xt7dfn10q05p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dfn10q05p/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19350118  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 18, 1935 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 18, 1935 1935 2013 true xt7dfn10q05p section xt7dfn10q05p L Best Copy Available
FRIDAY EDITION
SEMI-WEEKL-

KERNEL

Y

JCEf

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
UNIVERSITY

VOL. XXV.

OP

KENTUCKY

"Little" Monk Simons To
Lead Greenies Against
'Cats Friday, Saturday

Riding on
wave of
one
the most promising
Medical Examiner Who Con new hopes, the crest of a regulars, nized asin theofcountry.
with three
players
ducted Autopsy Testifies
"Little Monk" Simons, Carre re and
Coach Adolph Rupp nas been
Schneldau, back on the team, the having his worries with the injurat Lindbergh Trial

Annual Farm and Home Convention Will Hold Three-Da- y
Meeting

NEW SERIES NO. 30

MID-YEA- R

FIRSTSESSION

MITCHELL

SAYS

FRACTURE CAUSE
OF BABY'S DEATH

arTulane University basketeers
rived in town this morning for a
DISCOVERER OF BODY
e
engagement with Coach
IS CALLED TO STAND "Herr Adolph" Rupp's Wildcats.
Tonight at the Alumni gymnaRelates Finding of Rody in sium, at 8:30 o'clock, the Wave
"Bushy" Part of Woods quintet will attempt to avenge the
two defeats they received at the
Near Lonely Road
hands of Kentucky earlier in the
season at New Orleans. With SimBy JAMES I KILG ALLEN
ons and company returned to the
International New Service
squad after the Sugar Bowl footCorrespondent
Staff
ball tilt New Year's Day, the green- i-- ,
Flemlngtoo,
Courtroom,
N.
clad boys are ready to give the Ken
Jan. 17 (INS) Med leal Examiner tucky lads a real battle.
Charlea IL Mitchell testified today
"Little Monk" Simons, who will
a the norder trial of Bruno Rich- be remembered by Kentucky foot
ard Haoptmann that the Lindbergh ball fans as one of the best back- baby waa killed by a "fractured field men ever seen on Stoll field,
will see action against the 'Cats
along with Kendall Cram, one of
Be had conducted the autopsy.
the top ranking intercollegiate
tennis performers who is recog
WANTED. SPEAKERS!
two-gam-

Flemlngton, N. J., Jan. 17
(INS)
Newspapermen covering
the Lindbergh trial are in demand ai public speakers.
James L. Kilgallen, International News Service staff writer,
delivered an address last night
before the civic club of Clinton,
the home town of Prosecutor
Anthony M. Hauck and Sheriff
John H. Curtis.
A capacity audience heard the

that he

was riding on a truck with Orville Wilson.
The witness told how he left a truck
load of wood and went Into the
bushes along the road at about 3
p. m. that day.
Allen described the woods as
bushy.
I ducked my head," he said. "I
went under a bush. I seen a
on Page Four)
ed

News Flashes
SENATE MUNITIONS INQUIRY
(INS) A
fund of (60,000 was voted by the
17

Senate this afternoon to continue
1U sensational munitions inquiry.
The resolution originally called for
a $100,000 appropriation but this
was cut in half by the Senate's
committee on contingent expenses.
NBA

TalentedPianist, Reports on the campaign to era
dicate Bang's
To Play Sunday and talks on disease in Kentucky
the production and
sale of breeding stock will be high
25.

lights of the meetnig of dairy farm

FORD DECREE

Washington, Jan. 17 (INS) The
NRA today "gave another inch" to
Henry Ford in their "compliance"
battle of the past 18 months. Although the NRA Insists the Ford
Motor company sign a certificate of
compliance in submitting bids for
government Fords, the Recovery
administration has decreed that
such a certificate shall not be required for Ford auto parts, "so
Fords now in service may be used

without interruption."

