xt7djh3d0659 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7djh3d0659/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19400129  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 29, 1940 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 29, 1940 1940 2013 true xt7djh3d0659 section xt7djh3d0659 best uopy Available
The World

11

Whirls On
Br JIM WOOLDBIDGE
Within three days after the king s
declaration of war on that dark
morning in September, practically
very member of the British Commonwealth of Nations had ralliefl
to the side of their mother country
with declarations of their own.
Canada joined the cause immediately, Australia followed, India was
dose behind. Even New Zealand and
Egypt acquiesced. There was a little
delay on the part of South Africa,
but a new election ousted the pacifist element and brought about
declaration of war and a denouncement of the totalitarian policies of Hitler. All the British empire
came to the aid of the king except
Eirle, formerly known as the Irish
Free 6tate.
It was the same old Ireland,
looking for a chance to fight
the English government. How oft-- n
we hear of Irish uprisings, Irish
foomb-thr- o
wings, Irish riots, Irish
plots, and Irish street fighting. In
World War I. it was said that the
'people of the shamrock isle openly
aided the Central Powers in thence th struggle against the Allies.
German submarines would come
tip along the west coast of the island and obtain diesel fuel and
other supplies from the disgruntled
natives. The Irish didnt hide their
feelings toward England at all, and
at the end of the war they attempted to throw off the British yoke while
the king's army was busy fighting
the Germans. Their famous "Easter week rebellion" failed, but it
showed the English that the Irish
were growing in power and would
have to be dealt with in some different sort of manner.
Irish Free State
Accordingly, King George V, in
1S22 proclaimed the formation of
an Irish Free State which was to
receive full dominion status just
like Canada and Australia. This
little Catholic state was to be separate from the northern part of
Ireland, known as Ulster, because
Ulster had a population of Protestant people. The Free State's government survived a stormy birth
and an ensuing civil war before the
present regime took over the reins.
The new party, headed by President de Valera, immediately pushed
through some reform measures and
Industrialized
the little potato-trowin- g

T

dominion.

Conserving

3,321

UNIVERSITY

DAYS

OF SIGNING

END Guignol To Offer Play
Involving Problems
Enrollment To ,Close
Of Today
For Regular Classes "RUR" (Rossum's Universal Ro-

February

19

After three days of registration,
3,321 students have enroled for the
second semester, it was learned
from the registrar s office last night.
This is an increase of 103 students
ever the number who had sighed
up at this time last year.
Although the present figure is
467 short of the 3,788 who enrolled
last semester, registration officials
believe that late errolleees will
push the figure above that of previous second semesters. Now the
number is only 163 less than the
total enrollment for the final period
last year.
The last day on which a student
may enter an organized class has
been set as Monday, February 19,
by the registrar's office.
During the first semester
enrollment was led by New
York with 109 students. West Vir
ginia was next with 53 and Indiana
and Illinois followed with 46 and 42
respectively. Outside of Fayette,
Jefferson county led with 198 students and Bourbon had 86. The foreign representation showed two en
rolled from Panama and one each
from Brazil. Canada, China, Egypt.
Iraq, and Porto Rico.

PIANIST, AGE

12,

TO GIVECONCERT

all

Its income, the legislature refused
to continue paying the English the
sum agreed upon in the treaty establishing the dominion form of
government. Immediately, the British parliament retaliated by taxing
Irish imports which, up to tliat
An eeo- time, had been duty-frenomic war followed, lasting "until
the recent reconciliation meeting
between de Valera and Chamber
lain.
The hostile feeling of the Irish
government remained, however, and
when the present war DroKe out,
the followers of St. Patrick declined
to aid the British government In
what is growing into a very long,
exhausting struggle. The de Valera

