xt7v154dpk6d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v154dpk6d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19450817 newspapers sn89058402 English Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, August 17, 1945 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 17, 1945 1945 2013 true xt7v154dpk6d section xt7v154dpk6d fjy nvaiiauic The Kentucky Kernel 9 (D IP TO VOLUME XXXV LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY. FRIDAY, AUG. Z34 1 here are words that have , ereat meaning for us: truth hanrv o j honesty, faith, love. Peace is such a word, a word we appreciate just now more than ever before. For a long time peace has been absent from our world. It was a thing we took for granted before the paper hanger of Germany destroyed the tranquillity of our universe that September morn in 1939. Peace slipped away from us before we were aware it had gone. Then came war with its death and destruction and since then we have known but little except blood, sweat and tears. Most of us did not realize what a blessing jeace really is until it had disappeared from the face of the earth. But at last PEACE has returned. Now we know what it means, how blessed peace really is. We breathe a silent prayer of thanksgiving for its return. Ix-- t us also highly resolve that we shall work incessantly to maintain jeae on earth and good will among men. Once again we can return to the normal, constructive activities of life. At last, the soldier can lay down his arms. The laborer can return to his shop, the farmer to his farnuthe student to his books-- all to their home and loved ones. In war, the University gave much it its time and attention to activities related to the .war. It will now devote all its energies and resources to the education of the returning soldiers and sailors and civilians. We welcome to the campus the veterans who have brought peace to the world and kept men free. H. L. DONOVAN. President University of Kentucky f U ; rf- - Meyer, Ted H. Pride, Lewis B. Young, George O. Reagan, Cornelius L. Wright, Walter F. Nisbett, Sam T, Jr. Smith, Charles A. DeHaven, Ben P. Ware, Ras S., Jr. Rohs, Karle H. Dr. Ellis Adams Fuller Fuller To Speak At Commencement Senior Grades To Be In Monday Stone, Donald J. Alexander, Robert W. Gardner, Andrew J. Beaseley, Virgil K. Hill Fred B. Bywaters, William B. Montgomery, John W. Lawrence, George S. Crowe, R. Lee Bach, William B. Popplewell, Wilbur H. Stephenson, William L. Barclay, Lindsay H. Wallace, Joseph R. Rehm, Walter G. Van Arsdall, Marion C. Cole, John S. Winfree, Benj. S., Jr. Cog dill, Alfred John White, John K. Wiggin, Edwin P. Walter high-intensi- ty I . bad-weat- Clarke, Carl M. Darris, Donald H. Rowe, A. Thomas Buckley, Sidney Gallee, Phillip R, Jr. Mull Ins, Harry C. Hillard, George E. ' Walker, Allen F. Benton, Mortimer M. Updike, Edwin B., Kittinger, William C. Kees, Frank J. Candioti, Charles F. Dean, Ralph L. Jackson, Stonewall Wilson, Harry B., Jr. McGinnis, Joseph J. Calvert, Reynolds in Hunt, Phillip W. Former Student Is Home After Lighting Aleutians Hargett, Paul M. Suter, William W. Imwall, William F. Grogan, Robert S. Bowling, William A. Mayo, Richard E. Hatter, Emmett P. Steele, Henry P. Gholson, Edward L. Conner, Edwin F. Theis, Francis W. Adams, William F. Riley, Thomas R. Boyd, Harry M. Thomas, Robert D. University Studio Records News Flashes And News Broadcasts From Networks And Shortwave For Five Days And Nights "S0THE7 ! By Casey Goman The University radio station, WBKY, was the scene of continuous monitoring of the air waves, beginning Friday morning at 7 o'clock, when the first news of the Jap surrender message came over the network. At that time the three By Shirley Meister "Hallicrafters," the studio's short This survey was taken on Monday, wave and domestic monitoring radios, were turned on. each on a the day before J Day. Question: How do you think the different station, and the direct V- -J University should celebrate line of the American Broadcasting Day? company was "jacked In" to a Hoyt NoUe, Commerce, Senior: speaker. One radio was kept conthey ought to declare a holiday so tinually on WHAS, one on WLW, to that everyone can go home and re- catch CBS and NBC news, and the joice. other wandered over the short waves Bill Plazer, ASTR: I think every- of the world. thing should go on as usual. Earphones grew permanently to Roger Perry. AST: I think we the heads of the listening six, as furlough. ought to get a ten-da- y Arabia, Tokyo, Russia, France, LonTom Parry, Eng, freshman: First don, Berlin, Australia, Manila, all two-dholiday we should have a peoples of the world came in on Thursday