xt79gh9b6g20 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79gh9b6g20/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19451207  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  7, 1945 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  7, 1945 1945 2013 true xt79gh9b6g20 section xt79gh9b6g20 The Kentucky Kernel

PAGE ONE
Vole In Elections
For SGA Assembly
VOLUME XXXVI

Rupp Opens With
Pair Of Jacks

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Z246

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY. FRIDAY. DECEMBER

Chinese Journalist Lab Attack
Was Vicious
To Speak At Convo Donovan Tells

Kyian Beauty Queen
Selection Tuesday
A Kentuckian beauty queen
and five attendants will be

chosen at a closed meeting at
7 p.m. Tuesday In the Union
ballroom from a field of 35 entrants, Jean Crabb, yearbook
business manager, announced
today.
The selection will be attended
only by the entrants, five judges
and the Kentuckian committee
composed of Billie Dale, Hazel
Kennedy, Betsey Lowry,
Keith Dosker. Judges will
vote by secret ballot and the
selection will not be revealed

State Council

v"

.;:;.y;T

v"

Security In Pacific
Hubert Liang. Chinese journalist,
will discuss "International Security
In the Pacific" at the last fall convocation which will be held in Memorial hall Friday. December 14. at
11 aja. All fourth hour classes will
be dismissed.
An observer, writer and lecturer.
Liang recently arrived from Chung-kin- s.
China, where since the outbreak of the war he has covered
the Chinese situation for several
American newspapers, reporting and
analyzing events in the Far East.

S'tJP

iv

v

J

-

V

The "most vicious attack ever
made on the University was made
on its aeronautical laboratory."
President Herman L. Donovan told
the State Legislative council
Tuesday.
Discussing research work. Dr.
Donovan referred to the laboratory
and the controversy about it which
arose from a suit by two former
students attacking the salary of
James H. Graham, dean of the
College of Engineering.
Axel Again

and-Mar-

until the Kentuckian appears

In June.

Rehearsal for the contest will
be held at 5 p.m. in the Union
ballroom and all candidates
must' attend the rehearsal.

Bringing up the subject volun
tarily, Donovan said Axel Wenner-GreSwedish industrialist, sought
to build a laboratory in New Jersey
in 1940 and obtained Prof. A.. J.
Meyer from the University engineering staff to direct it.
Meyer was reluctant to leave the
school and took the proposal to
Dean Graham who suggested that
aeronautical research might be car
ried on at the University under
Meyer. Graham persuaded Wenner-Gre- n
to build the $150,000 labora
tory on the campus.
Donovan described Wenner-Gre- n
as a man who had spent the weekend in Buckingham Palace and the
White House and was in "good

(

n,

Educated In V. S.
Liang was educated in this country and for several years has been
with various Chinese
connected
.government posts, notably in connection with the Industrial Cooperative Movement, which has assisted the nation in her present
'economic crisis.
e
Liang has witnessed the
war since the Japanese
attacked Shanghai and has viewed
some of the major engagements on
land and in the air.

Pacific Talker Liang '

UK Grateful

Chinese-Japanes-

For Supplies

Knows Leaders

U. S. Releases

A close acquaintance of all of
China "i present day leaders, Liang
jis familiar with the currents which
are making Chinese postwar policy
and with the thinking which will
fix her alliances and her future economic structure.
He will discuss America's opportunity in China and the Pacific, the
mutual problems which America
and China must solve and the latest information en military, economic and political developments.
; Leo M. Chamberlain,
dean of the
University, will preside.
j

Excess Property

,

Editor
Now. Managing
Ex-Kern-

standing." Later the industrialist
was placed on the state depart"The University is very grateful ment's blacklist and accused of
for equipment obtained from the being a Nazi sympathizer.
government under excess property
"Could Be"
regulation of the War Department
"He may have been or he may
Uninumber 7, paragraph
versity Comptroller Frank D. Peter not," President Donovan stated.
Wenner-Gre- n
son told The Kernel Tuesday.
Translated into figures, Peterson's
statement is a thankyou for about
equipment
$150,000 in technical
given to the University by the Army
Engineers, Air Forces and the Ord
nance Department.

non-ficti- on

n.