Musicale To Feature
Mary Esther Higgs

bots), by Karl Capek, will open
Monday for a week's run at the
Guignol theater. It is a modern
play dealing with problems of economic and social importance.
'
The play concerns a company
which manufactures robots, mechanical men which are almost
human. One chemist developed ir
ritability in the robot, making it
human. After the robots were scattered in all parts of the world, they
revolted
and overpowered man.
Parallelism is shown between the
story of the play and that of the
Czechoslovakia.
writer's country,
The play was written at the close
of World War I and is particularly
timely in view of World War IL
The theater was faced with a
two-hodilemma from both stage
settings and costumes because the
time of the play is the future. The
set, planned by Clay Lancaster, has
no definite period furniture. A
"visiphone," a combination of the
telephone and television, is used.
The costuming of robots, designed
by Gail Kirn, suggests a futuristic
uniform and still makes the robots
acceptable as almost human beings.
The cast Includes the following:
Richard Swope, Dr. Gall, head of
the physiological and experimental
department of RUR; Robert Lund- qulst, Fabry, the engineer general;
Grant Lewis, Alquist, the architect;
Barbara MacVey, Sulla, a robot ess;
Stephanie Sorokolit, Maruis, a ro
bot ess; Jean Cummins, Nana; Louis
Scheinman, Howard Price and Wil
liam B. Martin, robots, Raduis,
Primus, and Trillion; Marcia Wil
ling, Oxia, a robotess; Mary .Clare
Howard, Comus, another robotess.
Admission to the play will be 50
cents plus the student theater
ticket.

.

Commerce Meeting
To Be Held Today

What They Think

Bootcn, Ag senior
"I
don't think it should be unless they
let students sell their ticket books
to others when they can't use them.
Arthur Sanders, A & S sophomore
"Certainly. That is the only way
to assure the athletic association
support."
Mary La Bach, A & S sophomore
"No. Some people might have to
work when the games are held and
Robert

others just aren't interested in ath

letics."
Bob Welch, Commerce freshman
"No. There is too much of the
communistic side in that."
Russell Wright, A & S senior
"Yes. The teams represent the
whole school and therefore should
have the backing of the whole
school."
Lysbeth Wallace, A & S sophomore "If it wasn't compulsory few
people would buy them."

rn

Mary Esther Higgs, 12 year old
pianist of Cincinnati, will be the Kehoe To Address
featured soloist at the Sunday Af
Group Of Chemists
ternoon Musicale at 4 r va.. Pebru
ary 11, in Memorial hall.
Little Miss Higgs began her mu- Talk On Industrial Toxicology
sical studies with her mother at the
Will Be Given Monday

age of five. When she was seven
years old she was sent to Mrs. Dor
othy Stolzenbach Payne, prominent
Cincinnati teacher. In January of
this year Harold Bauer, eminent
concert pianist, taught a master
class Cincinnati and Mary Esther
was the only child accepted in the
government doesn't allow anyone class. She gave her first solo recital
wearing an English uniform to en- at Baldwin hall in Cincinnati at
ter its borders. If any British war- the age of nine.
Miss Higg's appearance on the
ships or airplanes are forced to
land in Eire, they are to be seized Sunday series is being sponsored by
and interned for the duration of the Phi Beta and Phi Mu Alpha, honor'
war. The "fighting Irish" definitely ary musical fraternities.
The program follows:
arent fighting this time.
i
FLASHES
LAST MINUTE
Invention No. 4
Bach
Invention No. I
Bach
AU Britain is awaiting the results Sonata in C Major
Mozart
Allegro Andante Allegretto grazloso
of the hanging of two Irish nan
tionalists which occurred in Birm March from "The Love of Three
faigham, England, two days ago. The
Oranges"
ProkofieU
two men were members of the Irish Three numbers from "Kaleidoscope,'
Opufc
(iootsent
Republican Army, an organization Golliwogg's is Cake Walk
Debussy
pledged to fight the English gov
III
in A
. Leritskl
ernment until the two divisions of Valsebpritig major, Opus No. 2
io
Grieg
the present territory of Ireland are Valse in O flat Major
.
Chopin
Scharwenka
brought together under one inde- Polish Dance
pendent government. Control would
naturally be held by the people of
Eire because they form the major'
Itj of the island's population.
The hanging Wednesday took
Members of the staff of the Col
place in the gray light of a misty
Irifh morning and was watched by lege of Commerce and representa
a crowd of several thousand tives or Kentucky trade organizagrumbling onlookers, Thousands of tions, including the representatives
police reinforcements were held on from the Lexington Board of Comovertime duty in London and other merce, will meet Dr. Nathanael H.
Urge cities on the possibility that Engle, assistant director of the
the execution might signal a new Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, at a luncheon discus
outburst of terrorism.
The men were convicted of plant- sion at 12:30 today in the Union
ing a bomb which killed five per- building.
The purpose of the meeting is to
sons in a crowded town square.
arrange for voluntary cooperation
between the Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce and the bureau
of business research of the com
merce college.
Individual interviews will be held
By BOB AMMONS
after the luncheon and Saturday.

