton, 111., Feb. 13, 1877, and
'Ethiopian and Italian Situations." was educated In the public schools
The program should prove of Inter- there. He recently recalled that
when he was about 13, his teacher
est to all those Interested In
peace.
Mht him drawing pictures when
h.

Official Workout
Year Sees Only Two
Regulars from
Last Year

Univer-

sity of Kentucky freshman, discovered the corpse of Mrs. Evelyn

Sliwinsky, 24, lying on River Road
while returning from a dance in
Louisville, where he was spending
with his parents.
the week-en- d
Driving in a dense fog, "Tlcky"
noticed a swaying auto coming
toward him, and a moment after it
passed came to the woman who
year.
was lying in a pool of blood.
Those who were commissioned
After he had stopped and inwere: Robert Anderson, Lin wood
The
Arnold, Clarence Ayers, Basil Bak- vestigated, he notified police. said
body
er, Ralph Bates, Graham Benson. doctor who examined the
mangled as
that lt was as badly
Seth Botts, Wllgus Broffitt, Wil- any he had ever seen. Apparantly
liam Conley, John Cramer, Prank
a blunt
Dailey, Bruce Davis, Louis Gordon, she had been beaten with over by
Graber, Conny Hammonds, instrument and then run to locate
James
Police were unable
James Henry, Victor Hobday, Jo- a car.Sliwlnsky's husband.
Mrs.
seph Hocker," Leland Honaker,
Scholtz was not held as a witHoward, Joseph Huddleston,
Ralph Hughett, James Johnson, ness and returned to Lexington
Pelham Johnston, John Lancaster, Sunday night.
Thomas Lisle, William Lowry, John
Lucian, John Lynch, Harry Mason,
James McMillan, Henry Miller,
James Moore, Charles Olney, Jack
Phillips, Allen Reiniger, Clyde
Richardson, Henry Rollwage, Elvis
Ste-

First

Student Musicians
Will Give Recital

At UK Art Center

,

Irene Foster
Martha Sue Durham at the piano.

U. S.

He stated that there was nation
wide disapproval when educated
men, the "Brain Trusters,"
were
called upon to organize the confused business world, and that the
people demonstrated that they
were used to authority of politicians. While not agreeing with all
the policies of the New Deal, he
commended
its courage In trying
new ideas. He is convinced that
the recovery methods of former
leaders will not work in the present
day.
Referring to college athletics. Dr.
Embree said that they had assumed
astonishing proportions. In his attack on tfiem he said hat football
Is little better than horse racing
and little worse than professional
fighting.
He predicted that football would be pushed into the background within the next twenty
years.
Dr. Embree said that to be a
gentleman is one of the marks of
an educated man . He claims that
the old southern Idea of an educated man was a scholar, a gentleman
and a Judge of good liquor.
Dr. Embree said that a man of
the world was one who could meet
new situations,
understand other
people, and avoid prejudice. He
contends that the American people
have been growing more and more
narrow during the 20th century.
The speaker spent a great deal
of time as a youth In Kentucky.
After graduation from Yale University, he became a reporter for
the New York Sun. He is the author of several books and numerous magazine articles.
The invocation and benediction
were said by Dr. Howard Whltaker,
pastor of the First Methodist

Petitions Due For

O'Rourkfi. and Kilgore Turn
in Scintillating Game
for Auburn
Woefully weakened by the absence of Nevers and Potter, the
Kentucky Wildcats fell before a
powerful onslaught of the Auburn
Plainsmen in Montgomery,
Ala.,
Saturday afternoon, and wound up
on the short end of a 23 to 0
score, in one of the worst defeats
the Cats have suffered since Chet
Wynne became head coach.
It was Bunky O'Rourke, a substitute fullback, replacing the almost
unreplacable Wilton Kilgort, who
stole the show and was such a
thorn In Kentucky's side. This lad
made the first long run of the day
when he took the ball in the first
quarter and ran 52 yards to Kentucky's nine yard line before he
was finally downed. Again in the
third quarter he took the leather
on a lateral and In one of the most
beautiful exhibitions of broken field
running ever staged In Crampton
Bowl, went over the left side of the
Kentucky line, dashed down the
sidelines as straight as an arrow,
and then cut back and with fine
Interference crossed the goal line
on a final lunge that would put a
sprinter to shame. McMillan dove
at O'Rourke as the fullback hit the
line, but although he
made contact, so powerfully was O'Rourke running, he dragged McMillan over the goal line with him.
Auburn's first marker came in
the first quarter after Johnson's
punt from behind his own goal
line was partially blocked and
travelled only to the
line.
O'Rourke broke through for 11
yards and then Hitchcock dashed
the remaining 18 yards for the
touchdown.
five-ya-