MEDAL SAVES MAN'S LIFE

Petaluma, Cal.. Jan. 17 (INS)
piece and a St. Anthony
A ten-cemedal, which he carried In his hip
twvkt. nmhahlv saved tha Ufa Of
Frank Sykes, chairman of the state
nt

prison board, who was kidnaped
with five other prison officials and
terrorlaed during a wild ride from
San Quentln prison by four escaping convicts. Physicians at Petalu-

ma hospital reported that the tennleoo and medal deflected the
course of a bullet, which struck
Sykes in the fleshy part of the hip
from the spinal column ana viuu

ant

organs.

SAAB RETURNED TO REICH
(INS)
The
Geneva. Jan. 17
Saar Basin, rich mining region be
tween Germany and France, bitter
ly contested since the World War,
went back to the Reich today by order of the League of Nations council. Acting on a resolution by Baron
Pompeo Aloud, the council decided
to award the entire territory to
Germany with the stipulation it be
regarded as part of the "Left Bank"
of the Rhine under the demilitarisation clauses of the Versailles
Treaty. After solution of a number of minor issues at stake, the
Saar will be restored to Germany
on March 1.

ers.

Musicale

Rural pastors and laymen will
discuss the rebuilding of the country church, and will hear addresses
by Dr. Allen Wilson, of Lexington,
John Shelby Richardson, talented general secretary of the Kentucky
young Lexington pianist, will be the Christian Missionary Society; Dr.
the Southern
featured artist at the Sunday after O. 8. Dobbins, of Seminary, Lounoon musicale at 4 p. m., January Baptist Theological
isville; Dr. J. R. Cunningham, pres20, In Memorial hall at the Uni
ident of the Presbyterian Theologiversity.
cal Seminary, Louisville; Dr. Carl
Mr. Richardson studied for five C. Taylor, North Carolina minister
years at the New England Conserv- and rural sociologist, and Dr. U. V.
atory of Music in Boston where he W. Darlington, bishop of the Meth
was a pianoforte student of F. odist Episcopal church, South Hunt
and Richard Stevens. ington, W. Va.
He holds the degree of Bachelor of
Dr. Ward Kiltner, dean of the
Music with concentration in piano, veterinary division of Michigan
He is a State college, will be the principal
awarded with distinction.
member of Phi Mu Alpha and PI speaker at the meetings of veteriKappa Lambda, national musical narians.
fraternities. During the past sumDiscussions of the agricultural
mer Mr. Richardson was a scholar- adjustment program will feature
ship pupil of Henlot Levy at the the meeting for persons Interested
American Conservatory of Music in chiefly in problems of marketing
Chicago. He is well known to Lex- and finance. Speakers include O.
ington audiences having presented M. Farrington, state compliance ofsolo recitals as well as having serv- ficer; William Collins, of the toed as accompanist for a number of bacco section of the AAA; M. D.
Royse, Winchester, farmer member
visiting artists.
corn-ho- g
board of
Mr. Richardson is a member of of the KentuckyPhillips,
administrathe piano faculty of the University review; C. D.in charge of the corn-ho- g
tive assistant
of Kentucky where a number of the
program,
Patterson,
advanced piano students are study Mt. Sterling, and Ford
and J. F. Crldler,
ing with him.
on Page Four)
His program for Sunday is as
follows:
I. Fantasia In C minor. Bach;
Chorale Prelude "Ich ru'zu der,
Herr,"
Sonata in D
major, Haydn; Allegro con brio-La- rgo
e sostenuto Presto, ma non
troppa.
II. Chatterbox, Richard Stevens;
"Peace Poll" Is Conducted
A Hill Tune, Arnold Bax; Feux
On Nation Wide Scale by
Debussy.
Literary Digest Magazine
III. Intermezzo, op. 117, No. 2,
Brahms; Fantalsie, op. 49, Chopin.
Among Collegians
Will

Instructors Granted Youngest Graduate of Harvard Law School to Be
Sabbatical Leaves; Two
County Agents TenHeard at 3:30 Monday
at Memorial Hall
der Resignations
IS PROMINENT LAWYER