QIESTION
"Should the purchase of athletic
ticket books be compulsory?"

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY

'RUR' Will Open Monday
As Actors Become Robots

REGISTER

To Alpha Chi Sigma
Dr. Robert A. Kehoe, director of
the Kettering Laboratory of Applied Physiology at the University
of Cincinnati will be guest speaker
at the February meeting of Alpha
Chi Sigma, chemistry fraternity,
at 7:30 p. m., Monday in the lecture
hall of Kastle hall.
Speaking on "Industrial Toxicology and Its Relationship to Modern Industrial Development," Doctor Kehoe's discussion will cover
the injurious effects of poisons
handled and manufactured by industrial plants and the methods,
scope and significance of industrial

toxicology.
A dinner, which will be 65 cents
a plate, will precede the meeting
at 6 p. m. in the Union building.
Reservations should be made with
A. S. Kenyon, chemistry department, by noon Monday.
GRAGIS

IS REPRESENTATIVE

left Wednesday
Peter
night for Washington, D. C. as a
representative of the local chapter
of ASU to the American Youth
A. Gragis

Congress which will convene Febru-

ary

9--

in Washington.

FRIDAY ISSUE
SEMI-WEEKL-

Taken By Death

NEW SERIES NO.

9, 1910

ARE

CONTACTED

BY CHESSBOARD

New York City Judge
To Deliver Opening
Speech At Meet
In Union

Keynoter Kenyon

Charity Drive To Open
Tuesday With $500
Set As Goal

Conference
Will Help Women
Find Careers

More than 100 letters were mailed
Wednesday to all campus organization presidents by Chairman C. P.
Johnson of the Community Chest
local campaign in preparation for
the drive on Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday.
Hoping to exceed last year's donation of $350, members of the
com
combined Mortar Board-ODmittee have set the current goal as
' $500. Leaders of the drive are Mary
Louise McFarland and Barbara
MacVey, representing Mortar Board;
and Chairman Johnson, David
Blythe, Thomson Bryant, and L. T.
Iglehart, representing ODK. Last
Lafayette Studio
year's leaders. Dean Sarah Blanding
and Dr. Henry Beaumont, are act
Mary Ellen DeMaro
lng as advisers.
Leaders will supply other members of the two organizations with
pledge cards for presidents of the
campus groups. In addition to con'
tacting the sororities. Mortar Board
will conduct a feather sale on Wed
nesday and Thursday only.
Chest leaders stressed the fact
that the annual drive has done away
with hundreds of methods of per
sonal solicitations pursued in the
past. Organizations formerly seeking
Chi Omega sorority held a chap- donations all during the year have
ter service at the house at 7:30 Joined the Community Chest in the
last night in tribute to Mary Ellen one annual drive. According to
deMaro, who died at her home in members of the committee, the inRichmond, Va., Monday afternoon dividuals and groups supported by
from a concussion of the brain re- the Chest such as crippled and unceived when she fainted and fell in dernourished
children, old ladies
the bathroom, fracturing her skull. home, family welfare societies, Boy
Funeral services were conducted Scouts, and Salvation Army
are
In Ashland, where Miss deMaro had not supported by state taxation.
spent most of her life. Her family
Also emphasized by leaders was
had moved to Richmond only re- the desirability of student contribU'
cently.
tions in view of most students' four
A senior in the Education college. year residence
in Lexington as
Miss de Maro was an active member "citizens' and with "citizens' re
sorority and was a member sponsibilities and protections."
in her
of the YW and the Union dance
committee.