non-pro-

ey

super-streng-

th

fit

Bulletin Summarizes
Adena Trait Complex

'

war-tim-

UK Sheep Win

International Honors

,

--

,

fat-sto- ck

Pild

John F. "Sunny" Day Jr., graduate
of the University and former editor
of The Kernel, has been appointed
managing editor of the Dayton Daily
News, Dayton, Ohio.
A graduate of the University in
1935 and a reporter for the Lexington
Leader for five years, Day )oined the
editorial staff of the News last month
after serving on the news staff of
the Cleveland Press and as northern
Ohio representative of Time, Life
and Fortune magazines.'
Day is the author of "Bloody
Ground," a
book on the
mountain area of eastern Kentucky.
In 1942 he was selected as a Neiman
Fellow for a year's study at Harvard
University.
After leaving the Leader Day
joined the Associate Press staff and
was connected with bureaus in
Louisville, Huntington and Charleston, W. Va.
He was a member of Alpha Tau
Omega fraternity, Omlcron Delta
Kappa, national men's honorary and
president of the Men's Student
Council.
-

's name was removed
from the laboratory in 1844 by the
direction of University trustees and
a contract with the Mawen Motor
Corporation,
a foreign company
with American directors, cancelled.
Mawen was said to be controlled
by Wenner-GreDr. Donovan said the laboratory
had held numerous contracts from
the Army base at Wright Field, and
airplane
engine
Pratt-Whitn-

el

Dayton Daily News

More Gifts Expected
This figure does not include the
ordnance equipment promised from
Henderson, and other gifts still un
announced. "We expect more en- manufacturers.
Helped Win War
gineering equipment, and machinery for classes in aeronautics, chemHe said the laboratory developed
gasoline and motor
istry and physics." Peterson said.
Mr. Peterson explained that .wide- oil which played a major part in
spread government distribution of the defeat of the Axis.
iUESTTON: ARE YOU IN FAVOR property to colleges,
Dean Graham won the suit filed
private last April by Henry A. Harper and
OF HAVING AN HONOR SYSTEM institutions, and
IN REGARD TO EXAMINATIONS and denominational institutions, James A. Molloy who sought to
qualifications force him to repay the $14,374 in
ESTABLISHED ON THE UNIVER followed the schools'
schools. salary from the school while he was
as accredited
SITY CAMPUS?
The government wants to reap ben employed by the federal governJeaa Paxten, AiS, senior: As efits from its distribution of prop- ment.
long as instructors persist In be- erty in better training of its citizens.
lieving that every student cheats Gratis gifts of technical equipment
nd i degradingly insists on seating also lightens taxpayers' loads, he
them in a pattern to prevent pos- continued.
Talked to Officials
sible cheating, the honor system will
never work whether exams are
A summary of the Adena trait
In Washington last week, Peter
proctored or not.
son talked with FHA authorities complex in Kentucky has been pubas a bulletin
the Depart
Warm Bishop. A AS, freshman: about the University's prefabricated lished of Anthropologyof and Archaement
No, I dont think it would work. houses, to the RFC deputy commisJust from experience. I've seen too sioner about property, as well as to ology at the University under the
of the United authorship of Dr. William S. Webb,
a representative
many take advantage of it.
t head of the department, and Dr.
States Office of Education.
Gwca Petrey, A AS, junior: Sure,
Property is of three types,' excess, Charles E. Snow, associate professor.
it's worked other places so why not salvage
"Adena people," a prehistoric Ohio
and surplus, he explained
here? Kentuckians should be as
to The Kernel Outright gifts by river valley race, has been a study
honest as other people!
the government are a recognition of Dr. Webb, and 13 previous reEdward Carter, AS, sophomore: that such property will be of greater ports have been published by the
I sore am I'm all for it. Just too value in education than it would department under his authorship.
much cheating going on round here be if sold to enterprisers.
Some of the basic information
they should study more. Now I 'Among items given to the Uni- listed by the author points out that
tell "ya what happens to me I versity are bombsights and radar, Adena man was a builder of mounds
study ten hours on a test, then some long
e
secrets, but now over the dead and a constructor of
of 'em come to class and cheat and available to Kentucky engineers for earthworks other than the mounds.
For many' years archaeologists
; they get an "A" while I get a "D"
study.
now that aint constitutional is it?
have believed that the Adena complex was the basic culture from
Margaret Skinner, A AS, sophowhich emanated the elaborate Ohio
more: Hot because I wouldn't be
Hopewell culture, but not until the
'willing to try it. but I don't think
summation of this information has
it would work.
there been any substantiation of
j
David Frymire, Agriculture, fresh
For the second consecutive year,
belief, according to Dr. Webb.
aaaa: Yep, it worked very good in sheep from UK's experiment station this
Dr. Snow, the junior editor, has
my high school but, I dont know flock won international honors at
riven a summation of the physical
the Chicago
if I could still abide by it or not!
show. Dr. W
peoGarrigus. head of the anima' characteristics of the Adena
Jaa Shepherd. AS, Junior: An P.
ple, which show that Adena man
honor system wouldn't work be- husbandry department, announcer was the first brachyccphalic (round
of this week.
cause everybody's definition
headed) type in Kentucky.
A
Southdown wethei
"honor" might not be the same!
Burdette, A&S, freshman: lamb in the University's flock if
YES, it's the best way because the named grand champion single Iamb
faculty can't stop cheating alto- and three other Southdowns made
gether any way, and the honor sys- up the championship pen. The sheep
tem seems the best way to stop it. were fitted by Harold Barber, experiment
station shepherd, and
'hcy
firsts; scconds'
.11 for an honor system, but I think
every other
lesser
it would have to apply to all curri-cul- entered.
activities not only in regard
1944 grand
The University's
to exams.
champion, a
Southdown,
Ode Florence, A AS, sophomore: was sold for $3.75 a pound, an
I think it's a good idea, but there
high for the international
are times when I don't trust myself! stock
show.
fresh-m- :
David Hicks, Agriculture,
Why sure, why not! A person should be honest enough to put
down what he knows, and nothing
I
., ....
JV1
else!
Betty Lee Fleishman,
Shirley
Cea Whicker, AS, junior: Certainly it is a fine idea, but until Meistcr and Dorothy Levy have
the few
students been elected by Hillel Youth Group
learn that cheating is a losing game, as delegates to the Intercollegiate
be tough on the more con- Zionist Conference, which will be
It
scientious ones. "Sooner or later, held December
5
in Chicago.
- why
not now?" maybe.
The objective of the conference
A PROF: As long as a tattler is is to organize an Intercollegiate
considered more obnoxious than a Zionist federation in which all cam.
cheater, the honor system will never pus Zionist organizations will par
ticipate.
work.
A Great Kentuckian

