xt7ns17sp25t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ns17sp25t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19460315  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 15, 1946 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 15, 1946 1946 2013 true xt7ns17sp25t section xt7ns17sp25t Best uopy Available

The ECjentucky ECernel

PAGE ONE
Jim Wood Almost
Caught Up With Campus

page two-- no
Denman or Collet t.
Too Late

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXXVI

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY,

Z246

Vet Delegate

Spring Registration
Begins March 25
students now on the campus
are urged to complete their schedules for the spring quarter before
Tlit examination schedule for the
the close of the present quarter, accord in ft to the announcement of winter quarter was announced
by Leo M. Chamberlain, dean
UK Dean and Registrar Leo M.
Regular registration of the University and registrar.
Chamberlain.
begins Monday, March 25. In the Exams will be given Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, March 18, 19,
gymnasium.
Pre classification began Thursday, and 20. Night classes will be examMarch 7, and will continue through ined at their last regular meeting
of the quarter, Dean Chamberlain
the end of the current quarter.
Pre classification does not become said.
The complete examination scheofficial, however, until the student
has registered, paid his fees and had dule for all colleges except law
his schedule finally approved at the follows:
proper booth during spring quarter meeting first hour on any cycle
registration. A student who attends starting on either Monday or Wed- Monday, March 18:
classes
classes without having completed
classes meeting
his registration and fee payments nesday;
may have his class scheduled can- first hour on any cycle starting on
either Tuesday or Thursday;
celled.
classes meeting second hour on any
Classes Begin Wednesday
Regular registration begins Mon- cycle starting on either Monday or
day afternoon and ends at 4:40 p.m. Wednesday, and Geology 50a and
yos-terd-

--

--

Tuesday. Classes open Wednesday,
March 27. No Instructor is obligated
to hold a place for a student who
is not present at the first meeting
of a class, even though the student
may have been given a place in the
section during

veterans must prepare an adschedule card and a
office card for each class in
which they are enrolling. These wiU
be tamed in at the veterans' booth
in the gymnasium. When a veteran
adds or drops a class, a copy of the
"add and drop" card must be filed
with the reterans' office on the second floor of the Administration
All

ditional

per-mnn- el

building. According to Dean Chamber lain, it is necessary that this office have an accurate copy of each
veteran's schedule at all times, including a record of changes in
Veterans, by bringing these cards
to room 2H or the basement hall
la the Administration building, may
obtain approval for purchase of
books and supplies, according to
K. Henry of the I'K personnel
office.
Veterans who withdraw from the
University or who will not register
for the spring quarter, are asked to
report to room 204 of the Administration building.
Register With Group
Each student is urged to register
with his alphabetical group. Those
who wait and register with the mis
rellaneous group on Tuesday after
i..M
IHJUU limy imu .i
uiciiwti,w .t.nrfin.
in line for an extended period. It
all students will register at the time
they are expected to do so, there
slwuld be a minimum of delay, according to Dean Chamberlain.
The registration schedule follows:
Monday afternoon
T through Z
1:3 to 2:2
2:3 to 3:24 p.m, S
through R
3:3 to 4:24 .m,
Tuesday morning
.,
M through O
8 to 8:5
K through L
to 9:5
1
to If :5 am, H through 1
11 to 11:5 a.nu, E through G
Tuesday afternoon
1:31 to 2:21 p.m., C through D
2:3 to 3:2 p.nu A through B
3:3 to 4:34 p.m.. Miscellaneous,
A through Z