and Friday and then the through the loudspeakers and were have a gigantic party. preserved on the records. Stuart Foehr, AST: We all should get drunk. The six student members of the Clayton Powers, Eng, freshman: station's engineering staff worked Dismiss school and let everybody in shifts, so that two operators were in attendance at all times durcelebrate as they please. Note: It seems that the idea of a ing the five day period of waiting. two-da- y holiday and diversified Three recording units were set up for operation at all times and it personal celebration won out. V-- ay 38 Peace has come to a weary war - torn world and the University together with all other institutions and people lifts its heart with prayers of thanks that the bitter struggle which has continued for v so long is over at last and men and women can once again plan for a normal happy life the expected life for an American. We cannot truly rejoice at this moment of happiness without rememl)ering those students and staff members who gave their si, lives that this ieace might finally be ours. To them we owe a debt that can never be paid in dollars but only by continued I striving to create and keep this world a safe and peaceful place for democracy to reign. To those men who died for this cause, we gratefully dedicate this edition of The Kernel. Gross, Leslie M. Bullock, Harry E. Garner, Howard R. Jacobs, Mark Elmer Smith, Tyron W. Evans, John R., Jr. Archdeacon, John L. Estes, James A. Johnson, Emery H. Dr. Ellis Alams Fuller, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, will address the graduates of the University at the summer graduation convocation at 7:30 p.m., August 24, in Memorial hall amphitheater. Lt. H. Lester Reynolds, a specialist Approximately 120 undergraduate lighting for the j in Johnson Is and graduate students will hear Dr. Navy s Bureau of Aeronautics, was Fuller speak on "Come, Let's Go in Lexington last week on his way Missing In Action Dr. H. L. Donovan, Walter Johnson, Jr, seaman 1c, Together." to his home in Tyner, Ky. His work in experimental lighting in the a former University student, has president of the University, will Aleutians has made safer landing been reported missing in action present the diplomas to the gradufor Army and Navy pilots in that since the sinking of the cruiser ates, and the invocation and beneIndianapolis when it was torpedoed diction will be pronounced by Dr. area. July 30. William Clayton Bower, professor By means of special lights which are among aviation's Johnson was a member of the emeritus of religious education at latest advances against the hazards Basketball team while at the the University of Chicago. flying, it is now of (Continued on Page Three) possible for pilots to see their way even in low visibility. Reynolds was commended by the commanding general of the Alaska Department for his work. He is stationed here as specialist on high intensity lighting for the Bureau of (Continued on Page Four) high-intensi- ty NUMBER 17, 1945 Ford, Bascom E. Wilson, John D. Hackney, Harold T. Congleton, Clayton C, Jr. Eyl, William R. Barnett, Paul T. Rogers, Fred C. Larew, Lewis M. Manning, Vernon M. Peltus, Alfred Baker, James W. Caldwell, William L. King, James L. Brady, Fred G., Jr. Shain, Layman E. Gentry, George W. Sanders, Russell A. Henshaw, John W. Melloan, Berry E. Johnstone, William J. Goforth, James W. Howington, Orville J. Cundiff, Morton A. Johnston, Henry H., Jr. Blantan, William L., Jr. Young, Paul S. Gardner, Charles L. Hudson, John R. Cook, Billy B. Perman, Stanley W. Shadwick, Othar R. Dever, Harold S. (Contiued on P. 3) Attention, Seniors! Graduates may obtain caps and gowns in the campus bookstore at any time from Wednesday, August 22, until graduation, upon payment of a three dollar was possible to flip a switch and man, American newsmen, and the record any of the news coming in people of the United States; the over the three radios and the net- peoples of France, and of Germany, work line at any time throughout The generals of the Allies gave their .victory messages, and UK listened the day and night. The first day the schedule became and recorded, for evidence and re- arranged so that not too many memberance of how the citizens of students were away from the studio the world felt when a war, or even at class at any one time, and the part of one, ends. The documentary records telling watching and waiting fell into a pattern. Jim Hisle, Charles Craig, the history of peace possibly the Bob Westerfield. and Jim Brown greatest peace of all time are coi spent each night at the studios, plete. From the first news sleeping in hour and a half shifts, from