Best Copy Available

The Kentucky Kernel
$

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

i

LEXINGTON, KY

VOL. XL

GREGG

MRS. BRECKINRIDGE
DISCUSSES

PRESIDED IT
DE JUNIOR

LEAGUE

KEHTUGKIAH

Democratic Club Holds An Frances Marsh and C.
Enthusiastic Meeting;
Watson Will Publish
Women Urged to Vote.
1Q99 Tfm,t,.Ha
AJ
mmmm

Mrs. Desha Breckinridge, one of the
leading suffragists of the State and
a delegate to the International Suffrage Convention at Geneva last
the Democratic
August, addressed
Club last Thursday evening.
She spoke on the League of Nations.
"The League of Nations is a Monroe
Doctrine for the whole world," said
Mrs. Breckinridge and she further
stated that the only advantage to be
gained bytaying' out was the possibility of making secret treaties with
Germany, Austria and Mexico.
7 She also urged every woman to
avail herself herself of the opportunity
to use the ballot. A great deal of
interest was shown by the women
present who constituted over half of
the audience.
Simrall, dean of
Miss Josephine
women, introduced Mrs. Breckinridge.

v

ir

Literary

Society Chooses Leaders

For Ensuing Year.

!

i

JI&VllliUVIlIUlll

Editor-in-chie-

Famous Campus

Dillard Turner, '21, of the College
of Law, was elected president of the
historic Union Literary Society for
the ensuing year at the meeting in
the society rooms in the Alumni Hall
lust Friday evening. Turner has been
an enthusiastic member of the Union
for four years, He has taken part in GERALDINE FARRAR
several declamatory and oratorical
TO BE HERE FRIDAY
contests and debases In which he
helped tp maintain the reputation
Geraldlne Farrar, assisted by Edgar
which he society has held tin Kentucky's campus for nearly fifty years. Schofield, Ada Sassoll and Claude
The others officers chosen were: Gotthelf, will give the second provice president, E. Zukerman, '21, Col- gram of the Artist Concert Series at
lege of Engineering; secretary, Robt. Woodland Auditorium Friday night,
J. Raible, '21, College of Arts and October 15.
Sciences; treasurer, Raymond
Farrar, who is considered by many
College of Arts amV to be the greatest gift that America
'21,
attorney-generaRobert has yet made to the art of music,
Sciences;
Mitchell, '22, College o Agriculture; seems to., be especially created to em:sergeant-at-arfns- ,
C, S. Carter, '.23, body the id'eals of modern composers
College of Arts and Sciences; li- who demand not merely beauty of
brarian. A. lAlnerln. '23, College of En singing but breadth of action and atIn accordance with .its,' tractiveness of personality.
gineering.
custom the retiring president, N.; B.
Ada Sassoll, the brilliant harpist
lOonkwright, '22, College of Law, was with Miss Farrar on tho tour the latSelected janitor.
ter Is making of this country, Is ono
The Union is the oldest literary of the most skilled performers on the
society wesi oi uie aiibbiidiiiob, ho harp now before tho public. Miss
charter, granted to It by the Legis- Sassoll is young and handsome, and
lature of the State of Kentucky in when she Is with her harp she makes
l873, hangs on tho clubroom wall. on irresistable picture. In every city
Some of the best known Kentucky she Is singled out by demonstrative
graduates who are in public life today critics and commended for tho beauty
were members of the Union Literary of her performance.
She Is said by
Society. Former Governor A. O. Stan-- ' many to bo tho greatest harpist In
joy, Congressman King Swope, Virgil America today. Sho has proven her.Chapman and many others, wero self .to bo both a virtuoso and an interpreter of first rank.
'Union men.
At the meeting last Friday, C. 8.
Carter exhibited a gold medal pre GRAHAM URGES WAR MOTHERS
UILDING
sented by the Union Literary society TO SUPPORT MEMORIAL
,to his father, who won tho oratorical
contest in 1888.
Herbert D. Graham made a talk in
This year the Union plans not only . the interest of the Memorial Building
to uphold tho traditions of a half at a meeting of tho Fayette county
contury but also to add new; laurels chapter of American War Mothers,
Tuesday affornoon at the parish houso
'fContlnue on Pan '3.
of Christ Church Cathedral.

Annual Will Record FRATERNITY PLEDGES Nominations For Officers
Activities as a Panorama ;
Must Be Made at Least
Contest Announced
The frnternities announce the followa Week Ahead.
editor-in-chie-

1

j

AHHUAL

ELECTION

Herndon Evans Reelected
Stage Manager; Milton
Revill, President.

l,

j

,

I

?