Two-da- y

Keynote address of the Vocation
al Information conference, which
opens at 2 p. m. Monday, Febru
ary 12 with a compulsory convo
cation for women in the Union

K

Bluegrass room, will be given by
Judge Dorothy Kenyon, judge of
the Municipal court. City of New
York.
The conference, an annual two
day meet sponsored this year by

the Student Government a- socia-tiois planned to aid all Univer
sity women in choosing careers or
learning more about those they

n,

SERVICE IS HELD

to aid all University women in choosing careers

FOR UKSTUDENT

Free Blood Tests For Syphilis
May Be Had At Dispensary

Mary Ellen deMaro
Dies Of Concussion

ROTC Rifle Team

Begins Competition
The University's ROTC rifle team
which has been practising for
some weeks, is now beginning its
schedule of competitive meets with
other ROTC units in this part of
the country. Already begun Is the
first stage of the Fifth Corps Area
intercollegiate rifle match. The en
tire match, however, will not be
completed until February 24.
Other matches to be fired con
currently with the Corps Area
match are those of the University
of Georgia, the University of Idaho,
Kemper Military school, University
of Maine, and Indiana university,
The local team will also compete

for the Hearst trophy, an award
given to the best ROTC rifle team
in the country.
The members of this year's rifle
team are well distributed among the
four undergraduate classes. The
seniors are: J. W. Abbott, T. R.
Bryant, and H. G. Malone; Juniors:

C. C. Brown, R. H. Hays, W. L.
Hislop, and W. P. Reid; sopho
mores:
Billy
Green,
Plummer
Jones, George Land, and George
Perrry, and freshmen, W. L. Blythe,
J. E. Conley, Maurice Mitchell,
John Prewitt, Troy Singleton, Win- field Ward, and W. R. Ware.

McVey

and frankness
Disillusionment
make the younger generation today
seem unique, declared Dr. Alfred H.
Upham, president of Miami university, in an address Monday aftercommencement
noon at mid-yeThree students made all "A' exercises for 86 graduating students
standings in the College of Com in Memorial hall.
Speaking on the subject, "Accent
merce last semester. Dean Edward
Wiest announced yesterday. They on Youth," Doctor Upham said that
are Caroline Newell, sophomore, "youth has discovered so many staMaysville; Richard Young, sopho- tues with feet of clay, so much
more, Winchester;
and Otho R. hypocrisy and so much spiritual
wickedness in high places that it
Shadwkk, freshman, Owensboro.
has become disillusioned." A wider extent of knowledge and education account for the sometimes disturbing candidness of youth, he
pointed out.
President Frank L. McVey introduced the speaker and conferred
the 20 advanced and 66 bachelor
This is the last day on
degrees, assisted by Dr. Leo M.
which students may obtain
Chamberlain, registrar.
automobile parking permits, it
Mrs. Margaret Wickcliffe Preston
has been announced by Dean
Johnston, Lexington, and Mrs.
T.T. Jones.
Kathryn Lay Wiley, Barbourville,
Permits are available at the
were graduated "with distinction,"
office of dean of men. Cost is
having attained a standing of be25 cents.
tween 2.4 and 2.6 during three years

Three Students Make
All As In Commerce

ar

Deadline Today

For Parking
Permits

here.

