xt7tqj77tx6q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tqj77tx6q/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19391110  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 10, 1939 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 10, 1939 1939 2013 true xt7tqj77tx6q section xt7tqj77tx6q Fans PZan To Cheer Undefeated Team At Atlanta

The Kentucky Kernel

The World
Whirls On
Wednesday,

the walls of a large

Munich. Germany,
rang
ith the typical passionate
shouts of the man around whom1
the modern history of Europe is
being made. Adolf Hitler was addressing a select group of his party
members on the loth anniversary of
the founding of the Nazi socialist,
party, which took place in this
cellar. Just 15 years ago, a
frenzied young German dashed into the room, fired a shot from his
pistol, and shouted. "The revolution
is on!" The crowded tap room
turned out in a body and began
what is now called the "march on
pitsch."
Munich" or "the
ultimately leading to the formation
of the Nazi party and the iustalla-- ;
tion of Hitler as dictator.
Recalling all this to his lieuten- ants. Hitler's voice began to trem- ble; he quaked with emotion as he
recounted the story of their growth
cf power in the goverenment, of
the overthrow of Von Hindenburg.l
of the reamiament of the nation, of
the bloodless invasions of Austria,
and Czechoslovakia, and of the be- ginning of the present war with
England and France. Though he
choked with sentiment, every sen-- i
tence was cheered to the ceiling.'
Loud Heils" and "der fuehrer uber
tliroughout the
alles" resounded
building.
so
The sound was deafening
deafening that no one heard a
faint, regular sound under the
platform tick, tock, tick, tock. It;
was Hitlers death knell being tolled '
by a cheap alarm clock attached by
a fuse to a few sticks bf dynamite.
Somewhere in the city, another;
clock was ticking, but this one was'
being noticed, eagerly noticed. The
observer was also probably watch- ing a window with a nervous eye,'
waiting for the flash and roar
which would teli him of the end
of the most powerful despot since
Napoleon.
Back in the beer cellar. Hitler's
speech came to a close; the bigwigs, Goebbels. Goering. and Hess
lustily sang "The Watch on the
ouu me ciucn "tcu uu
Knme.
Hitler and his aides started out of
the room. Tick, tock, tick, tock.
With a last look at the place where
in

ar

VOLUME XXX

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER

Z246

The Student Government Association

beer-cell-

LEGISLATORS'

BY

NEW SERIES NO I'.

Id, I'J.'W

OFFICERS PICKED!

WW:

now-sacr- ed

Them Women's Got Iflees

Apu s 'Patch mo

AT INITIAL MEET
II

Committees Accepted;
Palmer, Johnson
Elected

.V

.V:

ar

rs
1

A"

college,

i

1.1

1

"...

it's up to them to make the constitution
Top row: John Hunsaker. Arthur Bryson, Carl
well. Middle row: John Clore. Robert Allen, Bill Duty,
Dcrothy Angle. Sara Triplett, Lillian Gaines Webb,

j

work."

S'ake.--. Harry Zimmerman. C. P. Johnson, Jim CaldBob Amnions, Bob Nash. Mark Harris. Bottom row:

Llewellyn Holmes, Buth Clay Palmer, Jeanne Barker.

i

Omicron Delta Kappa Selects 10 Men
For Membership In Senior Honorary
TO CITE PLEDGES

Kentuckian

OF TAU BETA PI

One Honorary,
Seven Students

Salesmen
To Meet

Ten outstanding men seven stu
dents two faculty and one honorary
,
were elected yesteraay
men.ber
Kappa, senior:
into Omicron Delta

jTJ OOU
imerw J

,

"rlS

;

4

A

honorary-- .

Students planning to sell
Kentucklans will' meet at 2
p. m. today In the Kentuckian
of
office In. the
McVey hall, according
to

mil

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1O

ccptYiVjlv

'

2J ZTZ street
thn

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tomorrer evenin in thet

AMMONS, ANGLE

.

WIN IN ELECTION

-

sen-ices-

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iuHcpicsc.ur.uM.

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prop-erg-.nd-er

Costumes For Dance
Men must wedr shirts
and women must wear
skirts. Any person improperly clad will not be admitted to the dance.
(2 Costumes are optional;
no masks will be allow?!.
3
Characters in tn? Lii'
Abner comic strip stic'i as
h
Lil Abner. Daiiy Ma
Gooch, Mammy Vonim.
Pappy Yokum. Old Man Mosc.
Marryin' Sam. Strange Ga!.
Sadie Hawkins, City Gal. Pa
Hawkins. Freddie Flophouse.
Judge Toliiver. Hannibal
Hcops. or any of the Doepatch
spinsters may be impersonated.