Six staff appointments were approved, three resignations accepted,
and four leaves of absences were
granted at an executive meeting of
the Board of Trustees held in the
offices of President McVey, Wednesday.
The appointments Included those
of Mrs. Elizabeth Hatcher, assistant
in the University commons; Miss
Lillian Brinkman, field agent in
home economics; Lysle W. Croft and
John V. McQuitty, graduate assistants in psychology to divide oie
duties of Prof. Edward Newberry,
who is on leave; Mrs. E. G. Trimble, Y.W.C.A. secretary in the absence of Miss Augusta Roberts, on
leave, and Miss Lucille Meyers, as
sistant in the girls' residence halls.
The resignations Included those
of Robert T. Harrison, county agent
in Pulaski, and Mrs. Zlltah H. Bruce,
home demonstration agent in Warren county. Sabbatical leaves tor
1935-3- 6
were granted Miss Ethel
Parker, of the College of Education,
who will work toward her doctor's
degree. Prof. E. J. Asher, of the
department of psychology, who also
will complete work on his doctorate,
and Prof. A. E. Blgge. head of the
German department, who will accept a scholarship at the University
Extension of the
of Heidelberg.
leave of Prof. James Wilklns, of the
Engineering college, was also approved. Professor Wilklns is com
mander of a CCO camp at Noble,
Kv.
The committee acknowledged the
gift by Senator C. O. Graves, of a
Hereford bull to the Experiment
station farm, approved a University

Seven separate meetings, repre
senting dairy farmers, rural church
workers, veterinarians, bee keepers,
homemakers,
rural pastors, livestock farmers, housemakers,
and
markets and finance, will mark the
opening day of the annual Farm
and Home convention which will
open at the University Experiment
Station, January 22. The conven
tion will extend through January

J. 5. Richardson

Afternoon

A. A. Berle Jr., of New York and
Washington, D. C, who will give
the convocation address at 3:30 p.m.
Monday afternoon in Memorial hall,
Is the youngest man ever to graduate from the Harvard Law school.
Mr. Berle entered Harvard at the
age of 13, with high examination
marks which he continued to hold.
He graduated when he was 17 and
one year later had his master's degree. At the age of 21 he received
his LL3., also from Harvard.
Mr. Berle started the practice of
law in the offices of Louis N. Bran-del- s,
now United States supreme
court Justice. During the war he
was a lieutenant in-- the infantry and
afterwards was a member of the
American Peace delegation.
Columbia University recognized
him as one of the best corporation
lawyers in the U. S. and offered him
the chair of Corporation Law at
that school, which he accepted.
Mr. Berle is now a city chamberlain of New York city, and has been
called many times to Washington,
D. C. to confer with the adminis-

Motte-Lacro-

Feature Lexington Artist

ix

STUDENTS VOTE

Bach-Buso-

ON WORLDPEACE

trators there.

Doctor McVey urges all students
to be present at the convocation, as
Mr. Berle is a young man who will
have a message that will appeal
to students.
speak at a dinner given by the
JOSEPH BARRON SPEAKS
Monday evening, Mr. Berle will
International relations club. All
Joseph Barron, a lecturer in the
persons wishing to attend may make
reservations by seeing Dean Sarah Art department, spoke to the Brush
and Pencil club Monday night at
Blandlng.
the home of Mr. Harry Lindberg on
the Versailles road. Mr. Barron
gave a very Interesting discussion
exhibit at the Kentucky state fair
of the works of Frank Lloyd Wright,
next September, and authorized the
a genius In the field of architecture,
holding of the fireman's training
especially of small houses. He has
school at the University. February
profound influence on European
13 to 14.
architecture and has published
Mr.
many books on the subject.
"Employment Assurance" Is Barron used about 60 slides from
Report
Pres- his own collection In illustration.