Dr. Raymond

F. McLain, presi-

dent of Transylvania, delivered the
baccalaureate address Sunday af-

ternoon In Memorial hall. Speaking on "Make Room for Life," he
said that "a university education
should mutiply one's ability to enrich his own life and to extend his
inner resources."
Following
the commencement,
Doctor and Mrs. McVey entertained
with a reception at Maxwell Place
in honor of the graduating class,
their families, and friends, faculty
and students, and the commencement speakers.
Advanced degrees conferred are:
Doctor of philosophy Claude O.
Spillman, Berea, education.
Master of arts William F. Atchison, Smithfleld, mathematics; William J. Boyd, Tullahoma, Tenn.,
psychology; John G. Foster, Central
Point, Ore., bacteriology; Clinton
H. Gardiner, Covington, history;
Charles W. Harbison Jr., Richmond
Hill, N. Y.. history; Laura Lucile
Harp, Lexington, sociology; Joseph
H. Huddleston, Lexington, physical
education; and Mildred Lloyd Judy,
Covington, Romance languages.
Master of arts in education Anderson B. Moore, Paducah; Viva
Odean Sloan, Somerset; Henley L.
Cash, Lancaster; Frank K. Burgess,
Carlisle; Florence Helen Cattadoris,
Elmhurst. N. Y.; Patricia Davis,
Lexington; Ruth Gladys Hoffman,

32

Vocational Guidance Conference
Will Be Opened Monday By Kenyon

CAMPUS GROUPS

Students May Receive
Examinations During
Regular Hours
Announcement
that blood tests
for syphilis will be given at any
time during regular dispensary
hours this semester was issued yesterday from the office of Dr. J. S.
Chambers, director of the dispensary,

240 Members

To Report
At Bureau
Members of the Committee
of 240 are requested to report
to the publicity bureau at
once for instructions and in-

formation regarding the Governor's party to be held here
Tuesday night, February 13.