rd

rd

report from the University
yesterday
afternoon
stated that Bert Johnson, star
halfback, had not suffered any
broken ribs when he was injured
in the Auburn game' Saturday.
Johnson was removed from the
game in the third quarter and
it was at first thought that he
had suffered several rib fractures. He was subjected to an
X - ray examination yesterday
afternoon and the picture showed that Bert was all right. His
injured leg is healing rapidly
and he is expected to be in shape
for the Alabama game November 2. Stan Nevers who was Injured In practice last week and
did not make the Auburn trip,
is rapidly recovering from an
injured leg and is also expected
to be ready for the Alabama
game. Sam Potter, the other
ailing cat, is also expected to be
in a fighting spirit this week.
A

dispensary

In the second quarter, Haygood
Paterson, giant Auburn tackle, and
prospective candidate for
honors, dropped back to the
15 yard line for a field goal and
booted the ball squarely between
the uprights for three points.
On the second play In the fourth
period Joe Bob Mitchell, lanky Auburn reserve bail carrier, broke
through the center of Kentucky's
line, shook himself loose from a
(Continued on Page Three)

UK Senior Offices
Petitions for senior class officers are due Monday, October
28, at 12 noon in the office of
the Dean of Men.
Signatures of 25 members of
the senior class must accompany
each petition, and each candidate must signify his willingness
to run for the office by undersigning the petition.
No name can appear on more
than one petition for the same
office.

Group
Protests to Officialdom

Anti-Olymp-

ic

The German club will hold an
executive board meeting on Wednesday, August 23, at 3 p. m., in
Room 204, Administration building.
The nature of the meeting la to
New York. Oct. 21 (INS) With
coining
he was supposed to be studying. plan a program for the by Mr. vociferous demands for a rigorous
year, lt was announced
examination into alleged racial and
Taking him by the coat collar she
religious discrimination
by Nazis
marched him to the door with the Frank Lebus.
against German athletes, leading
admonition :
proponents of the movement to
"Young man, you go home. You're
keep the United States out of the
not fit for anything but a cartoonistBerlin Olympic games next year
-He
today lodged emphatic protests in
began his newspaper career
two important official quarters.
with the Bloomlngton Sunday Eye
Judge Jemuiuh T. Muhoney, in
at the age of 18. Successively he
Today Is the last day that pica letter to Dr. Theodore Lewald,
worked on newspapers In Indianappresident of the Grman Olympic
tures for the 1936 Kentucklan
olis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and
committee, said the A. A. U., of
will be taken at Memorial, hall
Toledo. In 1911 he gained his first
which he is national president, had
They may be taken the rest of
measure of fame with the creation
investigated reports of discriminathe week at the Lafayette stu"Old Doc Yak," for the Chicago
tion, and, as a result, had found:
dio, 301 West Main Street, at
Tribune. About 1917 he began draw"That the German Jews are being
ing "The aumps." The pictorial
the same price.
excluded from the possibility of
story of "Andy," "Min," and "Uncle
House mothers of the fraterparticipating in the Olympic games
Blm," brought him fame and fornities and sororities are requestmerely because they are Jews.
go to the studio sometime
tune.
ed to
"That not only are they not enSpeaking fondly of "Andy" rethis week to have pictures takcouraged to participate In the
cently, his creator said:
new, being used
en. This Idea is
Olympics, but that the conditions
"Andy is a kind of everyday
tliia year for the first time.
under which they exist make lt ImHe tries to voice Uie senpossible for them to do so.
timents of everyday people."

Picture Taking
Will End Today

Dr. Edwin H. Embree, president
of the Julius Rosenwald Foundation, addressed a student convocation at 10 a.m., Friday, in Memorial hall on "How to Tell a College
Man from the Birds and Fishes."
Dr. Embree, an experienced newspaperman and author, was Introduced by Dr. Frank L. McVey, president of the University.
"Supposedly," he said, "the United States has the greatest number
of educated people In the world. To
be exact, there are 7,000,000 persons
In American secondary schools. The
United States has 1.250.000 graduates of colleges and professional
schools." Dr. Embree enlarged on
such statements as these in explaining the educational status of
the United States.
He believes that the American
business man showed a general lack
of knowledge in the 1929 depression, giving as reason

A student recital sponsored by
the Music department of the University of Kentucky will be given
at 3:00 p. m., Tuesday, Oct. 22, in
the Art Center. The program is in church.
charge of Mrs. South of the Music
department.