M

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uire-iwiu- ui

one-eigh- th

Stom
SiSta

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fSiSSiv

t'takJ

Discusses Lectures

a.,h..

At

j
r ledgeS

Uancei

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four-pag-

Philharmonic

j

Present

Will

'

Concert

Embargo vs. International Law Debated

By Dupre And Vandenbosch In Open Meet

Debaters Dupre

What They Think

Agree, However, That
Neutrality Must

and Vandenbosch

Be Kept

...

1.

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5:

extra-cirricul-

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"cash-and-carr-

es

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Abi-jo-

Suly Arranged Train

Thprnists To Hear
Lind Of Minnesota

To Leave Lexington

At iu ronignt

Authority. On Kadioactivitv
Will Speak Monday In

Kastle Hall
Dean S C. Lind of the University
of Minnesota will be the principal
speaker at the November meeting of
Lexington section of the Amer- ican Chemical society to be held
7:30 p.m., Monday. Room 214.
hall.
Internationally known authority
radioactivity, inventor of the
electroscope
Lind interchangeable
for radium measurements and originator of the ionization theory of the
chemical effects of radium rays.
Dean Lind will speak on the topic.
"Radioactivity, Natural and Artificial." In 1934 it was found that ra
dioactivity, the accidental discovery
of which tore up the immutability
of the atom, can be artificially pro- duced. These artificial radioactive
elements have important applica
tions as tracer elements in chemis-try- ,
botany, biology, and medicine.
Reservations for the dinner meeting to be held at 6:15 p.m. in the
Union immediately preceding Dean
may oe ootainea
Linos
from J. L. Gabbard, chemistry in
strucfor.
CALLED HOME

MiPhdi ,,,....,.,.,
Science building, has been called
in
to Gainesville. Ga.. by the death of
her father
.fiv

virci.-.i-

,

'

Rimsky-Korsako-

kiite-leng-

Cat. Backers Will Go South
uLZ
On Board "Kentucky Limited"

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1

Armistice Parade,
Services Planned

j

ss

One o' them thar honerery
name o Keys, has
perclaimed another o' them Sadie
Hawkins holidays fer the wimnien-foiwhereby they kin take advantage of us menfolk. "Come stag
er drag" they sez. it will cost ony
5 CenU.
Thet would be okay with
us menfolk, but. their furnn
goes on ter say thet ony
the wtmmen will be allowed ter
come "Stan."
It don't make sene ter iu. nohow How kin a gal be a stag?
Ter continier with their foolishness, they hev announced thet prizes
will be given ter the folks wh.
looks most like Pappy. Manuny.
Abljah Gooch. Daisy Mae. Ol" Man
Mose. Marryin' Sam and the test
nu
of us folks of Dogpatch. Notv
coude look more like onrelves than
we'uns kin?

J

mr:

Blue-gra-

room. Cut us men folks
in tile holler alnt aplannin'
fer to come.

'

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t'""

.UJXtR YOKl'M S.WIARA
Well folks, seem.s like they
is lilan.s
fer a .shimlig

'