If students come in large enough
The committee, composed
numbers to make it necessary, he
of two students from each
said, a special room will be set
county, has been chosen to
aside for the tests. In last year's
escort the legislators
and
campaign, for which
state officials.
The Kernel was sponsor, students
were forced to be tested at designated periods because of inadequate
facilities for making the analyses.
Blood tests for venereal diseases
The Kentucky Archaeological so will probably be included in the
ciety will hold its February meet' regular physical examination for all
ing at 8 o'clock tonight in the lee new students, by September, 1940, Blow Of Unknown Assailant
ture room of the physics building. Doctor Chambers believes.
Is Fatal To Freshman
Ralph Brown, field supervisor of
In line with a general educational
Engineer
the Butler county unit of the Uni- program on syphilis for the month
versity WPA Archaeological survey, of February, Kernel officials call
James Coffman O'Mar,
will address the group.
attention to the fact that comFor the past six months Mr. panion bills pertaining to the dis- old Engineering college freshman
Brown has been excavating a large ease were introduced in the state from Fulton, died last week at the
earth mound of the Tennessee-Cumberla- legislature Wednesday.
Good Samaritan hospital as a reThe proposed bills would in part
cultural group. His talk
nullify an 'act of 1938 which re- sult of a knife wound in the left
will include illustrations of his work
shoulder near the neck. His par
and details of the mound and its quired all applicants for marriage ents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. O'Mar,
associate villags with house sites licenses to present certificates show- were at his bedside when
he died.
ing freedom from venereal diseases.
and stockade wall
Stabbed by an unknown assail
The 1938 act was to go into effect
Election of officers for 1940 and a
brief business session will precede March 1, 1940. If the proposed bill ant, January 28, as he and Gilbert
the talk at 7:30 p.m. J. D. Figgins goes through, certificates will be Cheniae. Commerce college junior
is now president and W. G. Haag restricted to syphilis alone, and the from Fulton, were walking down
measure will not go Into effect un- Euclid avenue near Stoll field,
is secretary-treasure- r.
young O'Mar suffered great loss of
til January 1, 1941.
blood before he could be rushed to
the hospital. In spite of several
BACTERIOLOGICAL SOCIETY
transfusions, he sank slowly and
Judge Dorothy Kenyon, member
Katherine E. Cox, director of the died January 30.
at large of the League of Nations West Virginia Hygenic laboratory,
The body was taken by rail to
committee on the Legal Status of will address the Bacteriological so- Fulton where funeral services were
Women, will be the guest speaker ciety at 7:30 p. m. Monday in room held.
at a dinner meeting of the Inter- 306 of the Biological Sciences buildnational Relations club at 6:30 p. ing.
Miss Cox will speak on "Bacterm . Mondav. in the Union building.
She will speak on her experiences iological and Related Procedure in
Theory and Practice."
in Geneva.
Henry Clay chapter of Phi Alpha
Delta will hold a meeting at 1:30
today in the third year room of
the law school.
New pledges follow; Virgil K.
Beasley,
Lexington;
Charles
J.
Bentley. Mt. Olivet; John H. Clark,
Jr., Maysville; Jack Heath, Birm
ingham; Elmond Martin, Lexing
Robert Harris Brashear, Viper; ton; Arthur B. Rouse, Jr., Lexing
Ashland;
and Alfred Jennings
Horace Caldwell, Lancaster; How- ton; M. R. Shelbourne, Lexington
Ward, Russell.
Sweeny. Owensboro;
Master of science Philip M. Miles. ard Campbell, Fulton; Bernard Robert Todd
Eminence, geology; and Clayton F. Mitchell Crigger, West Van Lear; Thomas P. McCann, Georgetown.
Charles Hobart Futrelle, Cadiz
Mayo, Louisville, public health.
Civil engineer Louis Campbell George Lossen Gibson, B rooks ville;
Curtis Rayford Hancock, Fulton
Jr., Danville.
Bachelor degrees conferred fol- Lester Duff McDanlel. Ewing, Va.
Six staff members of the College
Frank Laughton Satterwhite,
low:
of Agriculture, Wayland Rhoads.
College of Arts and Sciences
Bachelor of science in home eco- George Harris, George Roberts. H.
Bachelor of arts Albert William
Marion Kuebler Allen, G. Sellards. J. E. Humphreys, and
Beck, Lexington; James Sivley Cary, nomics
W. W. Magill. are participating in
Hopkinsville; Virginia Alice Ever-sol- e, Owensboro; Ann Louise File. Beck- - a two-da- y
extension school which
London; James Sory Forbes, ley. W. Va,; Dorothy Elizabeth
Pened yesterday at Murray State
Helen Mastin,
Hopkinsville; George Henry Grif- Gentry, Henderson
fith, Mount Vernon; Joseph Lam- Cynthiana; Betty Jeanne Mulberry, Teacners college. being
The
conducted
bert Intermaggio, Oceanside, N. Y.; Sadieville; Dorothy Josephine Jointly school is
by the University of
Ophelia
Frankfort;
Margaret Wickcliffe Preston John- Thompson.
Wayne, Parksville; Kath- - tucky, Murray, and the Tennessee
ston, Lexington; John Esten Keller,
Valley Authority for the farmers
Lexington; Nancy Darnell McKee, ryn Lay Wiley, Barabourville.
'
of Calloway county. Yesterday's
College of Engineering
Frankfort; William Walter Moss
Bachelor of science in civil eagi-- 1 program was devoted to discussions
Jr., Hopkinsville; Sarah Elizabeth
Ratcliff, Covington; Harry Lyon neering Frederick Bickel Fischer. on livestock and soils will be
cussed today.
Read, Louisville; Virgil Homer Red-wiBachelor of science in mechanical
Jr.. Sandy Hook; Ruth .Oar-ric- k
John Curtis New.
Ware, Georgetown; Scott Dud- engineering
Frankfort: Donald William Pen-- !
ley Breckinridge Jr., Lexington.
Bachelor of science
Alexander nock. Lexington; Robert Samuels
.
William Heck. Lexington; Wilburn Triplett Jr., Owensboro.
Bachelor of science in metallurg- Bradford Keeton. Paducah; Joe
1. Delta Tau Delta
Blakely Lovett, Williamsburg; Fred ical engineering Laban Theodore:
2. Sigma Phi Epsilon
Ronald McCrea, Lexington; Embra Moore, Catlettsburg.
3. Alpha Sigma Phi
Bachelor of science In mining en- Arthur Roper, Lexington.'
4. Sigma Nu
gineering Hal Scrugham. Lexing- Bachelor of science In Industrial
5. Delta Chi
chemistry Monroe Moosnick, Ver- ton.
because they have uncondiCollege of Law
sailles.
tionally abolished Hell Week
Bachelor of laws Forest Clay
College of Agriculture
I
(Continued oa Page Three)
Bachelor of science in agriculture
anti-syphi- lis

Archaeological Group
Will Hear Supervisor

Jam.es O'Mar Dies

From Knife Wound

ar

nd

Club To Hear Kenyon

Nine Are Pledged
To Phi Alpha Delta

At Extension School

Ow-ento- n.