The program consists of:
Mozart
Minuet in F
Russell McKiski
Prayer of the Norwegian Child
Kountz
Wanda Lynch
Beethoven
Minuet In O
Albert Rhonsong
Bonn
Still as the Night
Ouida K. Jones
at the piano
Delta Theta Jones
(To be selected)
Violin Solo
J. Preston Bryant
Mozart
Sonata In C
Elaine Allison
Rogers
The Star
Raff
Love Finds the Way
Mozart
Alleluia

10

Auburn Plainsmen Score
Unexpected Victory Over
Wildcats At Birmingham

Wei-know- n

DEANS GROUP

S

Kampus
Kernels
There will be a dinner meeting
of O.D.K. at Tea Cup inn tonight
at 6.30 p. m.

There will be a dinner meeting
of Lances tonight at 6 p. m. at the
Tea Cup Inn.
The sixth district of the Kentucky Federation of Women's clubs
will hold a luncheon meeting Wednesday In the recreation room of
Patterson hull.

The worship group of the Y. W.
C. A. will meet every Monday at 4
"That the present German gov- - p. in . in the Woman's building.
eminent has injected race, religion All girls interested are Invited.
and politics Into sports in general
and into the Olympics in particular,
The senior cabinets of the Y. W.
and has destroyed their free and C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. will meet
independent churacter.
together at 7:15 o'clock Tuesday
"That discrimination In sports, night in the Woman's building.
which began with the Jews, lias been
extended so as to include Catholics
The freshman cabinet will meet
and Protectants who do not supine- at 7:15 o'clock Tuesday night in the
ly submit to the Nazi will in all Y. M. C. A. rooms.
spheres, including the sphere of
conscience
and that if Germany
The Spanish club will hold its
today has no Jews of Olympic calmeeting at 3 p. m., Thursday In the
ibre, lt is because she has denied Woman's building.
them adequate facilities for training and coiuetition and has forced
them into exile or suicide."

Stroller eligible are advised to
begin work on their plays immediately. They can find the plays h
the ttewrve Heading room at the
Jl IX.i S 1IOKSE SHOW
library. Tommy Atkins, at the
L. J. Horlacher, assistant dean ATI) house ran tell them whether
of the College of Agriculture, was their tryout will be held on Octo30, or 31.
Judge of a horse show held In Ow- - ber
(Continued on Page Three)
enton last week.