Domi, through every false so that each might rest a little, but 'alarm, to the actual tolling of Big so that the news, if it came in from 'Ben in London, and the playing of Tokyo, could be recorded. As the the combined national anthems of building opened for classes in the Great Britain, the United States, morning the feminine members of Russia, and China; from the awful the staff appeared with hot coffee, moment when Bob Trout read the bread and jam, or anything else of surrender acceptance flash, then said, "Hold that flash and an eatable nature for the men. One hundred and nine hours and reiterated its falsity, to the ansixteen of continuous nouncement from the White House minutes operation were logged over the five-d- that the war is officially and period, for both equipment and actually over he University radio j studios, personnel. with its engineering staff The same students made a com- of six students, have recorded for plete set of documentary records of future generations to hear, all that the V-- J day proclamations, cele- transpired in those days of strain In pand suspense. brations, and announcements. These records are available at that set of records speaks Winston Churchill, King George, and the the University radio studios in Mc-Vhall. people of London; President Tru ' j ' ill ..." ay , ey deposit. Mr. Morris will open the bookstore after graduation, August 24, to enable the graduates to return the gowns that night The deposit will be refunded at that time. Kampus Kernels Reception . . . for all summer school graduates will be held Thursday in Jewell hall. Veterans Club . . . will meet at 7 p. m. Monday in Room 206 of the Union to plan for the fall quarter. Baptist Students . . . will meet at 7:15 today on the steps of the Union to go to the home of Rev. Othar Smith for a discussion group. Vesper Services . . . sponsored by the BSU. will be held at 6:30 Wednesday on the Union balcony. Rev. David Sageser, Methodist Youth Director, will be the speaker. * Best Copy Available THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Page Two Friday, August 17. 1943 SurMeis'ing The Kentucky Kernel By Shirley Meister OF KENTUCKY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY Krr.toArZOZITZ, Bettve Pr. Son Lrxlnston Board of Commerce Kentucky Prnn Association National Editorial Association JUNE M. 8TJB8CRIPTIOH on. aart-- RATES On. Tear lJ. Managing Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Business Manager Catherine Coman Dick Lowe Pecgv Watkins Rr PORTERS Meister, Adele Derrman. Jimmy Bi" Y!0?- - Billii ,Helen Dorr. Beverly Brown. Floye Mulunaux. Tommy Gisn. Shirley s X Editor Hunt Bake V r PUBLISHED WEEKLY DURWO THE SCHOOL TEAR EXCEPT HOLIDAYS OR EXAMINATION PERIODS SP. Fih"' n Kational MvertisingSeniceJuc Cttif Pntlisttn ttpmmnv Niw York. h. T. 4IO Madison Avi. f .re to be considered the oninions of the writers themselves, end do not necetsaritt reflect the opinion The Kernel. All eionet articles and colvmnt (I j The Salt Shaker By Billie Fischer At last we have an excuse forw- writing a sloppy column. What with j to get them to take them anymore, the Peace news and all that went In fact we've trained one attendant with it, we completely forgot that to demand a stamp each time he there was such a thing as The fills 'er up. We loved Lexington the afternoon Kernel. So this is being written a day after the dead line while the that The News came through. It press is warming up and the printers seemed as if all of the city was getting married. Faces were so wonder-ful- y are setting their type and teeth. animated, and actions were so When we heard The News on August 14, one of the first thoughts very warm. (And liquor stores were to enter our curly little head was so very shut.) We heard of a soldier that with no more war there would standing on a crowded street who be nothing to blame everything on. dashed past three pretty girls to kiss For almost four years everything a policeman! from A to Z has been blamed on tc the war. But now our worries are We had many lovely things planover. We can blame everything on ned for this week's column, but our the Peace. came to little brain is on a holiday, so well The second thought that radio have to use other people's brain us after that even though we've sunk bulletin was the gas rationing situ- work. But stuff, we haven't sunk to to stealing ationwhich seems laughable now plagiarizing. We consider it most that we're looking back on it. But to tell you that we that very morning we had received magnanimous the folowing. A weak- fifty gallons worth of stamps from didnt write wrote it. the OPA. We thought it was rather minded friend rationing Just nasty of them to lift Do not be anneud when we were beating the racket, By teachings of Freud; so we're continuing to use our He praised the Czechs stamps. Of course the attendants at And talks about szechs; filling stations dont seem to underBut he isn't as doethe stand that it gives us a sense of As poems by Goethe. superiority to have so many stamps, we dont have to twist their arms Happy J Day! ! ! but ar 7 -- By Adele Dcnman. 