bership and
elected
Chick Young sales manager.
Pledges to Tau Beta
. engmeer.
Tick, tock fields in which their outstanding ing honorary, will be recognized at
oit
!a general Engineering college as
Rnnnii The entire block work outlined them are:
rocked with the explosion. The city , David K. Blythe, Triangle, senior
clock this morning.
rraii-- ;
became a Diare oi exciu.-meiu-.
scholarship
and social
Thomas R. Underwood, editor of
tw. rifi7.n5! asked half fearfully and
the Lexington Herald, will address
half hopefuUy if der fuehrer had,senlce' H- Clarke
Jr., Sigma Alpha aii students of the college, and
Jolln
The police arrived,
been hurt.
nlar-pr- i
a cordon around the build-- . Epsilon, first year law student, classes will be dismissed for the
.
John Russell, Tau Beta Pi
ing. and refused to let newspaper-- : scholarship,
forensics. and social
president, announced.
men come near the place, until it service '
i6-?!?Those pledged this morning will
was officially announced that Hitler
romm
""""
""""
be honored at an engineers' hop to- was safe.
Somewhere, on the other side of; Rho, ag Junior, scholarship, publi- - night, and wiU be initiated at the!
annual Tau Beta Pi banquet Fri-- j Robert J. Ammons, Delta Tau
...
town, a worried man bought a cations, and social service.
newspaper, read the dictators es-- 1
Tjoyd B Ramseyi sigma Chi, ed- -: day. November 17, in the Bluegrass Delta pledge, and Dorothy Angle,!. RIe"',e"
-room of the Union.
cape, and uttered Gott in Him-- :
Independent, were elected freshmen
futfltuCdeT who have Cleu
wld
nn tv.A hauic f shnlar. rpnnspntatir
tn thA rfurf.nf. Imk.
mol" under his breath. He had
by about five mm faUed. he missed
personality, leadership, and lature Tuesday by a handful of
T. B. Bryant Jr.. Sigma Alpha gerannterests, the pledges stand.their classmates.
C1A
utes. but a significant thing hap-- ,
. ...... .
. i.
ji
.
nill(T COlranSea.' Frwilrr
Qrtc unH GfimpM oninr i
thA hill
rt,..u t v.
luinn
.v- r
"
!U1 Ulr upycl
uniy vu iresnmen, slightly more Tne parade will start at 10 a.m.
the first thing to fall was a picture 10reasics and
senlw class or the upper
service.
7 per cent of the class en- - 0n west Main street and is expected
than
i
on the wall. The portrait
Freelon Hunter, commerce senior,101 the junior class and must have rollment, attended Tuesdays mass to last until 10:30 a.m.
Adolf Hitler.
a scholastic standing better than 2. meetiug in Memorial hall.
scholarship and social service.
All Army officers and ROTC stu- LAST MINT'TE FLASHES:
Ballots canied names of three dents are especially invited to at- Morry Holcomb, Phi Kappa Tau,' Officers and members of the ac- Fiankfort With 3649 precinHs
men,
Ammons.
John tend a special Armistice service to
st
student, forensicsi tive chapter of Tau Beta Pi, one of freshmen
f
ol the tctal cf 4.34. already counted.
the oldest honoraries on the cam- - Prewitt, and James C. Rinehart.lbe held Sunday morning in the
Keen, ubJica(jons '
(he Democratic candidate.
,
.
r(.iPus, are John Russell, president ;; and three freshmen women. Miss church or the Good Shepherd.
jr
emDers seiecieo
John n, led hb. Republican oppoii- -Harry Weaks vice.president; L. M. Angle. Patricia Snider, and Mabel Bishop H. P. Almon Abbott of the
Swope by a margin of 95,- Dr. enry Beaumont, associate pro-- BaUard recordmg secretary; D. K. Warnecke.
ent Kine
Freshmen 'cast their! Lexington diocese of the Episcopal
604 ictes. which practically aured
Blythe, corresponding secretary; G. voles for one man and one woman. church wiU conduct.
joniiMi... ...c
vMioiy lor
iw. Kurachek, cataloger; E. C. Rail- - One vote decided the contest for
u uit .mcr
won pracucaiiy
ihciiiuci
uiueu iiunoraiy
e
treasurer: and Hal Scrugham the man renresentaUve
were subject to the James Park, Lexington lawyer. A onj p i pihpr
offices which
28 of the 38 seiU
ilccticn, taking
Dr. B. P. Ramsay, professor of
in the state senate and "0 of the
TO QUIZ
hysics
ke
the ohio
of Trustees, and Phi Delta Theta.
1000 places in the house.
.
tiicir seieuuuna, news ieaK.ea out Physics club Saturday, November 4,
)
ODK pledges will meet at noon
Keen Johnson is an alumnus of
before the meeting that Rinehart
at Findlay College. His subject covthe I'niversity, and a former mem- today in the director's office in the
was one of the three men's candi- - ered ''Demonstrajtion
Lectures at
ber cf the Kerne, staff. He was Union for tapping ceremonies. Pic- Engineering
students match! datss, because several freshmen, the University of Kentucky."
president of the alumni association tures on page 4.
He explained how the lecture
and active in university affairs for
fessor Quiz contest" to be featured tions to vote for "the engineering sheets come in a series of 92
e
years after his graduation.
several
at the Tau Beta Pi engineers' hop candidate."
Engineering freshmen
outlines, containing the lecture
graduate
also
Kine Swrpr is
tonight in the Engineering were especially in evidence at the material and illustrations. Prepared
He was a Jaw
of the I'niversity.
building.
meeting, observers reported.
by Dr. Ramsay and Dr. W. S.
very acstudent and, like Johnson,
John Russell, Tau Beta Pi presi- Candidates were chosen by the Webb, these lecture sheets have atdent, as Professor Quiz, will find election board from the 21 fresh-- ! tracted nation-wi- de
tive about the campus. I'ntil recentattention among
out how much students and pro-- men who ranged in the first decile college and high school physics
ly, Swope was a circuit court judge
lessors know about general subjects. on all three classification tests.
in this region.
teachers.
In the Lexington city election,
Havely was voted in as
T. Ward
mayor, but the $500,009 bond issue
The University Philharmonic orto provide funds for the construction
of a municipal auditorium was re- chestra, conducted by Prof. Carl A,
Lampert, head of the music de- jected.
partment, will present the second
of this season's series of Sunday
Afternoon Musicales at 4 p. m.
...
Sunday in Memorial hall. The con- cert will be open to the public
without charge.
Kv KOII AMMONS
In recent years the orchestra
under the leadership of Professor
QUESTION
Concurring in the belief that
"Do you lavor subzidatiou of col- Lampert has grown from a small
America mu&t remain at peace, but
chamber ensemble to an orchestra
I.
lege football players?"
'.
r2
...t.
of full symphonic strength. Primary
t , 1 differing as to how that peace is to
be preserved, Historian Dr. J. Huntlorn Bowling. Engineering junior purpose of the orchestra is to servj
ley Dupre and Political Scientist
S
"If it will make a good team, sure, ts a medium for students in music
team to obtain training in ensemble
Dr. Amry Vandenbosch met in a
It takes a
to put a college on the map. Phi playing. Faculty and townspeople
neutrality debate Wednesday afterBeta Kappa won t."
noon in the first year room of the
also play each year.
"It
Ed Short, A & S sophomore
Law building.
Chosen by Conductor Lampert
seems to me that football is just for Sunday's program are:
Arranged by the University's Inactiv
as much an
Overture (Russian and Ludmilla)
ternational Relations club, the disity as others which are not tubzi- Qjjnjja
cussion was attended by such an
dizea. ijiee ciuo memoers, oiuaem.
Walter's Prize Song from "The
unexpectedly large number of stuGovernment officials and other such Mastersingers
of Nuremberg"
dents and faculty members, that it
are not subzidized.
students
tn
Was nwpvtflm r cVift
Mary Hieronymous. Ag sophomore WaSer.
a larger room than that scheduled
Polonaise from the opera "Christ
"Yes. That's the only way to bring
:
Night"
:
in order to accomodate the crowd.
in better material for a better team." mas
Slavonic Rhapsody No. 2 Friede- Doctor Vandenbosch stated as his
Commerce
William
Maxedon.
thesis on "The New Neutrality Act"
sophomore "Pay them $2,000 a year
Traumerie-Romanzi
tlm r,tii,tis,., lliULt. iUUlll II1C 1UI1I1C1
- Schumann.
..... unuuu i
for the risk they take."
arms embargo and the current
Bob Jones, A & S Junior "To a 'String Ensemble )
Waltz-Talfrom the Vienna
cerlam degree. Board, room, tuition.
law are undesir- Fur him, the arms embargo.
books, and a little spending money." Woods Strauss
(Continued on Page Three)
For him, international law.