j

Geology 3;
classes meeting
second hour on any cycle starting
on either Tuesday or Thursday.
Tuesday, March 19:
classes
meeting third hour on any cycle
starting on either Monday or Wednesday and Geology 30b;
classes meeting third hour on any
cycle starting on either Tuesday or
Thursday;
classes meeting
fourth hour on any cycle starting
on either Monday or Wednesday;
classes meeting fourth hour
on any cycle starting on either
Tuesday or Thursday.
Wednesday. March 20 :
classes meeting filth hour or from
12 to 1 o'clock on any cycle starting
on either Monday or Wednesday;
classes meeting fifth hour
or from 12 to 1 o'clock on any cycle
starting on either Tuesday or
Thursday;
classes meeting
sixth hour and Mineralogy 123;
classes meeting seventh and
eighth hours, appointments, and
conflicts.
According to a University rule, no
examinations may be given before
the last three days of the quarter
except on written permission of the
registrar. Dean Chamberlain said.
In case of a conflict, the instructor
involved must report the conflict to
the registrar, who will decide when
the examination is to be given.
The University will close at 6
p.m. Wednesday, March 20, and it
will reopen Monday, March 25.
and new students will
. Freshmen
take physical examinations ana
classification tests on Monday. All
students will register and classify
for the spring quarter on Tuesday,
March 26. Classes will begin Wednesday, March 27.

No Restrictions Put
On Student Admission

P--

r

ts,

non-reside- nt

Dean White's Office
Moved To Neville
The office of Associate Dean
charge
of Arte and Sciences freshmen,
M. M. White, wlu is In

is now located In room 106,
Neville baU, Dea Paul P. Boyd
announced today.

Basketball Squad
To Be Entertained
By Alumni Group
honoring the
University
of Kentucky
6
championship basketball team, will
be given under the auspices of the
Alumni Association at 6:15 Saturday
night, March 3. in the Blucgrass
room of the Union building.
Honor guests will be Coach
Adolpli Rupp and his squad, members of the coaching staff and their
wives, and University cheer leaders.
Tickets for the dinner will be
limited to 300 persons and will be
allocated to the different organizations on the campus. An orchestra
will play from 7 until 12 p.m. and
rraneements have been made to
admit 100 additional stags or
couples to the dance, beginning at
9 p.m.
Members of the 1945 football
squad will be guests of the Alumni
Association for the dance starting
at 9 p.m.
A brief program, consisting of a
talk by Coach Rupp and announcement of varsity letters by Athletic
Director B. A. Shlvely will precede
the general dance.
A

1945-4-

dinner dance,

While no restriction has been
placed on the admission of students
for the spring quarter other than
this
that applied to
does not mean that there is assurance that housing facilities will be
available for all the
students who have been admitted.
Students who are entering or reentering the University at the beginning of the spring quarter shodld
have arranged for living quarters
before coming to Lexington.
While the University will help
every student in any way possible, it
announces tha the admission of a
student does not carry with it a
guarantee of living facilities. It is
emphasized particularly that Kentucky students who have not yet
made application should assure
themselves of living quarters before
coming to the University. Out-o- fstate students shoul dnot come to
the University in any case until
their admission has been approved.
Inquires with respect to rooms
should be addressed tq the dean of
men or the dean of women. Inquiries with respect to admission
should be sent to the Registrar's
office.

I

Vets Must Report
Address Changes
Veterans who have moved are
urged to notify the regional office of the Veterans Administration of their new address.
Compensation, pension and subsistence allowance checks cannot be forwarded to another
post office. H. W. Farmer, manager of the Veterans Administration in Lexington, announced Thursday.
Veterans who have moved
must immediately send in to the
regional office notification of
old address, new address and
claim number, in writing over
their own signature, Farmer
said.

New Students

'

By Clayton Roland

.

Club Studies Legislation
Qrover Jones, current affairs com.
mittee chairman, reviewed current
legislation in Congress pertaining to
veterans and presented an interesting and Instructive study or them.
He said all Kentucky congressmen'
had been Informed of the club's
wants and desires and he had already received several replies from
them.
The constitution was amended to
allow the club to have two faculty
advisors instead of one. and Dr.
Amry Vandenbosch and Dean M. M.
White were elected to these positions. The vacancy was created by
the resignation of Prof. Bennett
Wall.
"Greet The Vets"
A special "Greet the Vets" committee, with Vance Johns as chairman, is working on plans for serving
new students on registration day of
the new quarter. Tentative plans
call for information booths on the
campus to aid the new students in
becoming orientated with the University.