1. long-await- ed V-- V-- V-- The Monument ... A Modern Fable j de The Store With The All Class Door 105 East Main Street Lexington, Ky. Phone 853 bUsi Spots Believe me when I tell you that getting news is hard. This time when I would ask people what was new in the gossip line, they just laughed, and screamed, 'Happy J Holiday". Few people celeprated the news with anyone different, the celebrations seemed to patch up old quarrels, make new friends and help everyone in general to forget everything, including gossip, so if the news is sparce this week, all I can say is "Happy J Holiday." 2. Those who go steady, those who have rings, and those who have committed marriage: Doc Morgan and Gwen Petrey have been going together for two quarters now, they haven't been mentioned in this column, so a week after they have patched up a quarThe Pharoah gave an order, rel, I mention them, but nevertheme the most enduring 'ound on "Make for unblemished surface less they are good kids, and the war monument of all times. of the horizon. Pharoahs died and and their quarrel are over now. Slaves set about to execute his others took their places. Cheers! (in the background). commands . . . When the designs was completed, Long chains of sweating, strain- and the scale reached, no man could ing humanity, bearing burdens of remember its purpose. No man was drying and settling the mortar, but rock upon smooth, black shoulders living to give it meaning. Only the the sands began to cover it, for they moved like the blood in tiny veins dead could tell how it was built must bury the dead it represented. toward the mighty artery of the (and they had no voice. Years passed. great questions to Nile, to the spot where the Pharoah nothing! the enigma of the past and man There it stood meaning had thrown a white cloth. People began to wonder whether it dug this thing out of the sands and The blocks of stone were fitted was beautiful or not. called it beautiful, for man is quick together to begin the formation of to Justify and glorify what man "To what purpose shall we use does. the geometric pattern. Modern men one heard, think it strange that clay and straw it," a voice cried. But no Still it stands. The desert sun was a good mortar, but mixed no one cared. Even the slave whose shines down the fierce winds flow with the blood of many slaves, it body had been crushed under the and the sands are beginning to blocks could not have known. was strong. cover it again. Nature sighs, for . Men appeal was made to the gods. she alone knows its purpose. An died their bones bleached white in the sands which covered "Why has this thing been built?" them from the fierce rays of the "What can this contribute to our The gods did not The monument is war, conceived desert tun the same sun that civilization?" crea- by man. Built by the multitudes nourished their crops and gave them know this was a man-malife. The death of a slave was as tion. of people who died to build it, natural as the sifting of the sands. Yet there it stood. The parched people who did not know its purThe monument grew and grew winds charged against it and re- pose. The Pharoah is the desire for and grew making a Jagged grey treated in defeat. The sun aided in power that farces innocent people to build a useless monster. The sands are the pleas for peace, and the sun is reality. Now that ITS ROBERTS FOB NATIONALLY ADVERTISED JEWELEBT these sands have covered the monument, will we be content to leave it buried? ROBERT'S JEWELERS Peace has come at last. After waiting for three years and eight months we have received the news that will make humanity renew its building of a better world, rather than continue its building a world of destruction. It isn't easy to grasp the full meaning of this victory over those who came very close to defeating us. Time and again people are overheard saying "when the war is over, we can do everything like we did in the good old days." Those people are living in a dream world, and now that peace is here they will have to be rudely awakened. There will be no such thing as the "good old days." We've fought a bitter struggle against a bloodthirsty enemy and the mental and economic expansion