SECURITY BRIEF
GOES TO SENATE

SuKy Circle Elects

Officers for

1935

Plans for Dinner Dance Are
Made to Honor Basketball,

of
Feature of
ident's Economic Security

Over 300,000 ballots have been
mailed to students in more than a
hundred leading colleges In America
college Peace
as the nation-wid- e
Poll was launched by The Literary
Digest and the Association of Col
lege Editors. One Canadian college,
Queen's In Ontario, was Included as
a test case in the poll of American
colleges.
The Literary Digest comments on
the poll as follows:
"College newspapers have launch
ed an editorial drive to Insure large
and representative returns. College
(Continued on Page Four)

EXTRA GUARDS POSTED AT

Committee

Rev. Wallace McPherson Alston, pastor of the Maxwell
Street Presbyterian Church, will deliver the Baccalaureate
sermon to approximately 75 members of the mid-yegraduating class, Sunday, January 27, at 3 p. m. in Memorial
ar

Schedule Given
For Last Tests

JOHN 8. RICHARDSON

Sunday

Open Graduation Exercises

hall. The complete commencement calendar h;is been released.
RURAL PASTORS TO
On Friday, January 25, at 4:30
DISCUSS CHURCHES
p. m., a reception will be given by
President and Mrs. McVey at MaxDr. H. Y. McCIusky, Univerwell Place for members of the gradsity of Michigan, Will Aduating class and their parents and
friends.
At 6:30 p. m. the same
dress Homemakcrs

w

Several

at the Bruno Richard Hauptmann
murder trial, told the Jury how he
found the body of little Charles A.
Lindbergh, Jr., near a lonely New
Jersey roadway on May 12, 1932
73 days after the Infant was kidnaped from his pursery.
He was questioned by Assistant
Attorney General Robert S. Pea-

Jan.

ies received by members of his regular starting lineup. Jack Tucker,
who has been on the sidelines for
a week with an injured foot, may
not be able to play against the
Wave. "Big Ed" Edwards is nursing an injured thumb and a bruised heel which have been slow In
responding
to treatment. Coach
Rupp, however, plans to use both
Tucker and Edwards as much as
possible in the two games. The remainder of the Kentucky lineup is
in good shape and ready to start
against the Greenies.
In a preliminary game Saturday
night, the Kentucky frosh will meet
the Georgetown college freshmen,
a quintet made up entirely of mem
bers of the 1934 Georgetown High
scholo team which won the Central Kentucky Conference championship.

BIGGE TO GO ABROAD

Baccalaureate Sermon Will

WILL FEATURE

GRANTED LEAVES AT CONVOCATION

William Allen, negro laborer, first
witness called to the stand today

Washington.

SEVEN MEETINGS

STAFF MEMBERS BERLE TO SPEAK

talk.