Church To Return
To UK Winter Term
Dr. William F. Church, former
instructor in history at the TJarer-- 1
sity, who has been in the U. S. Army
since. 1942, will return to the cojn-p- us
as assistant professor in ttoe
same department, at the opening of
the winter quarter.
Dr. Church was among the 96

7. 1913

NUMBER 9

Donovan Asks
Budget Boost
Five Million

For Two Years
President Herman Lee Donovan
asked the State Legislative council
Tuesday for a total of $5,829290 for
the University's work in the next
two years beginning next July 1,
compared to $2,951,500 In the present biennium.
Greatest increases requested were
for capital outlay and in the work
connected with the College of Agriculture and Home Economics.
Every College V'pped
For each college in the University. President Donovan requested
$1,953,750 in each of the coming
two years, compared to $1,170,950
this year and last.
He requested $455,000 in capital
outlay for the next two years.
The University critically needs
additional housing for an anticipated 5.000 students next fall, 1,700
above the previous highest enrollment. Dr. Donovan Informed the
council.
He outlined plans for the building
of new dormitories on a
basis. He said five of the six
present residence halis were operating on that basis.
In the past 81 years the state has
appropriated only $1,250,000 for
buildings with most structures being
erected on gifts and on a
basis. Dr. Donovan

stated.

To identify themselves as official
salesmen at future basketball games,
SuKy tryouts will wear blue ribbons.
Later in the season a cap or some
other distinguishing mark will be
worn by the candy and chewing
gum tryouts to signify that they are
authorized to sell at games.
Little boys who sell cokes will be
wearing arm bands.

said.
Dr. Donovan said most of the increase requested was needed to
raise teacher salaries, hire at least
100 new instructors, and buy equip-

ment.

He also outlined plans for an engineering experiment station and
asked $50,000 for it.