we underwent to achieve the victory over that enemy has changed the United States and its people. It is "one world" as Wendell Willkie said and whether we like it or not, we are part of that "one world" and we have to help keep this "one world" at peace. Here at the University most of us have never known what "pre-wcollege" days were like. When we first came on the campus the Army engineers from the Phoenix hotel were behind the trees and in front surveying the of the buildings campus, and fraternities were a thing of the past .Why a girl could even go to a dance without an escort and soon girls were living in the fraternity houses. The ASTP came. We lost professors to the Army and to vital government work. The casualty lists started coming in. And all this time the favorite saying on the campus was "wait until the war is over." The war is over, but we're not days." going back to those "pre-wWe couldn't possibly. Youth has had to mature too quickly In the past four years. What a peaceful Unive- sity will be like, no one can sa: All we can do Is hope, hope that tt University will become better thf days" and the war the "pre-wdays; that all the energy plus some of the millions put in the war ef fort will be put in the University effort, in order to make the University a better and peaceful University for all time. A STUDENT. Bobby Bishop is back from over- seas now and the first thing he did was get engaged to Reva Ingram. Who could have missed seeing that Annis Hutman and Rusty Graniti are making this dating business steady. Then we have Liz Palmer and Meredith Evans who are seen to- gether constantly. At last it has come! Les Bruce and Tommy Bell are taking the fatal step and they are probably married now in San Antonio. 3. Celebration at Patt hall: The celebrations at Patt took a new twist, all anyone could do was kiss everyone else. The TP's came over Tuesday night and everyone was most affectionate. Secret sources reveal that Mrs. Harvard did not escape the flow of the celebration. Stuff: Harry Bohannan's two guests, Cederic Lewis and Pete WicklifT have been having a wonderful time with Joyce Cason and Pat Griffin since they have been here. Sarah Hall and Hoss Knuckles have decided to call it quits, and the pin is back on its owner. Bob Kretchmer and Sue Flynn are dating again. j ar ar Waters Receives Wings As Airline Stewardess 4. Professor Sketches: The United Press sure did fix itself with Dr. Plummer, he had planned when the new member of the family arrived to name it so the Initials of the name form UP. His first child's Initials formed AP, and he wanted both news services represented. But when the UP announced the news prematurely, he got disgusted and called the new baby, Leonard Niel Plummer, Jr. 6. Life Guard Musings: Girls, remember the cute life guard at Castlewood, the one who wore the Frank Buck hat? Well, he is occupied now with dating Joan Ruby. Seems his name is Billy Boggs. 7. Odds and End: Sammy Huey was or still is home and was or is giving the girls a big 5. rush. Marvin Meyers did not make the Plummer Is Papa Again girls as happy. He is the man with a love interest at home. Born, to Carolyn Gilson has a chum in and Mrs. Niel Georgetown that is really something Plummer, a son, Leonard Niel II, at to sit up and take notice about. 3 a.m. Monday: weight, 7 pound 13 Jimmy Bolen, new RP, is worth an ounces. interest girls. Miss Julia Ann Waters, former student at the University, recently received her wings as an airline stewardess for American Airlines, Inc. She was made a full fledged stewardess at a graduation luncheon held at Hotel Roosevelt in New York City. With the completion of two months' training at LaGuardia Field in New York, she received her assignment to a permanent base in Memphis, Tenn., where she will become part of the crew of Flagship airlines. During the training course, she studied radio, theory of flight. meteorology, air geography, routes and schedules and many other subjects she will need to know in her position as stewardess. She also made several practice flights out of LaGuardia field. While attending the University, Miss Waters participated in many extracurricular activities. She was a member of the Glee club and other played on musical organizations; the tennis teams; a member of the WAA; Kampus Kousins; and the Red Cross. Veterans Club To Meet There will be a meeting of the Veterans club at 7 pjn. Monday, August 21, in Room 206 of the Union building, Joe Covington, president, announced. The purpose of the meeting is to make plans for the fall quarter. * THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Friday, August 17. 