cock.
Allen explained

.2

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1935

75 WILL GRADUATE AT
'

KASKETKALL
TONIGHT, TOMORROW
WITH TULANE

Washington. Jan. 17 (INS) Ex
SAN QUENTIN
cerpts from a summary of the report of the President's committee
Officers of SuKy circle for the on economic security sent to con'
second semester were elected at a gress today follows:
San Quentln Prison, Calif., Jan, fciso's Public Enemy No. 1, had en
meeting of the organisation held
(INS)
17
"Employment Assurance"
Extra guards today glneered the break and furnished
Tuesday In the basement of the
"Since most people live by work, were rushed to Ban Quentln, the guns.
Alumni gymnasium.
guard against the possibility
prison. In
The officers are: president, Wll the first objective in a program of world's most popular may follow the of To
further disorder, extra guards, all
the
Vlr economic security must be maxi fear another break
Ham Eversole;
As the major sensational delivery that cost the well armed, were enlisted to aug
glnla Robinson, and secretary, Mar- mum employment.
garet McGinn. A new treasurer contribution of the federal govern- life of one convict, led to the seri- ment the regular prison force. was
Stevens, a few hours later,
was not chosen as he remains In ment In providing a safeguard ous wounding of Warden James B.
we suggest Holohan and the kidnaping of six captured in Antioch, Cal, 30 miles
office for the entire year. Ever-so- le against unemployment
succeeds J. B. Croft. He is a employment assurance the stimu- officials and the shooting of two. east of San Quentln, In a gun bat'
Holohan, former United States tie. At the same time three of bis
senior in the College of Engineer' lation of private employment and
were taken, one of
lng, a member of Triangle frater- the provision of public employment marshal in San Francisco and war companions
workers whom den here since 1927, was in the them, Albert Kessel, alleged bank
nity, and president of Scabbard for those
and Blade military fraternity, and Industry cannot employ at a given 'prison hospital, his skull fractured, robbing partner of Stevens, falling
tirf). Public work programs are his head cut and battered by con-'vi- seriously wounded.
a member of O. D. K.
Kidnaped by the convicts were:
guns, and his chances for re
Plans for a dinner dance at the most necessary In periods of severe
Frank C. Sykes, San Francisco,
conclusion of the basketball season depression, but may be needed in covery "very slim.
He was beaten to the floor of his President of the State Board of
In honor of both basketball
and normal times as well to help meet
football squads were also discussed the problems of stranded communi- home in the prison reservation by Prison Terms and Paroles; Board
or declining four desperate felons who then kid- members, Joseph H. Stephens, Sacat the meeting, and a dance com- ties and
naped all three members of the ramento banker, and Warren H.
mittee appointed. A committee was Industries.
"We regard work as preferable to California State Board of Prison Atherton, Stockton, former state
also appointed to draw up plans for
the annual May Day exercises, other forms of relief where possible. Terms and Paroles, added the sec- commander of the American Lesponsored by the organization each While we favor unemployment com- retary of the board and two guards gion; Mark Noon, secretary of the
year.
pensation in cash, we believe that to their cargo, and sped out of one board; Harry Jones, lieutenant of
It should be provided for limited of the prison gates to a little ham- the San Quentln guard, and C. L.
TO ATTEND MEETING
periods on a contractual basis and let about fifty miles away where Doose, a guard.
The slain convict was Rudolph
without government subsidies. Pub- they were captured In a blase of
Streight. 35, Alameda county. His
Dr. W. S. Taylor, dean of the lic funds should be devoted to pro- gunfire.
College of Education, will attend viding work, rather than to IntroThe three living desperadoes were confederates in the escape were
a committee meeting on teacher duce a relief element Into what brought back to the prison and Alex McKay, 28, Los Angeles; Joshould be strictly an Insurance
training, headed by Dr. R. K.
confessed that Clyde Stevens, elu-ii- seph Krlsty, 26, Los Angeles, and
bank robber and San Fran- - Fred Landers, 37, Ban Francisco.

AFTER BREAK

Football Squads

I

able-bodi- ed

ct

Schedule for all examinations
University of Kentucky,
with the exception of the College
of Law, follows:
Saturday, all regular first hour
classes will meet for examinations; Monday, all second hour
classes; Tuesday the third hour
classes will meet; Wednesday, all
fourth hour classes; Thursday
all fifth hour classes; Friday,
sixth hour classes and Saturday,
January 8, seventh and eighth
hour classes will meet for examinations. According to the Registrar, in case of conflicts, the examination coming at the regular
time should have precedence ovei
others. Instructors making the
change should take care of the
conflict.
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday classes will be examined on
the mornings indicated, and
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
classes will be examined In the
afternoons. Classes meeting four
times a week will be examined in
the morning, and forenoon examinations will begin at 8:30 o'clock and afternoon examinations at 2 o'clock.

at the

NEWSPAPERMEN

PROTESTWAGES
Sigma Delta
Journalism
Sponsor of
Washington

ve

hall, where Dr. McPherson Alston
will be heard. The topic of Rev.
Alston's sermon will be "Keeping
tn TiV0 vrlth T.lfp " Pnllnwlnff the
sermon, the faculty will entertain
with a tea In the Faculty club rooms
In McVey hall. The graduating class
and their friends are invited.
Monday, January 28, the Commencement procession will form at
10 a.m. in room 111, McVey hall,
and will terminate its march at
Memorial hall at 10:30 p. m. The
Commencement address, "Facing
the New Frontier," will be given by
Dr. William Septimus Taylor, dean
of the College of Education of the
University of Kentucky.
The Instructions covering the exercises are in the hands of the various deans, and information as to
assembly points may be obtained
from them. The assembly time for
Sunday is 2:30 p. m. and for Monday, 10 a. m.
The deans of the several colleges
are requested to see that the members of their faculties are arranged
in order of academic rank in columns of two's for the procession,
and that the candidates for degrees
report at the assembly points
promptly on the date and hour des
ignated.