Outdoor ROTC
Drill Schedule
ROTC outdoor preparatory to the
annual government Inspection will
periods
be held at designated
throughout the spring, quarter. Col.
O. T. MacKenzie, fUniVetsity ' commandant announced
All ROTC members, members of
will

the Cadet band, and all
attend the drills.

The Inspection will take place
Monday and Tuesday, June 3 and 4.
The first drill was held Monday.
Drills will take place at the fol
lowing hours:
Second period, 5 p.m., Thursday.
March 28.
Third period, 4pjn., Friday,
April 5, (Army Day Parade and
review.)
Fourth period, 5 p.m., Thursday.
April 11.
Fifth period, 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 17.
Sixth period, 5 p.m. Tuesday,
April 23.
Seventh period, 5 p.m. Monday,
April 29.
Eighth period, 5 p.m. Tuesday.
May 7.
Ninth period, 5 p.m. Friday, May
4--

-5

4--

4--

4--

4--

17.

Tenth period, 5 p.m. Wednesday,
May 22. (Military Field Day.)
Eleventh period, 5 p.m. Thursday, May 30.
In making arrangements for the
drills, care was exercised to reduce
as much as possible interference
with other classes.
4--

4--

ODK H onorary
Pledges Nine Men

Former Student,
Will Sing March

31

This is the eighth in a series of
articles to acquaint the
with the University of Kentucky campus during the war.
deans
MAY, 1944: Seventy-fiv- e
from midwestern colleges and universities met at the University of
conference
Kentucky for a two-da- y
. . . Thomas D. Clarke, acting head
of the history department, wrote a
new book, "Pills, Petticoats and
Plows." . . . The executive committee of the University adopted a
resolution expressing complete faith
in Dean James H. Graham of the
College of Englneeruig . . . Special
Assistant Secretary of War Julius
H. Amberg explained the War Department's relation to the much
Aeronautidiscussed Wenner-Gre- n
cal Laboratory located on the University campus. . . Dr. Wellington
professor or
Patrick,
University
educationdied . . . First Lt. Walter
C. Botts, 1940 graduate of the University, was reported missing in the
South Pacific area . . University
appropriations were not included in
a call of a special session of the
General Assembly by governor Willis
. Norman Crlsman, senior In
the College of Ene&eeitoe, Vi3

..

r

Kappa chapter of Phi Beta fraternity will present Tom Scott,
noted American composer and arranger, at 4 pjn. Sunday, March 31,