1945 AMBERS Corinne Ledford, daughter of Mrs. Viola Ledford, Lexington, became and the bride of Bill Morris Chambers, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. ChamENGAGEMENTS bers, Huntington, W. Va., on February 5 at the home of Rev. Thomas King of Catlettsburg, Ky., who officiated. Miss Jean Charlotte Layman, The bride is a graduate of Henry daughter of Mrs. Iris Wellman Lay- Clay high school and attended the man and C. K. Layman, Ashland, University. and SSgt. Henry Davis Shanklin The bridegroom is a student at II, son of Postmaster and Mrs. H. the University where he is a member D. Shanklin, Ashland, were married of Sigma Chi fraternity. on Friday morning, August 10, at the bride's home, with the Rev. Russell McCONNELL-MILLELenox officiating. Marjory Yvonne McConnell, The bride will receive her degree daughter of Major and Mrs. A. W. from Marshall College in January. McConnell of Toronto, Ontario, and Sergeant Shanklin was graduated Nassau, Bahamas, became the bride from the University in 1942. He of Capt Campbell E. Miller, United continued with graduate work until States Army, son of Mr. and Mrs. he enlisted in the Air Corps in Charles E. Miller, Lexington. August of the same year. The bride received her education He served with the Eighth Air in England and traveled throughout 30 heavy Force and completed Europe before the war. bombing missions. He was awarded Captain Miller is a graduate of the Distinguished Flying Cross, the the University and Massachusetts Air Medal with three Oak Leaf State College. While at the UniverClusters and the E. T. A ribbon with sity he was a member of Alpha three Bronze Stars. He is now Zeta, Omicron Delta Kappa and stationed at Laredo Army Air Field, Alpha Gamma Rho, social fraternLaredo. Texas. ity. He entered service June 15, LEDFORD-C- H WEDDINGS LAYMAN-SHAXKLI- N R 1945. LANSELL-HAGE- Seniors! (From Page One) LoHnk.Phil Condor, Thomas B. Minor, Arthur C. Winn, Harold E. Oliver, Darwin K. Cornn, John S., Jr. Young, Don Hardyman, James C. Dutton, Kenneth C. Howard, John J. Dannehold Cyril O. Elmore, Cecil L. Leonard, Joseph Brewer, Melvin C. Mountjoy, Jesse T. Elder, William B. Page Three Continued DEDICATION- - -Kent, Walter T. McCord, David C. Mason, Harry A. Ehmet, Joseph E. Hammack, Henry D. Carr, Elmer L. Hammack, William D. Wheeler, Jack W. Neal, Bernard G. Frederick, Lewis S., Jr. Disney, John E. Fisher, John H. Mains, Charles K. Fergel, Frederick A. Craig, Gravin G., Jr. Bazzell, Paul G., Jr. Winchester, Frank Mahaney, Dan J. Wallace, Leon W. Ellis, George S. Littrell, Leon G. Wisner, Oscar E. Melbourne, John W. Coons, Brooks M. Grayson, Henry Gilliam, Clyde Turner, Henry F. Tish, John W. Baker, William H. Clore, John G. Parrish, Rhodes S. Huhlein, Frederick E Oldham, Robert N. Greenwell, Charles E. Jones, Bryant O. Masters, James E. , Barter, Fletcher S. Gard, Richard E. Martin, Walter F. Katz, Harold R. Johnson, Paul F. Johnson, James H. Amnions, Robert J. Davis, Robert C. Willock, Shelden B. Howell, James P, Jr. Hoppins, Wm. B., Jr. Allison, Leslie Rose, Earl B., Jr. Alfrey, Malcolm P. Duff, William H. Moore, Carleton C, Jr. Styles, Joseph A. Payne, Joseph H., Jr. Saunders, Jesse A., Jr. Porter, James A. Phillips, Frank S. McNash.CapelW. Walker, St. Clair Karr, Edmund P. Cole, William A. Cantrell, Lewis F. Jones, Kenneth B. Blumer, Phillip E. Wilson, William C, Jr. Mattingly, Spencer E., Jr. Parker, Samuel F. Matthews, Church M. Botts, Seth S. Reynold, Paul M. Caldwell, Edwin O. Perrine, Samuel H. Hagan, Louis P. CBrein, George T. Hicks, James G. Harns, James T. Gaines, Thomas C, Jr. Rose, Conrad A. Hollan, Dan S. England, Kenneth H. Van Hook, Carl R. Lipscomb, Lyall M. Coblentz, Myron P. Blythe, Winston L. Metcalfe, Audrey B. Nollau, George F. Schoberth, Harry A. Estill, James D. Thompson, Arnold M. Hembree, George N. Davis, Richord T. Mackey, Henry E. Allen, John L., Jr. Neal, Barney G. Hood. WUliam C. Beeler, Robert J. Haughaboo, William S. McCannon, Walter O. Malone, John E. Kirkpatrick, Seba W. Smith, Edward H., Jr. Berry, David R. Wllhoit, Darnaby H. McCann, Thomas P. Draper, Carl G. Bruce, Alexander Hopewell, William W. Lawson, Ernest H. Reynold, Gilbert A., Jr. Griffith, Mark H.. Jr. Cawood, Donald O. Sauer, Robert S. Van Arsdell, George A. Blevlns, George H. Cureton, Nat C, Jr. Moffett, Albert A. Jett, Shelby N. Dallas, Raymond O. Lamason, Orvalle B., Jr. R Mr. and Mrs. John Lansell, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth Dorothy to Lt. Cornelius R. Hager, son of Mr. and Mrs. Archer Hager, Nicholasville. Miss Lansell graduated from College In Wilmore, Ky, and attended the graduate school