Scientific Group

Chi, National
Procures Speaker
Fraternity, Is
Brief Filed at Dr. Glen BLock of Indianapolis,
Code Meeting Indiana, will address a meeting of

Sigma Delta Chi, professional
Journalistic fraternity, with a membership of 8,000 men, presented a
brief at the recent public hearing
on editorial hours and wages at
Washington, D. C, protesting the
minimum wages set up under the
dally newspaper code. The brief
was filed with NRA by Walter R.
Humphrey, Temple (Texas) Telegram, chairman of the fraternity's
executive council.
"We believe that the proposed
wages are contrary to the best interests of newspapers and of the
public because should they be acby newspapers,
cepted generally
they would fail to attract to Journalism the type of men and women
needed to maintain a free press
serving the best Interests of the
public," stated Mr. Humphrey In his
brief.
"It is our belief that the best Interests of Journalism and of the
public are served by the employment of men of integrity, adequately prepared by education
and
training to gather and disseminate
news and by renumeratlng them
adequately for the important services they perform.
"Publishers
of the better and
more successful newspapers generally have accepted
the principles
above expressed,"
he continued.
own actions, and in some
"By their
cases by their public expressions,
they have indicated that they con
sider it 'good business to employ
men and women, to
pay them well, and to assure them
of reasonable security. That some
publishers have not, we feel, makes
necessary this protest.
"That the college graduate is
adequately educated to meet modern
newspaper needs and that he lends
himself to the training for the important service of newspapers to the
public are attested by the individual
records of the great majority of
members of present staffs of newspapers. But the college graduate
will not be attracted to this import
ant field of endeavor by beginning
salaries too low to provide him with
an adequate living and by oppor
tunlty of advance to the proposed

the Kentucky Archaelogical Society
on January 2!i.
Dr. Black if the state archaelogist
of Indiana and has made recent ex
tensive excavations in some mounds
in southern Indiana, near Cincinnati.
The add' ess will be open to the
public and will be illustrated with
photograph is and slides. Dr. and
Mrs. Blark will be the guests of
Dr. Wlllifin Webb during their stay
In Lexington.
The January meeting of the so
ciety is the time set for the annual
election of officers, and this pro
cedure will follow the address.

Kampus
Kernels
8tudenta are requested to obreadings at the
tain thendispensary between 3 and 4 p. m.
They will not be available at other
-

X-r-

hours.
All persons that have not taken
a physical examination since entering the University, are expected to
do so January 29, when the second
semester freshmen are given examinations.

hlgh-calihr-

minima.'

ELLIOT WILL SPEAK

over-mann-

I

day, the Alumni dinner for the
graduating class will be in the University Commons in McVey halt
The program for Sunday will
start at 2:30 p. m., at which tune
the Baccalaureate procession will
form in room 111, McVey hall. The
procession will march to Memorial

Prof. N. R. Elliot, of the department of Horticulture In the College
of Agriculture, will speak to the
Warren county garden club in
Bowling Green Saturday. "Planning
a Garden" will be his topic. The
club has eighty-fiv- e
members, including the persons having the
best gardens In Bowling Green and
Warren county. This year the club
has organized a regular program
of meetings to be held once a

month.