.......

Fer Big Shindig
Tomorrer
Come Stag er Drag,
Says Posters

law college.
"ki-- 4
.
r
i-Approved by the legislature were
the presidential appointments to the
finance committee of John Boles.
senior in the college of commerce
and John Morgan, senior in the
arts and sciences college.
The legislature likewise approved
the appointments to the social
committee of Susan Jackson, senior
in the arts and sciences college;
Mary Duncan, junior in the arts
and sciences college; and James
Wine and Morry Holcomb, both
first year law students. Miss Dun- can is the only one of the four appointees who is a member of the
legislature.
The above appointments and ap- provals completed the selection of
the personnel of the finance and
Elected to the
social committes.
welfare committee were: Jim Cald-- i
ell, junior, chairman; Lida Belle
Howe, sophomore; Barbara MacVey,
senior; Harriet Hendershot. senior;
John Lovett, junior; and Tom
Bowling, junior. The first five mem-- 1
bers are students in the arts and
sciences college, while Bowling is
an engineering student.
'
Mary Lou McFarland, senior in
the arts and sciences college, was
named chairman of the committee
on student standards. Majority of
the members of this group are as
T--- .'
a
r
M
t
yet unselected.
'
arts and
Harry Zimmerman,
f sciences senior, was selected- - ser- -i
geant-at-arof the legislature.
Next meeting of the legislature
is called at 5 p. m. Thursday. Nov- hen faujjhl by the Kernel
was husky Footballer Larry Spears
mber 16. in the first year room of
Canirraman yesterday in a rather premature ci IfbratiiMi of Sadie Hawkins
the law building.
"I.onnd-dogs- "
Day.
in the piiture are: Dorothy Beelor. .Alpha X. Delta:
Louise Bailey, Kappa Delta, and Mattis;ene Halmore. Independent.
'