f

i

in Memorial hall. Mr. Scott is a former student of
the University but he finished his
education in New York. His activ
ities here Included men's glee club.
Choristers, band and orchestra. Mrs.
Scott Is a graduate of the Univerv:
urn mow m n
frmin wmir mrT r VMlirimnii n
sity and an art major.
Following hi their dad's footsteps are Kernel reporters, left to right:
A native Kentucklan. Mr. Scott
Judy Johnson, Nancy Shinnick, Beth Bicknell and Don Towles. They became Interested in American folk
are reading files of
Kernels their dads edited
lore and made it the idiom for many
of his compositions. He has been
Joanna and Nikolai Graadan
an arranger for Fred Waring for
several years and for the past two
years has sung on an eastern radio
station featuring folk songs.
In the fall of 1945. he presented a
program in Town Hall and received
By Betty Crevice
four cubs
will
Printer's ink is thicker than water, line for by hard work posts be in excellent comments on his selection
the executive
their and presentation of arrangements ' The lives of Nikolai and Joanna
and four cub reporters on The Kerdads held.
of folk music and original composi Grandan, 'cello-piaduo who will
nel prove it.
The
appear here at 4 pjn. Sunday, have
Majoring in journalism, all four paper dads are all still in the news- tions.
game.
followed a pattern that strongly
are offspring of former Kernel exeDwight Bicknell returned in Ocsuggests the presence of a deter
cutives. Among them is Elizabeth
tober from an overseas stint with $1,000
mined fate, emanating from a town
Ann Bicknell, Cincinnati Enquirer
the Office of War Information. He
in Russia and drawing them back to
financial editor from 1934 to 1941. was news
editor in the psychological
It to combine their personal and
Bicknell was Kernel editor in 1925. warfare
section of SHAEF at Paris.
artistic pursuits. Libau is a small
His friend and colleague was JosIn Lexington again, he plans to
town and
was
eph Sterling Towles, now of Shive-le- y, move to
Returns in the second week of Nikolai anditJoanna there that both
Cincinnati to work with a
were born.
Ky., and father of Elizabeth public
solicitation for the World Student
relations concern there.
Ann's present-da- y
Nikolai originally left to study
friend and colService Fund total $1,000, YWCA
Dads' Work Varies
league, young Don Towles. The two
'cello at the St. Petersburg Conser
Sterling Towles is editor of the campus secretary Dorothy Collins vatory
other followers of their dads' footand upon his graduation.
weekly Kentucky Gazette where he announced Thursday.
steps are Nancy Shinnick, Chicago,
Solicitation of townspeople will and at the recommendation of Alexhopes Don may come to work after
and Judith Keen Johnson, Richander Glazunoff. then director of
his graduation in 1949, barring in- begin next quarter, Ed Bary, genmond.
eral student chairman for WSSF, the Conservatory, Graudan won an
terruption by selective service. Keen
Campus Changed
added. The total collected to date appointment as one of the youngTtie four youngsters report a Johnson is publisher of the Richest members of the Conservatory's
Includes contribution of the n
campus far different from that mond Daiiy Reite and WtlHnm ceeus uuin
Tnna left Libau for Kh'-uie intramural men's bov where
sjiIiulicIc Is an editorial staff writer
sue
uer piano
their fathers knew. When Keen
basketball finals last month, Bary
for the Chicago Tribune.
studies.
Johnson in 1921 and William ShinThe girls are all inclined toward said.
nick in 1917 managed the college
Then each went to Berlin . . .
canvass was de
The
capaper it was printed downtown. In public relations as
signed to reach every student and Jofiina lor study wth Kreutzer
1925, Dwight Bicknell and Sterling reers. Further coincidence is the faculty member. Betty Ree Rhoads and Schnabel . . . Nikolai for conTowles, backed by venerable depart- fact that they are all members of and Howard Stephenson, "colonels" cert appearances.
ment head Enoch Grehan, bought the same social sorority, Chi Omega. in the drive, divided students into After their marriage, the couple
the first piece of machinery the And the mothers of all four are sorority and fraternity groups, resi- was more and more called upon to