There will be a meeting of the
Junior League Child Guidance
Service Friday afternoon in Neville

halt

The snapshot section of the 193S
Kentuckian is now being prepared.
All snapshots of campus life, students, faculty members, etc.. are
much in demand. Anyone having
similar pictures that they would
like to get in the yearbook are requested to give them to Cameron
Coffman, Bazil Baker, or Elizabeth
Ann Millard, or bring them to the
Kentuckian office, room 54, basement McVey

halt

Those planning to take the Bar
examination are requested to meet
In the Law building on January 29.

at

8

am.

The student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers
will meet at 11 a. m., today, in Mechanical hall. Roy Owsley, field
secretary of the Municipal league
will spettk on, "The Municipal
League."

There will be a meeting of the
faculty of the Arts and Science
college at 4 p. m. in McVey haB,
room 111, Tuesday, January 23.

* Best Copy
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Tage Two
flclent evidence to show that under
the guise of this "100 per cent
Americanism" he Is waging a battle
TUESDAYS Wp FRIDAY
PUBLISHED ON
ag ainst all dissenting opinion. That
Mrmtwr
the methods whereby he attempted
Lrilnctnn Board of Oommrro
to Justify Ms personal ends at Syra
cu.se and Columbia were prompt y
pr
K.ntu.i.,
Ao.f.k.n
exposrd and condemned does little
International News fcrnci
credit to Mr. Hearst. It does, howMajor Collet PublicaA member ol th
ever, honor a group of prominent
tion!, reprenented be A. 1. Worm Hill Co..
n St., Hew York City: HI W. educators who were determined to
15a B.
M(1lon St., Chlcato: 1004 nd Ara., Sett-ti- see no intrusion of frasclstlc doc1031 S. Broadway, Lot Anfelet: Call
trine on the American campus, and
Bldf ., San Pranclico.
Justly protested against this effort
to stamp out freedom of thought
OmCIAL NIWSPAhtR OP THS
OP IHt UNIVERSITY OP
and expression. Mr. Hearst, apparKENTUCKY, LEXINOTON
ently, Is going to encounter more
opposition than he has anticipated.
BnUrrd
Year.
Pubscrlption $100
Another professedly "clever move"
Ueilnaton. Kj., Poatofflea Aa Second
Cilia Mall Matter
was to sponsor a Washington meetcollege
HEUE 6HALL THE KERNEL ALL ing of the editors of all
S "UDENT3 RIGHTS MAINTAIN dailies. There they were feted and
dined, and then removed to New
1. "StJlfNY" DAT.
subjected to the wisM imagine tmtnr York to be
BO SHANNON
An't. Mgr. KMor dom of some of Mr. Hearst's fore-rql- it
FRITZ BORRIES

!,.,,,,..

JEST AMONG US
When you define liberty you limit
it, and when you limit It you destroy It Brand Whltlock.
a

The varied theories of the po
litical science professors on values
in politics do not seem to apply to
student politics. At the University
of Missouri student election 200
more votes were cast than there are

fdltor-ln-CR-

students.

.

T'o

satellites.

LEASHING HUEY
Conscientious discussion,, and posones, are being
sibly
written by prominent authors ev
ery day regarding the Louisiana

senator's threats to form another
party and also the alarming large
number of persons advocating his
plans for the maintenance of the
country as a whole and the treatment of Individual citizens with
reference to their financial status.
To all those fearing Huey's possible control of the nation encouraged by the 50,000 letters he asserts
he receives every week, there is a
vey strong leash close at hand
which should serve on Intelligent
people to keep this blustering,
"what-a-mawould be dictator In
check.
It is his own "Louisiana Plan"
which he declares he will adopt in
his platform for the third party.
Let us take a look at a few of
the characteristics of this plan as
practiced by the "Kingflsh" in Louisiana today. AH school boards are
under the political thumb a practice which has unquestionably resulted, in every instance, to be the
worse possible method of conducting public educational Institutions.
Then we have the forfeit of the
right of free speech and freedom
of the press. Mr. Long is so set on
ridding his state of this "evil" that
he went so far as to suppress the
college press because the editor
dared to criticize him. And incidentally, we might mention the illuminating character of Mr. Long
advohimself which the would-b- e
cates of the "Louisiana
Plan"
would have to tolerate. The leader
of this retrogressive political hodgepodge would be the typical small
town politician devoting about
of the taxes to the establishment of gaudy uniforms for huge
brass bands at the head of which
he would
in marching
Pennsylvania avenue would be the
scene of a parade possibly once every week so that Huey could shout
to the house tops what a great man
he is and let off the steam of a
colossal small town punk possessing
an equally small mind and gray
one-thi-