PAGEANT

The Kentuckian of 1921, as It is
now being planned by the
Adele Slade, and her staff, will
be on an entirely different plan than
jany other year book that has ever
been put out at Kentucky. It is built
on the plan of a pageant, which will
a panorama of ithe activities
I present
of the University the past year, and
endeavor to tell what each organlza-- ,
tion, movement or activity has con-tributed to the success and progress
of the University.
The aim this year is to make the
Kentuckian an original production,
and one worthy of the University,
Each division of the Kentuckian is
being planned on an entirely new
basis, and the Kentuckian staff will
welcome any new and original ideas,
concerning any division of the work.
A prize of $10 Is being offered to
the one who submits the best set of
a dozen snapshots; a second prize of
a Kentuckian, will be given the person submitting the next best set. A
subscription contest will be held later
In the season.
The Kentuckian office this year is
located in the basement of the Library
Building.

Rod-'ger- s,

,

New Plan for Class Elections
Inaugurated by Sophomores

WILL BE
LIKE

No. 3

V.I 1921

The Engineers made a landslide of
the Junior class election Thursday, by
electing their entire ticket.
Ed.
Gregg was elected president; Elizabeth Klmbrough,
vice president;
Piper',
Sarah
secretary;
Motcalf
Authur Slmnkl In, treasurer; Burton
Prewltt,
orator; Frances
Marsh,
Junior editor of Kentuckian; C. V.
Watson, Junior 'business manager' of
Kentuckian.
Gregg is a student in the College of
Engineering, a member of the Sigma
Nu fraternity,
the Mystic Thirteen
honorary society and the Sigma Tau
musical fraternity.
He is Art Editor
of the 1921 Kentuckian.
He won his
"K" in baseball in 191S, and is at
present a candidate for the varsity
football squad. His home is in Louisville.
Frances
Marsh, Maysville, was
elected Junior Editor of the annual
and by virtue of this election will
f
assume the duties of
of
the 1922 Kentuckian next fall, is a
member of Chi Omega sorority and is
prominent In the journalistic activities of the University.
She was a
member of the Kernel staff last year
and was 'boa of the editors of the
University Bulletin.
V.
C.
Watson, Brooksville, was
elected Junior Business Manager of
the 1921 Kentuckian, and will be Business Manager of the annual next year.
He Is a member of the Alpha Tau
Omega fraternity, treasurer of the Y.
M. C. A., and assistant manager of
the football team.

ELECTS DEEICERS

PLANNED

CLASS!

OCT. J5, 1920

I

At the opening meeting of the Strollers, the dramatic organization of the
University, officers were elected and
committees were chosen to lead the
club throughout the year 1920-2Herndon Evans, stage manager of
"The Climbers," was reelected to
stage
manager
Milthl3 year.
ton Revill, of "'Mice and Men" fame,
vas elected president of the organization for the ensuing year.
Other
officers of the Strollers are: Martha
Buckman, vice president;
Burton
Prewltt, secretary-treasurer- ;
William
Finn, business manager and Fred
Augsburg, advertising manager.
The committee for tho selection of
a play for the 1921 production Is composed of the following: Fred Augsburg, chairman; Carlisle Chonault and
Mamie Woods.
The new Stroller room wlll be furnished by the following committee:
Mary
Robert Mitchell, chairman;
Lyons and Clarlbel Kay.
The social committee which will
function throughout the ontlro year Is
composed of Francos Marsh, chair- man; Martha Buckman, Mary Jamos,
Katherlno Herring and Gus Becker.
concerning
Plans were discussed
Amateur Night. Tho following committee will take care of the now tal- out which appears on Hallowe'en:
Herndon Evans, chairman, Mamie
Woods, Mary Downing, Milton Revill
and Auryno Boll.
Robert Mitchell will again act as
property man for tho production this
year and Frances Marsh will take
care of tho publicity.

ing pledges:

Sigma Chi.
The Sophomore class held a class
D. H. Mnhoney, Lexington; Thomas meeting
in tho chapel last Thursday
Hardesty, Ft. Thomas; T. G. Foster,
afternoon.
The meeting was called
Jr., Lexington; E. A. Gana, Louisville; to order by
Dean Melcber, who read
G. E. Rouse, Jr., Nashville, Tenn.;
the rules for the
and disW. G. Branaman, Lexington; Clayton
Arnold, Lancaster.
Alpha Tau Omega
Henry iCampbell, Dud King, William
King, Ed. Wiley, Millard Wilson, Lexington; J. B. Williams, Ewlng.
Kappa Alpha
Dan Bomar, Dan Morse, B.
Lexington; Joe Grimes, Stanford; J. A. Wltherspoon, Lawrence- burg; R. Van Zant, Frankfort; H.
Harper, H. Tilton, Carlisle; Allen Fer-- i
guson, Georgetown.
Dew-hurs- t.