of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N. Y. Lieutenant Hager received his M. He A. degree from the University. entered the Army in 1942 and spent some time serving overseas. As-bu- ry CAPS and GOWNS SENIOR RINGS fit Fuller To Speak - dy for you now (Continued from Page One) Senior grades and results of all comprehensive examinations must be in the registrar's office by 9 a.m. Monday, August 20, the registrar's Correspondence office announced. by courses must be completed graduate students by August 18. Undergraduate examinations will be held, according to the procedure followed during the summer session, in the last regularly scheduled class period. Campus Book Store I it Mrs. Holmes In Cadiz ' I - " v- - - V f Mrs. P. K. Holmes, dean of women, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Broad-ben- t, In Cadiz. 1 SAVE ON Your LAUNDRY - DRY CLEANING 15 sweaters Discount Drive In Service Sweaters, and more sweaters . . . the kind college girls like to have in abundance. All wool in pastel, bright and dark colors. and cardigans. See Embry's 5.95 and up new collection Pull-ove- De Boor rs SWEATERS FIRST FLOOR Opposite Stadium LAUNDRY CLEANING Embry & Co. Incorporated * THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Page Four Friday, August 17, 1945 CASH FOR USED BOOKS NOW Campus Book Store By Adele Dainu "Got to leave home early this morning to have time to fix my breakfast at the Bowl." This Is a phrase that you may iiear any student say who eats his breakfast at the Colonial Bowling Lanes restaurant. These customThey ers specialize in slip behind the counter and prepare their meals, these are carried to the tables, and later the dirty Klishes are disposed of, they tell the proprietor, Mrs. Alice O'Brien, what they have eaten and pay at the cash register. This honor system is evidence of the success of a trial and response plan on the campus. Maybe the reason is that the students try to repay Mrs. O'Brien for her excelfood by being lent home-cookconscientious about being exact in self-servi- ed MICHLER FLORIST CUT FLOWERS AND CORSAGES Fhoao UU FOR LATE EVENING SNACKS Call MOBILE FOODS 518 - Douglas MacWilliam Dick, former University student, has been chosen for the lead in "Forever Is Now," the Adele Longmire comedy which Gertrude Macy is planning to pro duce in October on New York's Broadway. Mr. Dick came to Versailles from 'Inspects Dormitories Charleston, W. Va., and was gradu Mrs. P. K. Holmes, dean of ated from Versailles high school. He later attended Bolles School, women; Miss Irma Poole, director of Jacksonville, Fla., and the Univer- residence halls for women; and Miss sity, where he was a member of Gertrude Zemp, manager of resiKappa Alpha. He also attended the dence halls for women, spent last University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz. week in Detroit, the University of He was a member of Guignol Michigan, and the University of while at the University and. took Indiana inspecting new dormitories part in several plays. At the Uni- and housing facilities for women versity "Of Arizona, be belonged to students. pre-flig- ht Another good reason is be seated in the dining room in the that the students feel that in wait- fall. When school starts again in the ing on themselves that they become a part of the business and want to fall, Mrs. O'Brien plans to turn the restaurant into a sandwich grill, do their part of the Job well. look forward to The wartime help shortage has and old days in 1941, the revival of staff hit this business perhaps more than the 14 waiters served when adining a filled for the cook that had work- of others room four times at each meal. ed there for years quit and went into defense work. To add to this major disaster, the dishwasher fell Former Student in love with the cook and he left (Continued from Page One) work too. This necessity led the proprietress herself to take over Aeronautics and is supervising lightflying bases in the States. the job of preparing the meals. Her ing atwas civil engineering He a student d meals reversed the University and was one of the luck that she had been having, how- at the ever, and customers have doubled 18 students selected by the Depart' in number since she began cooking. ment of Agriculture for training in On Sunday, the busiest day of rural electrification. After serving three months as a the restaurant, some students have Navy communications officer in 1943 to come in for a meal been known he was transferred to the Civil En and remain the rest of the day to gineering Corps and attached to the wait on the other customers, all without pay. One girl used her Bureau of Aeronautics. night to help va