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* Best Copy
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of nimt oilier schools, these game could eaiih
be aiinuged on oilier d.iicv
OF
OFTICIAL NEWSPAPFH or THF HTUPFIVT
reeling that college football is already highly
TIIF I'NIVF.DSITY OF KFNTITKY
enough (ommcrc ialied. rl ai ihe same time reMFMBKR -alizing that a ccit.iin amount of ( ommerc ializa-lio- n
ITlncton Foard of Comnicrrp
A
nc In inn
Nntmtini CnllrBp rrr
is necessary if A
Kami aie to lo mainKrnturkv Intprrnllrtiinlr Prn AorlMinn
Jnternflt tonal Nrw Brrvlcf
tained, we proiest against (liis alining of a
Puhllratlnn. rrprrvn.ril hv
A mrmhfr of tlir Malnr Cnllrirr
iiadition. Ihe I'nivcniu of Kentucky
nd 81 Nrw Ynrk cily: 1?S W
A
J KmrM Hill Co. I .is E
MmI'mhi HI.. CliirKto. I4 nl Avf rViiUIr, 1031 S Brodv.
and Tennessee have met on the gridiron for
Lo Anrflr; Cull Bullrtinn. Sun Frnrlro
sixteen consecutive yeais on Thanksgiving day.
PUBI.IRHF.D ON TUFflDAYS ANI1 FMHAY8
This despite the fact that no wiitteu contract
NOPVAN C OARMNO Vntinom Frfilor
FRANK BORRIES
as to the continuation of these games has ever
Al. MonoolnB rd'Mr
RAO KASH
been signed. 'To leave 'Thanksgiving clay withHERE SHALL THE KERNEL ALL
out a football game between Kentucky and
8TUDENT RIGHTS MAINTAIN
'Tennessee would be as satisfactory as the elimYOUTH AND TIM: RED EVIL
ination of tin key and c ianlxrry sauce from the
large and blustery tcniest is 'Thanksgiving dinner. College- - undei graduates
A iimarkably
confines of and alumni look forward to the day and antilxing waged within the china-thihighcipate a real football encounter to top off a dinthe Yale Daily News teajxH. This aged and
its trembling ner that has put them in the mood.
ly dignified institution of Yale, in
'Then too, there is a decided advantage in the
and indignant excitement, has practically thrust
"Mauling
mid-weeday for a football game in that it gives
k
upon the collegiate public a
revelation" of communistic activities among both teams a chance to make real preparation
for a real battle. Coming as it docs when both
inrmlKTS of its student body.
can well imagine the Yale bulldog growl-in- g squads have gone through a long, strenuous
One
of his self sufschedule, the extra three or four days are weluneasily in the half-sleeficiency. Comfortable old men, bulldogs, and comed to get the guilders in shac and primed
Yale work themselves into a tremendous dither for a genuine contest.
Let us then uphold this time honored and
when the odor of a new idea wafts around an
men fume levered tradition the highlight of our football
ivied corner. It is all the same-o- ld
clean-limlxseason, the finishing touch to a day of feasting
and shake their canes at the laughing
young; bulldogs growl and scratch, then and gladness, the projjoncnt of good will
two great states, which would lose much of
creep warily under the sofa; and Yale publishes
its glamor if it were given the status of an ora "Digest" poll.
It is not that we believe the United States dinary weekly contest the annual Turkey day
would be grid battle between the Tennessee Volunteers
harbors no red propagandists-th- at
of the jwople
and the Kentucky Wildcats. Thus shall we
like denying the existence
rather undue emphasis is lcing bring joy to the hearts of those who have long
since left academic walls but who look forward
placed on Yale as a breeding place for communists. Communism springs up wherever it can get to attending the annual conflict, and preserve?
for posterity one of the big "thrills" of the cola hearing; that is true, but it seems to be more
attendance at the Thanksgiving
of a sacred airing than a hearing in this college lege year
article.
game whether it be in Lexington or Knoxville.
In the first place, 62 of the 3300 undergraduates, and faculty who were questioned recently
TIME FOR ACTION
admitted having been born in Russia. Ordinary
For the past several years, incoming male
reason and the registrar's files will prove that not freshmen students have been required, through
every other person in that great university is of a regulation of the Men's Student Council, to
Russian birth. The Russian mind and soul is so wear caps in the colors of the University, so as
so interlaced and interwoven with communistic
to distinguish these freshmen from uperclass
ideas and vain imaginings that the wonder
students.
would be if it should change. Thus we may exIt has been apparent, during the last year or
pect red reactions to come from those imborn two, that the first year students have been more
in it. But it is difficult for us to think that an and more inclined to grow away from the usage
American university should possess within its of these caps until now it is indeed a rarity to
walls more than half of its students and faculty
see a freshman hat. Clearly, the days of rah-raright out of Russia. May we suggest, the Daily collcgiana are over, for the present at least; it
News might have picked the 3300 questioned is jKssiblc that the nation-widchange of attiarbitrarily instead of taking an honest average? tude and spirit of the average college student
If the Yale Daily News had really wanted to brought about by the depression is responsible
alarm anybody, there should have been no men- for the increasing resentment of freshmen against
The Kernel the traditional headgear. This resentment maytion of the numljcr of Russian-born- .
in knowing how a more
would be interested
be construed to mean that University students
typical college group would stand.
in general are a part and parcel of the new era.
The revelation docs, however conitx.-- l realiza'There Is, however, another angle which must
tion more clearly than before that there is such be attacked before this matter is so completely
a thing as Red activity among our younger fry. and loosely tossed aside. We refer, of course, to
is
even though foreign-born- ,
The foreign-borthe effect which the consistent violation of any
nevertheless making itself at home in America's
regulation has upon the morale of any body. It
front parlor and has to be seriously considered.
was shown during prohibition that the violation
The Kernel does not feel as the Daily News of one law leads easily to a disregard of other
digest might suggest to some, that all that is laws. We do not think that it is carrying the
left to be done is to pull