Ken-Beatri- ce

eL

ne

The Kernel
Salutes:

have already selected.
Monday's program will consist of
the introductory convocation at
which Judge Kenyon will outline
the theme of the meeting, demon
stration Interviews by Helen Shell.
Northwestern university, and round-tabdiscussions which will be led
by Judith Waller, educaticnol director, central division. National
Broadcasting company; Dorothy R.
Coates. placement secretary. Katherine Gibbs school: Mrs. Harold S.
Tweedy, Federal Housing Administration, Washington, D. C; and
Mrs. Gordie
Young, supervisor,
school libraries, Frankfort.
Highlight of Tuesday's program
and closing feature of the conference will be a banquet for ail University women at 6 p. m. in the
Bluegrass room. Mrs. Mary Breckinridge, founder and director of th?
Hrontidr Nursing service will be
guest speaker.
Tickets for the banquet Tuesday
night must be purchased from
authorized ticket sale committee
women or from the offices of Assistant Dean Sarah Holmes. Administration building. Miss Rebecca Van Meter, Union bulking, or
YW offices. Union building before
P-- m. Monday.
February 12. it
was announced by Rita Sue Laslie,
ticket sales chairman.
Personal interviews with conference speakers may be obtained by
women students through reservations made from 8 a. m. until 2
p. m. Tuesday at a special desk to
be set up in the Great hall. Union
building.
The interviews will be
held from 11 a. m. to noon and
2 to 3 p. m. Tuesday at places
from
In the Union to be designated later.
June Mehne. chairman of room arle

Disillusionment And Frankness Are Marks
Of Generatian, Upham Tells Graduates
86 Students Receive
Degrees From

KERNEL

Y

OF KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY.

Z246

AS THREE

e.

'

HE

VOLUME XXX

KERNEL

ECEN TUCKY

rangements stated.
Three radio programs from

Uni-

versity studios will be broadcast over
WLAP, publicizing the conferenc?.
The first broadcast will be a five
minute interview on the Wildcat
Review program at noon Saturdav
on which Jeanne Barker, general
chairman of the conference committee, will answer questions as to the
plans and purpose of the conference.
Attendance cards, to be punched
at the meetings during the conference, have been issued to ail wom- en students by Dean Sarah O
Blanding through the mail. Thesf
cards will serve as explanation of
absence from classes.

STATE OFFICIALS
TO VISITCAMPl'S
Governor Will Be Host
For Game, 'RUR'
Gov. and Mrs. Keen Johnson wUl
be hosts to members of the Kentucky legislature, elective and appointive officials and their wives at

a

basketball-theat-

er

party and

re-

ception Tuesday night. February 13.
on the campus.
President Frank L. McVey has
asked the governor to extend en
invitation to the state officials to

attend either the Kentucky-MississipState basketball game
pi

or
which is being presented
that night at the Guignol. A reception and dance will follow in
the Union building.
Dorothy Hillenmeyer, president of
the Union board, and John Morgan,
representative of the students, yesterday extended invitations to the
officials from the floors of the Senate and House.
The Committee of 240. consisting
of two students from each county,
will serve as escorts to the state officials while they are here.
Governor and Mrs. Johnson and
President and Mrs. McVey will be
in the receiving line at the reception. Dean Sarah G. Blanding and
Tyler Munford, state official from
Union county, will assist with introductions at the head of the line.
"RUR,"