Kernel ever had. That small lino- former University of Kentucky co- dence unit groups, and
give Joint recitals and for five years
of groups
type has multiplied until the present eds. With that background,
for convenience in solici they toured Europe as a 'cello-piaplant is valued at $50,000. In addi- newspaperdom and Bluegrass tation.
ensemble. Meanwhile, each artist
tion the Kernel has presses, offices, schooling, small wonder that ElizaReturns by units, many of them continued to aqhieve reopgnJhon
A ac- beth Ann Bicknell, Nancy Shinnick, still incomplete, include:
and the backing of a Class
in a solo capacity as well and
Judy Johnson and Don Towles are
credited Journalism school.
Boyd hall, $47.00; Jewell hall, Nikolai Graudan Included among
But reporting is much the same all UK journalists and eager Ker- $56.99; Patt hall, $29.21; Kappa his appearances the
Berlin Philas it was twenty years ago, and the nel reporters.
Lydia harmonic under Furtwaengler, the
$21.45;
Kappa 'Gamma,
Brown, $5.00; Alpha Delta PI. $32.75; British
Broadcasting
Company
VVBKY
Delta Delta Delta, $97.00; Tau Al- Symphony under Sir Adrian Boult
pha PI, $9.00; Sigma Nu house, $1.50; and the London Philharmonic under
Shelby house, $29.00; Delta Zeta, Sir Hamilton Harty. Joanna's solo
$14.05; Zeta Tau Alpha, $13.00.
performances with orchestra also inFormer officers who wish reapOn the third floor of McVey hall
Elmslde, $3.00; Alpha XI Delta,
pointment in the armed forces to lit
engagement
with the
radio studios, Hugh Dunbar $28.50; Chi Omega, $18.00; Kappa cluded an
the
the grade they held at the time of
Berlin Philharmonic, and in this
and O. C. Halyard have opened a Alpha Theta, $20.00; Kappa Delta, country with the Minneapolis Symrelief from active duty may secure
forms of application from the Uni- new show called "Jive Jamboree on $47.00; Alpha Gamma Delta, $10.00; phony.
Hamilton house, $8.00; Bradley hall,
versity's ROTC headquarters mili- Friday, 8:15 p.m. Dunbar
Nikolai's initial engagement in
tary department, Colonel G. T. plays recordings and transcriptions. $10.25; Kinkead hall, $4.00.
country was as first 'cellist
Pi Kappa Alpha, $15.00; day stu- this
MacKenzie, head of the department,
Tonight's program will be a
dents (men), $12.15; day students with the Minneapolis Symphony
today.
announced
-making
event, marking the first
(women), $21.60; Sigma Chi, $20.50; under the direction of Dimltrl
Officers eligible for reappoint- time hi radio history that a broad$6.00; Metropoulos, and once again he and
SAE, $21.00; Breckinridge.
ment are those who have been re- cast has ever been made from an
his wife were joined in music when
faculty, $50.50.
alumni, $2.00;
lieved from active duty under honJoanna was engaged as guest soloist
elevator.
orable conditions and who are physwith the orchestra.
To hear the show students are
ically qualified for general service,
In spite of these individual musilimited service, or general service welcome to come up to the radio
cal activities, the Graudans continu
with waivers.
studios at 7:45 Friday night. Ann
ed appearing together In concerts
Wall Hopkins, the Kate Smith of
Don Bartholomew has been elected and their success drew them East
WBKY, the best in jive, and a president of the Business Education j where in 1944 they gave
two Town
world-wisearch for Kllroy are club at a meeting Sunday at the Hall recitals in a single musical
SuKy president Cornell Clarke has scheduled. The staff of WBKY asks home of Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Lawrence. season.
requested
that all organizations that the visitors please use the
Other officers elected Include Z.
Their subsequent coast to coast
planning to enter floats in the an- stairs at the south end of the build- S. Dickerson, Jr,
tours and U.S.O. and Red Cross ap11 ing as the elevator will be wired for Janet
nual May day exercises May
Helsel, secretary; Agnes pearances
have established them on
notify SuKy of their plans before the the broadcast.
Doors will close Shreve, treasurer; Harry Howell,
this continent as an ideal duo persergeant-at-ann- s.
close of the present quarter.
promptly at 8 p.m.
sonally and musically.
I