(S

Keys Importin' Trask

A Tree . . .

respectively

"

Chooses Two Faculty,;

leadership

elected

"Rabbit" Up

i

)

'

were

'Secretary and treasurer of the Uni-- '.
ersity student body at a meeting of
the student legislature late yester- -'
day in the first year room of the

f
-

A

Ruth Clay Palmer, senior in the
arts and sciences college, and C. P.
Johnson, senior in the commerce

;

j

rtnti-- n

KERNEL

Y

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

By JIM WOOLDRIDGE

beer-cell-

FRIDAY ISSUE
SEMI-WEEKL-

Theater Tickets
Will Be Given
To 50 Sadies
Fifty local Sadie Hawkins'
the opportunity to
take their choices to the theater without too much embarrassment to the budget tomorrow. Numbered circulars
will be distributed to day at
the Union and the University
post office. If the numbers
coincide with those posted at
the Ben Ali theater Saturday,
holders cf the luclty circulars
will be presented with guest
tickets to Deanna Durbins
"First Love."

'

Suky's specially chartered Georgia bound "Kentucky Limited'' will
lour out of Southern Station to- niSnt at 10 o'clock with some 500
students and townspeople aboard,
It will tear through the South-th- e
lands all night in order to reach
tomorrow's football capital, Atlan-a- t
ta. in time for the
gia Tech game.
Afer bidding the Wildcats fare-o.en until tomorrow, the students
will board the waiting express which
will carry them directly to Atlanta.
A phonograph
will provide music
for those who wish to dance in the
baagae car. Suky members will
sell soft drinks and candy.
Reservations,
at $6.00 tor the
round trip, will be accepted until
the time the train leaves if there
are any available, tt was announced
today by Suky president Bill Eider.
Any reservations
that have not
been taken up by 5:00 p. m. today
will be sold.
A special desk will be placed at
the statlon to sell tickets and to
give general mtormation. Elder add- ed. There are about 50 original
tickets still unsold.
Tlie ' Best Band In Dixie'' will
occupy a special car of the train.
I" car one there will be members;
mea and KaP"
o the A!'a Tau
prt Delhi fraternities and in car two
those of Triangle. Phi Kaooa Tau
and Sisma Alpha Epsilon. Kappa
Aipha and Pi Kappa Alpha will
occupy tar three. Independents and
other fraternities will be in car four
and four more cars will be reserved
for towivpeople
The train will leave Atlanta late
Saturday night to return to Lexington.
Kentucky-Geor-Kast-

Thty is even importin'' some famous people fer to judge as to who
will win the prizes, which will be
S3 fer the best couple pud SJ fer
the best single person S.;m.s line
some big band leader feUer. Hume
o' Clyce Trask. with a vocalist
twhutever thet may be and a man
name o' Tiny Page will be judges.
They will be six "no breaks says
which uon :
this organizashun.
sound so good fer us as wiU get
"dragged. " Each one of the men-- 1
folk must be tagged by the gal on
Friday or Saturday, with a tag
thet they kin purchase fer ten
cents, accordin' ter the plans, but
us menfolks will have ter be cotched
first.

le

n

Kampus
Kernels
j

NYA timesheets are due in
Dean T. T. Jones office by Tuesday noon. November 11.

I'MOX NOTES
Today
3 to
m., 205.
Swimming team, arsity members
4 to 5 p. m 204.
Carnesie musicale. opera "M.ir
rfage of Figaro." Mozart. 7:30 p. m .
music room.

Student council committee,

4 p.

Saturday

Sadie Hawkins' dance, a to 12
midnight, ballroom.
University discussion group. 12
m., 23A- AT 1MVERSI1Y OF NEVADA
Monday
Mr Jumes Graves Scrugham,
1900. now living in Reno. Nev.. will
Phi Beta. 5 to 8 p. in.. L14
repre.-eBaptist Student Union. 5 to 6 p
the University December 15. at the inauguration of Leon m.. 205.
Wilson Hartnian as president of the
(.Continued on Page Four
University of Nevada.

will have

nt

--

t ill DELTA PHI TO MELT
Chi Dtlta Phi, national women's
iiterary society, will meet at 7:15
Monday night in the Union building.
Women wishing to have manuscripts
up for consideration must submit
them before the meeting.