Check Your Money
Before You Write
A Bookstore Check
1
By Hugh CaUett
Unredeemed checks worth hundreds of dollars have been returned
by various banks. to the Campus
Book Store. Junes- - Morris, manan -- .('
ger, announce todar.
Realizing the difficulty students
have in cashing checks. Mr. Morris
has borne a great loss of money hi
order to cater to the desires of the
student body.
--

cease cashing checks altogether,
Mr. Morris said.
Mr. Morris has placed a suggestion box on the counter in the bookstore and is soliciting ideas and
suggestions that may remedy this
situation.
Manager Morris has made the
following suggestion and would like
student reaction concerning it: All
checks cashed with a purchase of
fifty cents or more will be cashed
free of charge; all checks cashed
with a purchase of less than fifty
cents or with no purchase will be
cashed for a fee of five cents. This
fee is not established as a money-makischeme, but as a safety
measure to cover the cost of cashing the check at banks, he sid.
The bookstore offers Its
service to the students for
their convenience, and Mr. Morris
is asking that the students themselves settle the problem. Anyone
having suggestions concerning this
problem is requested to write them
down and drop them in the suggestion box in the bookstore.
ng

Lexington Hero
To Return Soon

check-cashi-

Lt. Thomas McKinley, leader of

the Army unit which captured the
arch diplomat, Franz von Papen,
will return soon to the University.
McKinley recently received an
honorable discharge and has the
Silver Star. His home is in Lexington.

.

'"f
all-ti-

UK Students
Chosen Delegates

22-2-

:

Dr. Thomas Hunt Morgan, 79. in
ternationally known biologist and
holder of several degrees from the
University, died Tuesday at the
Huntington Memorial hospital, Pasadena, Calif., after a short illness.
A Nobel prize winner in 1933 for
his discoveries in heredity and genetics, Dr. Morgan was
for his discoveries concernt
ing the eugenic functions of chromosomes.
On September 25, 1936, Dr. Morgan was honored by a
celg
ebration and program conducted by
the University. A memorial plaque
to mark his birthplace was presented by Dr. Frank L. McVey, then
president of the University.
He received his Bachelor of Sciences degree from the University
in 1886, his Master of Sciences in
1888 and his PhD In 1890.
Studied Flies
Nearly 32 years ago Dr. Morgan
world-famo-

day-lon-

decided that flies offered the best
form of life in which to Study heredity. He discovered that there are
25 generations of flies a year, which
is eight hundred times as fast as
the rate of propagation in man. For
years he crossed flies and produced
results that astonished the scientific
world.
A native of Lexington, he was
born September 25. 1866. the son of
Charlton H. and Ellen Key Howard
Morgan. He received degrees from
the University of Kentucky, Johns
Hopkins University, McGill University, the University of Edinburgh,
University of California, University
of Michigan and Heidelburg University.

I

Gardner.

KHSPA Meet To Be
Held This Weekend
High School Journalists Register
Clinic
This Morning For Two-Da- y

More thaii 200 delegates are expected to register this morning at
the Department of Journalism for
the anual conference of the Kentucky High School Press association.
Thirty-thre- e
speakers will lead
clinics or direct contests during the
two-dmeeting. They include local
newspaper and press association
writers, staff members of University
publications, and faculty and students of the Department of Journalism.
Activities of the conference, which
is attended by students and advisers
of high school newspaper staffs
throughout the state, will Include a
score of clinics on journalistic topics,
eleven writing contests, publication
"an instate newspaper, campus
lours, a social, ana a sweater swing.
High school newspapers submitted
for criticism will be evaluated by
the- journalism faculty.
"' Paper To Be Published
Kernel staff members will supervise work of the high school jourte
nalists In preparing the
newspaper, a standard four-papublication to be printed and distributed to delegates Saturday morning. It will consist entirely of news,
editorials, features, columns, and
advertisements concerning the conference written by delegates during
the meeting. It will publish
entries from the writing
contests.
Total awards in the contests will
be $60 in Victory stamps. $50 offered
by the Lexington Herald-Leadand
$10 by the Kentucky Press association. Delegates will compete in contests on advertising, news writing,
editorial writing, headlines, make-usports writing, features. Interviews,
and columns. Entries will be Judged
ay

-

'

all-sta-

ge

prize-winni- ng

er

p.

-

all-sta-

ed

porter."