ww

urn

m

Four Fourth Estalers Follow
In Footsteps Of Parents

Grandan Duo
Plays Sunday
no

Reported
In WSSF Drive

Through Thursday

us

post-colle- ge

town-stude-

nt

no

Schedules

Former Officers
May Be Reinstated

Variety Program

em-ce-

Nine senior men will be pledged
to Omlcron Delta Kappa honorary
fraternity at 12:30 today In room
206 of the Union building, president
of the organization Morriss Holcomb
announced Tuesday.
Initiation of these men, selected
for leadership in five fields of campus activity, will be held at 8 p.m.
Friday. March 29. in Memorial hatt.
Hit By War
Partially inactive during war
years when there were few men on
the campus, Omlcron Delta Kappa
has pledged only a handful of men
since 1942. This Initiation will be
the first normal one since then, according to Holcomb.
Five categories of activity from
which candidates are selected ara
scholarship, athletics, publications,
social and religious groups, and
speech, music and the arts.
The nine seniors chosen this
quarter will be supplemented by
others chosen on the basis of peti
tion O ODK. Holeomb ai&
Pledges Named
To be pledged today are James
D. St. Clair, Falls of Rough; Staley
Selby Hurst.
Adams, Lexington:
Lexington; John Harrison: James
Couty, Owensboro; James Ecklund
Banahan. Lexington; Edward A.
Bary, Bellevue; John J. Hopkins.
Carlisle, and William Richard Le- Grand. Owensboro.
St. Clair, a navigator in the Army
Air corps during the war, is In the
He is a
College of Agriculture.
club
member of the University
and of Alpha Zeta. Adams, a for
mer Air corps captain, is a member
of Tau Beta PI and Sigma Pi Sigma,
and a student in the engineering
student.
college. Hurst Is a
4-- H

1

Another AZ .Man
agriculture student.
Harrison.
Is a member of Alpha Zeta and of
the YMCA cabinet. Couty. a former major in the infantry. Is a
commerce student.
Banahan. in the College of La-- ,
is treasurer of SGA and the YMCA
cabinet,
of the Student Union board and Newman club,
and a member of Pitkin club and
the Student Bar Association. He u
also chairman of the dance committee of the Student Union board.
of Phalanx frater
nity, member of the University social
committee, and business manager of
the K book.
Bary, a philosophy major, is spir
itual life advisor and president of
the advisory board of the University YMCA. He Is chairman of the
1946 drive for the World Student
Service Fund, and president of the
state student YMCA in Kentucky.
He was named to "Who's Who in
American Colleges and Universities."
(Continued on Page Three)

history-

Business Education
Club Elects Officers

SuKy Requests

de

Catching Up With The Campus
By Jim Wood

Senior Honor Group
Initiates March 29

Noted Composer,

vJ Vj;

To Serve
The University Veterans' club, at
its Monday night meeting, voted to
support and send an official delegate
to the meetings of the Lexington
veterans' housing committee. Al
though the number of members
present wasn't impressive, much discussion was heard on the activities
of the Lexington committee in trying to obtain ceiling prices on houses and apartments.

NUMBER 20

Phi Beta
Will Present
Tom Scott

'

'Greet The Vets'

Exam Slate
Is Announced

All

v:':C';

To Attend
Housing Meet

Pre-Classificali- on

Cautions Listed

1

FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1916

"SO THLr

mm,

By Lkj Thomas
QUESTION:
WHAT COURSES
DO YOU THINK COULD BE IMPROVED AND HOW?
Harris Arnett, Engineering, freshman: Schedules should be made not
to Include so many Saturday classes.
Vernon J. Cale, A AS, freshman:
More lecture hours in chemistry.
Llbby MeNeal, AS, senior: Give
The program:
us more profs in every field so we
Sonata In D major, Adagio-AllegrAndante, Allegro. J. S. Bach.
can have a wider choice of courses
Sonata in C major, opus 102, and also relieve
the now overAndante-Allegr- o
Adagio-Temvivace.
worked profs we do have.
d'andante - Allegro vivace,
Walter Fergason. A$tkiUii'.
Beethoven.
Sonata In D major, opus 58. Al- freshman: Honestly, some profs just
legro assal vivace. Allegretto scher-zand- give two or three quizzes during the
Adagio - Molto allegro e quarter
and expect a student to
vivace, Mendelssohn.
excell on these Instead of taking
into consideration the whole quarter's work. And If by chance you
don't make the grade on these
quizzes, it's curtains: this I do not
The Faculty club of the Univer- approve of and I think
that another
sity will hold its monthly dinner at system regarding grades
would im6:30 p.m. tonight at the club s house. prove
all courses.
The dinner will be followed by an
Cyrene McCown, Ajricolture, junopen house. Professor Victor R. ior:
The psychology teachers should
Portmann,
and house stop psychoanalyzing the students
chairman of the club, is in charge when they ask questions.
of arrangements for the dinner and
George Martin, Engineering, sophthe open house.
omore: More lectures in 1A Engineering drawing.
Bryon Reed, A AS, freshman:
English, and don't make it so damn
ruff!
Jewell McBee. Arricolture, sector:
Students who will be in school
Foods classes will be Improved due
next quarter must renew their
to the fact that rationing is almost
boxes in the University post ofover and foods, especially meats,
before the close of the presfice
will be available for class use.
ent quarter. Miss Carrie Bean,
William M a r d I s , Engineering,
postmaster, announced
freshman: Why can't Engineers take
chemistry on Friday instead of
o,