Permission Needed
Notice has been received from the
dean of women's office tnat women
who plan to attend the Georgia
Tech fame most have special permission from their homes.

* oesi uopy Available
mR

Pae Tut
When one consider

the case and faciliiv ol
(hanging, lundameulallv. each eniering freshman (lass in the long span of four wars,
lailuie ol imisi piolessors is apparent. No
niiiatlc. no iuieuse cllori is required 10 awaken

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
NFWQPAPFR

OFFICIAL

Pt'lil TP?Fn

OF THR PTDDFNTS
OF KENTUCKY

PFMI WFFKI Y

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THE SCHOOL YFAR
PERIODS

fXCKPT HOLIDAYS OR EXAMINATION

MATtOfetit.

av

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National Advertising Service, Ittc,

lake

olttK( Ptrttrthen Rtflresrtttatrvt
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sa Fmancisco
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(loki

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$2 00 Onf Year
One Sotr.pster

I'dilor
M)iuigii Fditnr
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00

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win ion
Lxxiwiv

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II. Mori.xn

on

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Sports Editor
Circulation Manager
Cartoons
Staff Photogra pher
Society Editor
Advertising Manager

LOfTPE CAt BERT

-

,

AT'T? A I.F.F LYONS
MABEL LOX'EKS

I

ase

as

rctcni

JIM CALDWELL
Assistant SoriPtv Editor
Proofreader
-

Reporter

Copyreaders

Ai mist

lit-

u

hour

ihe eleventh nionth.
VikI ii is luting that on do so.
I 01
I am ihe
imisiicc.
Ii was I who drought to an end the World
l mortal
W ar. tntaicst
conllitls.
Ii was I who enslaved '"lineni respite" on
lilt tomb ol jjreatel (.crtnanv.
II was I who calked the muzzles of the rrcai
;nns. hailed he rae and the plunder ol inrescued
the
armies.
vadium
m
""Ixouih ol all naiions Ironi the
eleventh da

i lie-

!

l

.

harhed u ire and the shrapnel
the unci writ hins ol ihe
'
fl wounded and (he hiihhlx brcaih- ol I lie nassed.
(ut Iron) tin present e ol ltcaih I brought
jIh iii and rcsioicd iheni to their homes to res)
in assured Kaic.
Ii was I who blasted lorcxcr the nauseating
Icais. the amnions haired, the vulgar emotion
alisnt which enslave the minds of men in limes
ol war.
I. the Annisiiie. ended all lliis.
Or did -- !..!..
'

3 and

1

How Happj7 Their
Lives Must Be!
behind the limes

he who tears lo wax enihusiasiic over ihai which he secret I approves.
Manv siudeuis on ihe campus, in an effort to
avoid in ing dublcd seni hncntalists or inid- u !ui i.m idealists have turned to cvnicism. a
lidiculoiis and illogual dcsiructivc criticism of
i vci wiling to which their minds inrn.
I lit v
sincere in opinions on
hesitate to
ainpus life and affairs. I hev tear to be "caught"
ai praising a plav. piiiure. Inxtk.
iiptii-- i
llu new govern
liathii.
bin
it ii (liiitisms. in ihe
ii.iiii.
eiiia(iilar ol ihiir own tvnuism.
"siink. " Ii is no longer smart lo
.
be (vnwat.
and tear-lessis

-

l'

.

sione-heai'led-

2

i liaps.
he a til ol his v nical a il ude lies.
in oik u lit l ion ol a oil lege cd lira ion
lo Ic a h
siii(!(iiis to riii(i(. lo view lile realist it alls
bin a (Icar distinction has nol been drawn between ( t il i( ism and ( v ni( isiu. I bus. lor the colli gc siudenl. i onsiriK l ivc or desirtu t ivc trili-- i
ism has loo tit(juenilv degenerated li desirut-liv- t
(vni(ism: a us( It ss. impractical tirade ol
lauli finding against evervthing. and a general
si'i it toil ol tlx philosophv. "What ever il is. I'm
I

I

I

I

I

I

.

:t

u.