Delegates will obtain experience in
interviewing at press conferences to
be held by President H. L. Donovan.
Dean Paul P. Boyd of the College
of Arts and Sciences, and Coach
Adolph Rupp.
(Continued

on Page Five)

Former Editor Back Christmas Specials
From Pacific Theater By UK Studios
Maj. Louis Iglchart, editor of The
Kernel from 1938-3- 9
and 1939-4is in Lexington on terminal leave
after serving with the 49th fighter
group 35 months in the Pacific.
A former Lexington Herald reporter, he has served four and
lf
years in the Army, and is a
graduate of the University.
He reverts to inactive status Feb0.

one-ha-

ruary

1, 1946.

member of the Royal Society in
England from which he received
the Darwin medal, and the Academy
of Petrograd and of the French
Academy of Science.
Dr. Morgan was a nephew of
General John Hunt Morgan, Confederate cavalry officer, and he was
born at "Hopemont," corner of Second and Mill streets.

Only Few Cases

Of Flu In Infirmary

Widespread increase in the number of influenza cases all over the
country has not been reflected at
Instructor
the University, Dr. William
Dr. Morgan has instructed at
announced to The Kernel
Bryn Mawr, Columbia University Monday. "There are fewer cases in
and was director of the Ker'ckhofl the Infirmary this week than at
Laboratories la 1928. He was a any other time," he said.
rd

Agriculture

During the remainder of the
quarter, major programs planned
for presentation from the University radio studios through WHAS
include two round-tabdiscussions
and a special holiday series.
The problem of feeding Europe
will be the roundtable topic discussed at 11:45 a.m. Sunday, December 9. Participants will discuss
the sociological and economic factors in a starving Europe, taking
the view that the United States
should contribute to the welfare of
European peoples and avoid sowing
the seeds of another world war.
Speakers on the forum include:
Prof. Bennett WaU of the History
department. Dr. Howard W. Beers,
professor of rural sociology. Bill
Weems. veteran, and Dr. Arnold
Anderson, head of the sociology department, as moderator.
A student discussion concerning
free college education will be held
at 11:45 a.m..' Sunday. December 16.
Four special holiday programs are
scheduled for the remainder of December: Choristers. December 23;
dramatization of the legend of St.
Stephen. December 30; and two
others on December 23 and 29.

upperclass

woman.

Joann Kloecker and Frances

WU-hoy- te;

Education upperclass woman. Billie Dale and Helen Burke;
Engineering upperclass man. Howard Stewart and Clyde Tipton:
Commerce man at large, Everett
Fairchild and Buddy GwUlim.
Agriculture Open
The vacancy in agriculture man
at large was left open automatically
because neither candidate bad the
required 1.3 standing, according to
Dean L. J. Horlacher.
Voters must bring adequate identification to the polls or watchers
will not allow them to vote. Driver's licenses or University receipts
are satisfactory identification. Miss
Pace explained. After voting, students will be marked at the polls.
Each hour from 9 ajn. to ( p.m. two
Independent and two Constitutionalist election officials will be at
the polls.
Results Next Week
Votes will be counted at 6 p.m.
by the election committee consist- J
Mac
Gwen
Tevis. Richard LeGrand, and Donald Warren. Results will not be announced until next week's Kernel,
the last of the quarter.
Independents led by President
Dick LeGrand met early last week
to nominate their slate of candidates. The Constitutionalists met
Thursday night and elected Charlie Gardner, president of the clique.

by the journalism faculty and The
Kernel staff.
Campus Tour Arranged
All journalistic sessions of the conference will be held in McVey hall
From 8:30 to 10 a.m. today delegates
will register, receive assignments
newspaper, and
te
for the
take a tour of the campus arranged
by Elmer O. Sulz?r, director of the
Department of Public Relations.
Clinics will begin with four, sessions at 10 a.m. Lee Harris of the
Division of Vocational Education
tography,"
will speak on "Press
Aiiu Willi iiai muu w
Equipment Company. Lexington, will
Newsspeak on
papers." Miss Mary Louise Patton
and Miss Dora Lee Robertson, journalism seniors, will lead a clinic on
"Finding Features." At the same
hour Prof. W. C. Tucker of the Department of Journalism will speak
on "Editorial Pages."
At 11 a.m. Russell E. Scofield, advertising manager of the Lexington
Herald-Leade- r,
will speak on "Advertising That Sells." Prof C. R.
Barnhart of the Department of Art
will give a lecture and demonstra
tion on "Low-Co- st
Illustrations."
Dr. Niel Plummer, head of the Department of Journalism, will speak
on "Fair Play in the Paper. Miss
Betty Jane Pugh. Lexington Herald
reporter,
will discuss her work"
under the title of "Girl Police Re"Stencil-Duplicat-