po

elected state president of the YMCA
. . . Prof.. Carl Lamriert. retiring
head of the music department, was
A lethonored with a reception
ter writer to The Kernel accused
SGA president BUI Embry of using
"steam roller" politics . . . Commencement exercises were set for
June 2 . . . .Inn,- - Ttalror was named
editor of the Kentucklan and Janet
Edwards was named editor of The
Kernel . . . The "Y" petitioned the
University to allow Japanese students enter the University in the
fall of the year . . . James M. Mol-loUniversity alumnus, filed suit
in Fayette Circuit court and demanded the receovery of funds
claimed to have been paid on contracts for tests conducted at the

...

y.

Wenner-Gre- n
.Aeronautical Research Laboratory on the University campus . . . The Kernel print-

ed a
edition.
SEPTEMBER, 1944: Former Kernel editor. First Lieut. Bob Amnions
was killed in action In France . .
First Lieut. Harold Winn, former
managing editor of The Kernel was
also killed in action In France .
Fall quarter registration stood at
1527 and women outnumbered men

three to one . . . Augustus Noah May,
retired professor of industrial educa.
tion at the University, died . . .
President Donovan asked the University board of trustees for new
dorms

Mildred Long' was named
news editor and Doris
Singleton became managing editor
. . . T. T. Jones, dean of men, announced new regulations governing
fraternities . . . Dr. Donovan appointed a post-wcommittee. . .
Football refund to the University
after a year's absence . . . The
Wildcats beat Ole Miss . . . Approxi.
mately 154 University coeds received
bids to the eighth national sororities at the University .
OCTOBER, 1944: Fifteen representatives were elected to the University Faculty . . . Tennessee trim,
med the 'Cats . . . "Junior Miss" was
the first Guignol production for the
school year . . . President Donovan
addressed a convocation . . . Ellery
Hall, assistant professor of history,
died . . . Edward Fisk, assistant professor of art, diec" at his home in
Lexington . . . Mrs. Frances Jewell
McVey, wife of Dr. I : ank L. McVey,
president emeritus of the University, underwent an ope"atlon at Ann
...

Kernel

ar

--

Arbor, Mich. . . .Nine foreign countries were represented on the campus during the fall quarter . . .
Michigan state defeated the Wildcats . . . Dr. Lawrence L. Quill, head
of the Department of Chemistry, resigned to accept a position as head
of the chemistry department at
A KernMichigan State College
el editorial wanted to know If frats
are on the way out.
NOVEMBER, 1944: Sadie Hawkins week began . . . Ely Culbert-so- n,
bridge authority, discussed
plans for peace, at a University convocation . . .Sixteen seniors were
selected to appear In Who's Who
in American colleges and universities . . . Capt. Joseph H. Payne,
former University student, was killed in action In France . . . Three
new members were elected to SGA
. . . Alabama beat the Wildcats . . .
Mississippi State took the Wildcats
. . . Dr. Huntly Durpe. former professor of history at the University,
was actively engaged In New York
as executive secretary of the World
Student Service Fund . . . Capt.
Carleton C. Moore Jr, was killed In
England . . . The Wildcats defeated
West Virginia University.