'

ii!

i

luiKiion ol a (ollcgc etlut ai ion. lo Itaili
lilt; siutltul lo view lile realist it allv and si ieu
IiIh.iI'v in tin light ol nt vv and old fads, is a
worihuhile objcitivi. out lliat will help lit
i!n siiitlcni to glow uioiallv and iniellei I uallv
I.tt us nol iM'ivtii lie lunt lion. -- I.. (.'..
I

hile walking up Short street vcsicrdav we
noted a sign that read: "Come In
Let Us I'av
our I axes." W'e didn't have lime lo stop since
we were in something ol a hum. but we haven't
U en able lo get the thing oil our mind.
Taxes are bad. Thcv cost monev. and (hat's
bad. .Iiut we. Ix'ing a hangover from the
sihool lhat believed government
should Ik' paid lor. tan see the oint in favor
ol taxes.
Mr. Morgenlhaii. who is secret ar of ihe
iieasurv, told newsmen in Vashingion vesierdav
lhat ihe national debt was 41 billion dollars.
I ranklv
of a lot of monev.
speaking, ihis is a h
It means thai everv man. woman and child in
these I'nited Slates will have lo pav the government S.f I2.(iti lo pav ihe national debt. (This
doesn't include interest, since we have never
Ik en good al figuring interest.)
We don't know what Mr. Franklin I). Roosevelt thinks alxiul ihis. but it worries us. And
we think something should lie clone alxitit it.
Obviously the onlv thing lo do is lo pav the
debt, and lo do that we must have more taxes.
As soon as we get lime we are going; to write
lo our' Congressman and tell him lo lew a lot
more laxrv
Then we'll go down lo lhat plate on Short
street lhat says "Let I's Pay Your Taxes" and
say io them. "You pav cm budtlv. i hex 're loo
lough for me."
W

ii.

t

C. ECKDAH1

Ik

The

following

t

mimii nitpie

has lx'cn

re-

ceived:
"Dear Andrew.
" Hi Yo Silverman awav' xouisell
right
bat k at ion. T.nough is enough. Mv digniiv is
scriouslv impaired each time a 'hi
apjxars at the end ol vour cute (plug) column.
usi think, I spend a whole week building up
fit- dignilied
aliunde Ixlilling a (ahem) graduate student, ignoring jeers and hoisex rcmai ks.
and vou. vou termite in ihe foundaiion of mv
reputation. nr awav ai mv digniiv on Tritlav.
I am xvorried.
Mow long, oh Andrew, how long
will this go oiir
"I'robablv voul oldesi .'(g reader.
"Grace Silverman
"I". S. Mow tlitl vou ever gel thai haircut vou
needed anil asked me to give vou!--"
Well, that seems to be that, but the thought
ol abandoning "Mi Yo Silverman" is driving us
(

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at ie.

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All About These
Wide-Awak-

Freshmen

e

past, this pa pi i has saitl halsh
lliiii.'s alxml llie etlut al ional program and is
iaiid.ii'l bt.ntis. the piolessors. ol the I'niver-'i- i
ol Kt nliukv. but what has already passed
bt ntaih Hit bridge is as a lain (Imp tompaicd
lo tin II(khI now toming.
i

linns

iii ilit

liititlenlal iulormai ion: he I iger. student
iuwspaxT al Clemson college, has a soticiv
editor bv ihe name ol I'.aiiicv Marshall. And
Alexander John Cwiadovvski writes a coluiifti
lor llie I 'nivetsilv ol Kot liesit r pap
W'e'ie not living lo ;ci personal or anxihiii",.
bill where is the stutleiu dircelotvr

bitause ol llie letter We prinlrd above, we
tan'i sav it. bin vou know what xve're thinking
as vvc end ihis (oliinin.

as they encourase their team with
(a F!CHT TEAM FIGHT :'orm.i:ion
and .hen lean forward in your seal
as thfy strut into their UK formation
'Then Drum
Bruce Sullivan
will mutter. "Sing to them Sam'"
;and from the come: of soloist Sam
Rainey will come the sweet, senti- nou-of My Old Kentucky
Home."
The program will close as the
bandmen turn and leave the field
to "On On UK."
Precetling the game the Urlver-sitband will jo.n with thai of
Georgia Tech in presenting an Ar-- J
mist ice day program, during which
,the colors will be presented.
j