* 1 11L U L U 1 U

The groundwork has been laid. To minutely
retrace not onlv would be tiresome, but irritating. Nevertheless, the human mind is all too
fallible. We forget easily those things we should
remcmlxT. During the month of February, a
series of editorials and features will be presented in Tut Kfrvfi. to refresh forgetful minds and
to aid others in retaining a vivid picture of the
killer svphilis.
Rendering facts more accessible, doors of the
I'niversitv dispensary have now been thrown
oeii for blood tests to all students during any of
i he regular dispensary
hours. As jilways. results
are absolutely confidential. Treatment is rapid
and scientific.
The cvnics leing ever among us. some will
scoff that syphilis is unthinkable, that only the

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

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Eiitrr4 at the Post Office at Lexington, iantoekr. oa mb4
'ia martri under the Art of March a,

in.

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Ktntnrky Interrollcfiat
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Lcxlntton Board of Commerce
HMMCNTn

POII MATIONAk AOVMTMIN

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National Advertising Service, Inc.

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MlDIION AVE.
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Cmcc

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.oris T.

Iclf-Har-

Editor-in-Chie- f

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Patricia Hamilton

rT Crowdi s
John- H. Morgan
'ivf

.

Managing Editor
AV'i'S Editor
Business Manager

."

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-

JOE CREASON
WYNNE McKINNEY
AGNES JENNINGS
JACK TREADWAY
LAURA LEE LYONS
CHARLES A. SMITH

C. K

I.

I

V

i

I

I

I,

Finding The Right Shoe

and

dregs are infected, anyway. If it were only so.
Those of the lifted eyebrows must forgive us if
we brush them aside in trying to aid some of
the "dregs" too often innocent victims.
It's almost unbelievable, isn't it, that one out
of every twenty individuals is numbered among
the "dregs"?

Snorta Editor
Circulation Manager

Cartoon
Staff Photogranher
Society Editor

Advertising Manager

Associate Editor

BEN K7LLTAMB
JIM CALDWELL
LOUISE C ALBERT

--

Column Photos Courtesy Lafayette BtuCios

Max.r Ellen

ri

lais im

ifft

Mare

Jameg Coffin an O'Mar
1S1T

1944

Practically Stymied
Before It Gets Started

Reason says no. but the moist, spermy earth,
warmed by the returning sun, gives an illusion
that spring is here, that for the last time we have
known the chilling deadness of winter.
But at best it is onlv an illusion. A month
must pass lefore spring is possible, a month in
which we will feel again the raw harshness.
It will come though. Spring, with its long afbreezes, and soothing
ternoons,
warmness.
And, as spring glides into summer, the days
will get longer, the breezes will die, and the
temperature will rise.
And there will be gnats, and flys, and ants.
When vou go to led .it will be hot a sheet
will feel like a blanket, but if you throw it off
mosouitoes will destroy sleep.
And your tie will feel hot against your neck.
And vour head will ache from heat, and

One professor, repeating his action of last
vear. already has written the student committee
in charge of the campus Community Chest drive
protesting against Islington's solicitation of
funds from students.
Doggone it. And the drive promised to get of!
good start, too!
Too had that his opinion will prevent the
Community Chesi from rendering its
aid to crippled and undernourished children,
unmarried mothers, disrupted families, penni-le- s
aged ladies, and thousands more
individuals and agencies that receive no state aid. Isn't
11 a shame
that the individuals and the agencies
must erase to exist because thev are not recognized.
It's rather remarkable, loo. that the professor
suffers such a twinge of conscience over the
thought of student contributions. The evervdav
comforts and amusements afforded students, and
(ire. health, and police protection are so negligible.
And it docs seem such a pity that, because of
ihi man's disapproval, organizations like DDK
and Mortar Board will be forced to realize that
for fellow citizens is do longer an American attribute, and that the enervating work of
conducting such a campaign is worthless unless
ou are replenishing your own coffers. Too bad
that they must necessarily throw up their hands
in despair, now. "
W hat a consolation it must be to know that
he is right and that the hundreds and hundreds
who will contribute t