delight

rd

Washington

I

After the movies have been re
newspaper men of recognized enterprise asserted this was just his formed and the literature of the
way of pouring syrup after a chal- country made clean, we suggest that
lenge letter sent him by the Asso- somebody begin work on the people
ciation of College Editors. Mr. I of the nation. Bourbon News.
Hearst imagined, they declared, that
Well, one satisfactory thing about
such generosity would make imK. basketball game
measurably easier the progress of the N. Y. N.-the "red scare" among the separate I'was that miracle of all miracles
all press reports tallied on the num
colleges.
persons who saw the game.
Following the conference,
k ber of
Georgetown News.
claimed the "Hearst-Yout- h
!

,

News-Wee-

hatchet buried" as farcical a misstatement as ever in print. It cannot be denied that a few of those
present had slightly too much regard for Mr. Hearst's altruism, and
were rudely shocked when he was
accused of ulterior motives. But the
overwhelming majority came and
went in firm opposition to his principles and methods'.
Talks by
Hearst writers; Richard Washburn
child and Bainbrldge Colby and
indirect offers to become wavers
of the Hearst banner did surprisingly little to alter their opinion.
Drop in the bucket though It may
have been, the money which rolled
to
from the Hearstian coffers
smoothe the surface can be written
in the ledger with red Ink. Mr.
Hearst, it would seem, is pinning too
much faith in human stupidity.

ItMctnait thQtst

With this Issue of The Kernel
are inaugurating this new feature Cryptograms.
This popular
form of puzzle has existed for centuries. If you are at all literary-mindewe

d,

remember
that
there is a "crypt" in Poe's "The
Bug," which Incidentally,
Gold
cryptogram fans claim is absurdly
simple. We can't give you any
really hot clues for our first puzzle
in this series but It is about a
crossword puzzle fan.
Here's the first puzzle, the answer to which will be given next is
sue: ABCDDECBP ACGHIJGJGK
"LMLKLDLD" DNKKLDHD ECBP
you will

JD JGHBJGDJAIOOP

Patronise Kernel Advertisers.

MANNERS
college

education

ABPQHCK-BIRRIHJ-

CB FC EL LBB?

Daily Princetonlan.

If a

accom-

plishes nothing else it should, at
least, serve to polish the rough social edge of the young knowledge
seekers.
Much attention is paid by the
students to their correct attire for
social events, it is carefully seen to
that they are well supplied with polite, harmless conversation, and that
they are discreet where their associates are concerned. The advice
given to new pledges by their sorority and fraternity brothers and sisters show the truth of this state-

wrong Stylus, but we Just don't play
that way.

In his ways, and It Is hard to change
them after he is out on his own.
A university or college Is said to be
the place to gain knowledge, and so
why not acquire a little social
knowledge as well as that taken
from books.

The Kentucky Kernel

Friday, January 18, 1935.

Hoi Polloi
By CAMERON COFFMAN

think not... He broke down yester-da- y
and confessed that "there was
aaa
a point in military that he couldDelt Crporge Nagel is on the look.
out for prowling patrol cars... one n't explain". . . .That's Okay Oscar.
A young lieutenant by the name of
grind friends recently threatof his
ened to have him run in for park- Teddy Roosevelt once said the same
ing his car on forbidden grounds.
a

Once again we take our little
Remington in hand to dash off a
few random shots at you college
boys and gals. ..Yea, orders are still
that we say things in a nice way or
out we go... so we can exprct to
write nothing very spicy. . .nothing
Just plain
mal'Clous. .. .nothing
nothings. . .our good frie