y

j

My attention was called to the
November 3 letter of Peter A. Gra-gis- .
printed in the Kernel.
After seeing the recent version
of "All Quiet on the Western Front."
and recalling my ROTC experiences at the University, I think his
attack on that group is somewhat
justified. Personally. I liked the
personnel of the ROTC. But I
winced at seeing a freshman, who
had fainted in the hot sun from
wearing a wool shirt and wool coat
in accordance with regulations (not
in accordance with the temperature!, being forced back into drill
after a glass of water and little
fanning. I can't say that it hurt
him any. but it seemed pretty tough.
My instructor was as fine a man
as I ever met. but he had the old
For the second consecutive year. Miss Hawkins has army idea of roughing it. It was
graciously consented to pose for the artist. Modestly recog-- 1 not simply a teaching of the eleof military drill and
nizini": the indescribable force of her profile. Miss Hawkins! mental
it was a systematic grind
decided upon a side view for the current work. Consistently; prepared to make the student think
abreast of the times, she illustrates in this portrait the' that nothing was better than war
hair, the current emphasis on! than more of it . . . furthermore,
.tendency toward
We that war" was "justified" by anyprominent features, and the swing to Adams-apple- s.
er
dresses are. thing from personal insult to nabeads and
also see that buck-berr- y
'definitely-"in.Unfortunately, Miss Hawkins would not tional aggravation.
relax her clasped hands because of the strain which she un-- j I am a fighting Irish PresbyI bedergoes as the time for the chase approaches. The decided terian, intensely patriotic. Lincoln,
America,
with
eyes was maintained by placing a man in her lieve in people Butand do not belive
sparkle in her
in the
I
line of vision.
in war except in the most extreme
cases
those cases being limited
to il
internal civil struggle or
i2
to defend, literally, our own
shores or boundaries or those of
directly neighboring countries, from
aggression that would endanger
ourselves. Neither of these cases
By JIM CALDWELL
indicate that I think we should
fight in Europe. Asia. Africa, or the
Arctic.
on a mysterious something called
If this be treason, it's too bad
I still shall say that if Congress dewhich is found in textbooks
"fusion"
clares we should fight a war again,
anywhere but in the Americas. I
would just as soon fight the ConCollegians universally show a tendency to criticise those gressmen as the enemy. That,
who occupy places just above them. Some of this criticism gentlemen, summarizes my senti'is sinceresome a direct result of "feeling their oats," and ment!
Sincerely.
some an attempted covering up of their own shortcomings.
ROBERT W. SHIELDS
The second type is probably the most common. Students
Seymour, Indiana
days usually can find some
jin their grade and high-scho-

COMK TO

BENTON'S
Sandwiches

Cold Drinks

DRIVE IN SERVICi:

LAKK I'AUK ROAD

Right or Wrong?
A

test for telephone users

ute

Rft

"

Campuscene

ivKB

ft

Lv

Li! ks:.;,Lu,,X
network program are timw
milleil from lnlii to broaoinAtinjE
l:ition on regular telephone cirrmt.
WRONG C
RIGHT

2. RaHio

Bell Telephone engineer are ma Iking exhaustive utmlies nf solar (lata
from olnervatorieaall over the worM.
WRONG Zl
RfCHT
1.

r

...

I

ol

fault with their immediate superiors, but they seldom ex- press their opinions on the matter, either because they do
not yet know, how to word their complaints, or because they
have a fear of being looked upon as
However, the new
"insubordinate."
feeling of freedom which an Indi
vidual acquires upon entering col
lege causes him to be just a trifle
cocky in his attitude toward his
Later on. this feeling
teachers.
dropped, and the attitude assumed,
if any, tends to become one of
riasonaoie criticism.
Last veai we noticed quite a bit
of bo:h varieties
of
on the part of the student body,
nith teaching methods. This session,
for some strange and inexplicable
rcason. the general opinion seems to
be that the ins:ruction itself is all
right, and that it is the textbooks
that are at fault. The criticism most

Bandsmen
Will Strut

At Georgia Tech

tr.mpCiary textbooks, it should offer at least some consolation that
perhaps their wailing isn't in vain
atter all
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yjroVai
Youthful Violinist,
d
Is

s;R

i

I

Well-Receive-

fault-findin-

B tun ptr-.t- .
do not tit the patterns followed in
a professors lectures. Whereas the

e.xPir.-sr-a

By LOUISE C ALBERT
Incredibly young, yet with the
, spasoned flnd mature con- cert artist was Robert Virovai.
inist Xuesday niaht. at the opening

.ormance

of

the

Corn-

1939-4-

-

munity Concert serx?s.
A yjolinlst well schooled i