Votes To Be
Tabulated Today,
Announced Friday
Polls in the great hall of the
Union building will be open until
$ pjn. today in the balloting to fill
ten SGA vacancies, chairman of
the election committee Gwcn Pace
announced yesterday.
Candidate Listed
Vacancies and candidates for each
are: Arts and Sciences Upperclass
woman. Jane Ertckson and Marjean
Wenstrup; Arts and Sciences upperclass woman. Elizabeth Allen
Thomas and Margaret Davis; Arts
and Sciences lowerclass woman.
Floye Mullinaux and Nelda Napier;
Arts and Sciences lowerclass woman. Helen Dorr and Margaret Skinner; Arts and Sciences lowerclass
man, Harold Friedley and Charlie

Independents' LeGrand

New Clique Leader

'

Kentuckians Fall Dead
"Kentuckians would fall dead if
you did something like that. . . .
I think I'd get an awful shock," he

In recent months the situation
winners of Guggenheim
Fellowhas become more acute, and, unless
ships awarded last spring by the something can be done to cover his
John Simon Guggenheim founda- losses or at least cover the bank's
tion, and will take up his fellowship charges
for handling worthless
next June.
checks, the bookstore will have to

Blue Ribbons Identify
SuKy Salesmen

Ten SGA Vacancies
To Be Filled Today

Dr. Thomas Morgan,NobelWinner,Dies

ar

t

ON PAGE SIX

CM

Engineers May

Receive Scholarships
The University is one of three
schools which will receive scholarships for students of coal mining
engineering. Harry Kennedy, secretary of the Central Appalachian
section, American Institute of Min
Engineers,
ing and Metallurgical
announced Saturday at the meeting of that group in Lexington.
The awards, valued at $300 each,
win be granted on the basis of
competitive examinations offered in
the spring. Students graduated
from any high school in the central
Appalachian section may compete.
Other schools named are the University of West Virginia, and Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

Kampus
Kernels

le

Directories Ready
Emily Jones, editor of the
student directory, announced
that the directories will be distributed at the Union building
today. All students are requested
to call for their copies.

War Effort committee . . . will meet
at 4 pjn. Wednesday in room 205
of the Union building.
will
Koffee Klub committee
meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday in room
204 of the Union building.
Dutch Lunch club . . . will meet at
noon today in the Y lounge of tha
Union building.
rppercUsa Y . . . will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday in the Y lounge of the
Union building.
Freshman club . . . will meet at
6:30 pjn. Tuesday in the Card room
of the Union building.
tradiHanging of the Greens
tional Christmas ceremony sponsored annually by the YMCA.
YWCA. and the Student Union
board, will be held at 8 p.m. Friday. December 14. in the Great hall
of the Union building.
Koffee Klub . . . invite all students
to hear Dr. Thomas Clark speak
on the Kentucky constitution at 4
p.m. Thursday in the Music room of
the Union building.
German club . . . Christmas party
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at home of
Dr. and Mrs. A. E. Bigge.
Xi chapter of Chi Delta Phi . . .
initiation at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in
Carnegie Music room of Union
building.
Alpha Lambda Delta
will meet
at 4 p.m. Monday In the Union.

...

...

...

'

* The Kernel Editorial Page

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
PUBLISHED WEEKLY DORINO THB SCHOOL TEAR
EXCEPT HOLIDAYS OR EXAMINATION PERIODS

Enters
rond

!.

Mart Jake Dor
Betty Tews

.t

the Po Offlc. at Uxlnton. Kentucky. M
in.ttw under the Act of March J. 1171.

DlcK
DORA LEE ROBERTSON

MEMBER

CASEY GoMAN

tntreollflt mm

Amoelttlon
Lntngton Board of Commerce
Kentucky Press AreocUtlon
national EoitoriU Aviation

Kentucky

pAT BURNETT
MARILYN MITCHELL

'"

cwj. ruiukz

mm t

caicM

dv.t..