...

o.

Faculty Club
Plans Dinner

Renew Boxes Now

Saturday?

* J

I

The Kernel Editorial Page

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OP TEX UNIVERSITY OP KENTUCKY
rDBLISHTO WEEKLY DURTn TTTB SCHOOL TZAR
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Mart Jane Dorset

PERIODS

Entered at th Post Office t Lexington, Kentucky,
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Bettt Tevis

Dick Lowe
Dora Lee Robertson
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a

JffEMBER

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Lexington Board of Commerce
Kentucky Press Association
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PAT BURNETT

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Naiiona! AdvcrtisingSeniice, Inc.

Bettie Tuttle, Tillie

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teste.

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YORK.

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One Quarter

Tom DUNCAN
O. C Halyard,

N. Y.

1

50

Jean Paxton

The Free Lance
By Scotty McCnlloch

Advertising Solicitors
Rewrite Editor
Staff Assistants

The United Nations Organization
has come to its greatest testing
ground. If the "Urotherhood of
nations," that magnificent abstract
principle, is to survive the tribulations which will beset it at every
turn on the road to ultimate peace,
the issues which face it today will
have to be met with overwhelming
victory as the only goal.
This august body was established
wtih the following aims in mind:
(1) That it is possible and highly
probable that the nations of the
world can live peaceably together,
enjoying the fruits of their labors,
without fear of violence or threats
(2) That foreign
of aggression;
trade and international trusts can
be operated successfully with the
maximum benefits to all, without
the monopolies that often result,
but with every competitive measure
still a part of the system: (3) that
it is possible for one central group
to administer the affairs of the
world, capably, successfully, and
without prejudice or hates. The
time has been coming for a long
time, and has finally come to a
head, when the UNO will be called
upon to prove whether it can ful-

tiffnrd articles and eolamas are to be eminent the
opinions of the writers themMelves, and do not mecejtarUy
reflect the opinion of The Kernel.

One Tear

Days Like That

lie spring, anil exams, and the races, things
o in ilcs. One day the world looks rosy, and
tlx- next, the asjx'tt is so gloomy you are low
enough to crawl under a snake.
and strikers causWilli Russia
ing trouble, housing problems, food shortages,
no m-- cais and a constant wrangle over one
thing or another the asjiet t hxiks on the gloomy
siik'. r.nt two weeks from now the situation may
lie oniirely different.
To the nun who have just gotten home from
f.ghihi'j; one war even I lie prosjxx t of going
through the dirty, sordid business all over again
is enough to make them read enth (lay's headlines anxiously, and lie snappy with their home-iion- t
flit nds. lint chant es are, fighting the Russians won't lie necessary, and all that fret is for

two-part-

-

niislx-haxing-

nothing.
y.m

Jiome at night and fall into a chair;
you know you can't jnissihly get that term paper
JmiMifd by Monday, nun h less memorize 25
pages of let lure nous. Three books must be
lead and then exams. Sometimes students feel
that they can't possibly live through another
exam week without flunking every subject and
j;oing home a total wreck, lint they always do.
Who was it that said, "Tilings ain't so bad as
ihey look"?
J'rofcssors have had double trouble the past
week trying to get students classified in addition to their regular duties. Rut it will be so
ninth less woik and confusion to go through
;it the
of next quarter. And just think
of those four days
nothing t ''o but forget
alxiiit college and classes!
You don't have to be an obnoxious little ray
of sunshine, but it's better to be that than a
temjiest. Remember, there'll lc days like that!.

Mugwumps
My good friends stand on plat forms and shout
:i!out the
system. Ihey perspire, they
pant, they lose weight, they practically knock
themselves out; and, what do I do? I smile to
myself, I test my soul, and I laugh up my sleeve.
hv do I do these tilings? I localise I am amused.
two-part-

Because all the talk of a
system is just
swish, swash and swush. Because the Republicans and the Democrats do all the work and the
m