Kappa Sigma
Emanuel Van Meter, Coleman Hunter, Winchester;
Molloy,
Newton
Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Jack Rollow,
Oak Grove; Douglas Vest, Carrollton;
Coleman Arnold, Lancaster; Robert
Miller, Hardinsburg.
Sigma Nu.
T. L. Menaug, Harrodsburg; Garry
Jloosma, Alfred Sturges, Rassaic, N.
J.; Robert Dinwiddle, Louisville;
Beverly Mann, William Carothers,
Bardstown; William Whitfield,
J. H. Card, Jr., Plneville;
William Duiguid, Ghent;
Madison
Caweln, Louisville; Earl Nicholas,
Dawson Springs; Rogers Clay, Frankfort; Lafayette Herring, Fulton.
Phi Delta Theta.
R. Glovanoll, "W. T. Shelby, Lexington; J. E. Claunch. W. C. Bobbitt,
Somerset; H. F. Asbury, Carlisle; T.
J. Porter, Lebanon.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
John W. Cook, Smith Grove; Sam
C. A. Carter,
Martin. Millersburg;
Wm. Worthlngton, Lexington; A. C.
Bottoms, Lawrenceburg; J. A. Dobbs,
Morgantown; Calvin Llsman, Dixon;
D. A.
H. C. Hoffman, Carrolton;
P. B. Rou3e,
Wolfe, Georgetown;
Paducah; L. R. Rlngo, Owensboro;
L. T. Smith, Bowling Green; John
Albright, Mt. Vernon.
Sigma Alpha Mu.
Daniel Wleile, Louisville.
Pi Kappa Alpha
John E. Riley, Henderson; Lowell
Truitt, Morganfield; Waller Sprague,
Sturgls: Earl Bourland, Madlsonville;
Wickliffe Moore, Alvln Blackwell,
Clay; W. L. Amis, Barboursville; Jas.
C. Stapp, Corydon; R. L Saunders,
Covington.
Alpha Sigma Phi.
Arthur F. Bontly, iHojwesville; Morton Field, Owensboro: Charles E. Gibson, Lexington;
Earl M. Heavrin,
Hawesville; John B. Loftus, Princeton; Robert ,C. Riggs, Lexington;
Jesse H. Sahlle, Owensboro; Elinor R.
Wallace, Lexington.
.

SCORE BY WIRELESS
E. L. Baulch bus been receiving tho
scoVe.i from tho world series over tho
wireless telegraph in the Civil Building thirty minutes before tho Herald
and Leader get them from tho Associated Presa wlro.
Preparations are being made to regame play
ceive tho Harvard-Centrby play, and also tho
game Saturday.
e

Miami-Kentuck-

cussed a plan for electing class officers. His plan met with the immediate approval of those present and
a unanimous vote was given to use it
in the present election. His plan was
to get away from the undemocratic
manner in which all former elections
have been conducted and to establish
for this class as well as for those
which shall follow, a set standard entrusting to candidates the responsibilities of the office.
In previous elections the successful
nominee wa3 the one who belonged
to the college which had the greater
majority.
This year the candidates
Tvere nominated from the entire class.
The names of the nominees have been
posted on the bulletin board In the
Main Buildings Those not present
at class meeting should consult the
list and consider the competency of
candidates.
Ryan Ringo was elected temporary
chairman.
The following were nominated for
the consideration of the clas3: president, Bruce Fuller, Stuart Neff, R. L.
Ringo. B. L. Pribble.
Vice president:
Mary Elizabeth
Downing, Elizabeth Allen, Louise
Dorothy Blatz.
Secretary: Kathleen Renlck, Kath-erln- e
Conroy,
Irene
McNamara,
Margaret Griffin.
Treasurer: H. D. Brailsford, A. B.
Cammack, J. Burks, C. Humphries,
J. Shouse, J. W. Selph.
Con-nel- l,

AMATEUR NIGHT WILL
BE HELD

HALLOWE'EN

Prospective Footlight Stars
To Display Histrionic
Ability in Chapel
"The last night of October
Is the strangest ever seen,
For 'tis then that tho wierd old
witches
Go
on tho green."
"Haste thee, nymph and bring with
thee" costumes, make-up- ,
properties
and Ideas for tho first Stroller tryout
October 25. Procure your blanks from
the post office right away, make them
out in' full concealing none of tho
family secrets, and hand them to tho
first Stroller you meet coming out of
the Ada Meade, Applications filed in
that way always bring results. Al- though tho processes seem a bit Involved, bo suro npply: every one
trios at least once.
"Amateur Night," Friday, October
29, promises to display to tho world
hitherto unknown talent, along
and other linos. Tho usual
prizes of live dollars In gold will bo
awarded to tho best individual act and
the best group act.

n

1

*