-

.50

One Quarter

$1

SO

The Free Lance
Confer- The Labor - Management
ence was called to discuss the
Hurley Resignation Causes Furor
of getting better under- Congress standing between the workers and
Our
has been chasing another red her- the owners and no workable agree- ment was reached. Now the pre si- ring this week, and Major General
dent asked for district boards to be
Patrick J. Hurley who went envcy-in- g organized so that a dispute, which
to China as President Roosecall for a large strike, could
put off while the board met with
velt's personal ambassador has come
the leaders and discussed the situa- relahome to do American-Chin- o
n. The unions have rejected that
by what some
tions a lot of harm
also. What can they want? If they
term his witch hunting.
rtrt nnt. rlpKir
a merlin tin? hmirr!
Hurley, called by Drew Pearson tnen tne only obvlous conclusion
.
cowboy ambassador
"a delightful,
would be mat tney want to strike
arrived In the East amid a great whenever they desire: to continue
fanfare and received a large wel- - hnldirur the owners over & barrel
come by the Chiangs He took up
ng them no choice but to give in.
ambassador of good will. Then fric- n must
U.ve'.but
tion developed Between him and the
seems a rather
staff over the degree of aid to be it
sometimes when even the president
given the Kuomintang in fighting
a
cant
and probably of the United States to all render
the Communists
without
haa decision in fairness
Miiik cIca van tnvnlvoH
e union complaining of "yielding
been recalled now and former Chief
to industrial arrogance." There is
of Staff Gen. Marshall has been
common
appointed to his vacant post, but no no solutionmeeting ground. There
to reach because any
Hurley is raising somewhat of a is
decision must be in labor's favor,
smell In Washington with his accuWhy can't capital organize?
sations about the. Chinese.
Letter Received On Zionist Issue
Wants Congressional Hearings
In writing on ths question of the
The General wants three Con
a few
"
gressional hearings, all of them to
be made pubUc, in which he will
th entire
interrogate all the members of the a"empt t0
Diplomatic Staff and "utioii. but did point out backgund and a few of the main points
prove that they are guilty of various
and sundry things. So Congress of r?ument- - Since then a letter
contemplates
holding
the three has been received from Miss Betty
shman. not one of disagreement.
hearings and risking a great deal
but rather a larger view of the
by even considering it.
is needed Problem that is now uppermost in so
PerhaDs a shake-u- p
among the career diplomats and the many minds.
T1"3 column attempts to offer no
people should know, but the time
is not ripe for it yet. Congress solution to the problem and could
hasn't time to waste on Hurley's hardly hope to solve in three
accusations with an entire world columns of type what the British
waiting for other more Important Empire hasn't solved in 23 years.
decisions.
Miss Fleishman's letter follows:

By Scotty McCulloch

rumasta
An tinned articles and eolnmiit art to be eonMered ths
opinion! o the writert themielvet. and do not necestarUs
regret the opinion o The Kernel.

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MlLDRBD

December 7, 1943

"

awn

j.J"

You Are A Member' Of SGA

Miss McCulloch reported
that
every investigating committee
eluded that the only logical way to
settle the dispute Is by partition of
the land, half to Jew and half to
Arab. But 4alestine as we know
it today is already but a partition
which was created in 1922. Pales-mig- ht
tine at the time of the mandate in-eluded Transjordania which is a
larger territory than remaining Pal-ti- n
es;ine. The Jews were to be given
Palestine; the Arabs. Trans jordania.
Tnrinv nn .lew is Allowed to even
enter Transjordania without Brit- .
.
..
isn permission. But Palestine. . . .
was pointed out In The Free
.it tv.a m Boifon. ifdoiatifui
was adhered to since the number of
be

slowly crawling back to normal, we are faced
basis
with problems of returning to a pre-wa- r
or keeping the status quo.
One suih question is, should we go back to
&m&&kiaim m l m
I'
the semester system in academic life? The quar"
ter system provided many advantages for those
the
"thin fifteen
even
increased
Arab population
in wartime who wished to speed up their edumore an increase of nearly 504 in
pro-idocation, but now that active fighting in World
25 years. Before 1918 the Arabs were
War II has ceased, is it necessary to still keep
emigrating frm Palestine; today
they are immigrating
Palestine.
rushing students through college as if they were
What happened in the interim to
machines?
cause this complete reversal? The
answer is the Jews the Jews with a
lilldcL
The quarter system crams a student full of
consequent lifting of standards of
knowledge for a short time, but at the end of
Yet how many students ltnow about the orliving resulting from the Inflow of
ganization of this association to which they the twelve weeks he empties all that knowledge
Jewish capital, enterprise and skills.
Yes. the British adhered to the
Taking their student governing body out on an examination paper, and a short time
promise of the Balfour declaration
for granted is an erro