xt7vmc8rcw1b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vmc8rcw1b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19311106 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 6, 1931 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 6, 1931 1931 2013 true xt7vmc8rcw1b section xt7vmc8rcw1b Best Copy Available THE KENTUCKY KERM2L UNIVERSITY FRIDAY EDITION KERNEL SKMI-WEEKL- OF LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, VOLUME XXII KENTUCKY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1911 CATS TO MEET PI SIGMA SIGMA OPENS NATIONAL r "flCewpWWWW MEETINGJN CITY - " ..... - - -- - Honorary Physics Fraternity Is Guest of Local . con- of Sigma PI Sigma, national honorary physics fraternity, opened at the Lafayette hotel Thursday afternoon and will continue through Sunday. The Lambda chapter, installed at the university In May, will be in charge of the program and of the entertainment DR. MARSH W. WHITE of guests. Dr. Marsh W. White and Dr. M. Registration of delegates and an N. officials of Sigma PI Siginspection trip through the physics ma,States, national honorary physics fradepartment of the university were ternity, are attending the national arranged for Thursday afternoon convention being held today and while the initiation ceremonies of Saturday at the Lafayette hotel Doctor Marsh who Is the secretary the Lambda chapter, a meeting of of the fraternity and is a professor the executive council, and an In- of physics at Pennsylvania State formal smoker Jar the delegates were held Thursday evening at the session proper will open at 9 o'clock this morning when Prof. W. S. Webb, head of the physics department of the university, will deliver the address of welcome. Dr. Marsh W. White, William and Mary college, will give the response and the presidential address of the session. This afternoon, various convention reports will be presented and adjournment will be made for the address of Dr. W. P. Swann at 4:15 o'clock. Tonight Dr. Swann, who is the director of the Bartol research foundation of the Franklin Institute, will deliver a public lecture at 8 o'clock in the physics lecture room at the university. The second session of the convention will be concluded Saturday morning after which the delegates will witness the footall game in the afternoon and will attend a dinner dance In the Duke-Kentuc- evening. The convention will be concluded with an automobile tour of the Bluegrass Sunday morning for the delegates. Officers of the Lambda chapter are: W. A. Bruce, president; F. F. Cleveland, K. D. Little, secretary and R. C. Layson, treasurer. The pledges initated Thursday evening at the Lafayette hotel are Dr. L. A. Pardue, William Harris, W. C. Wlneland, J. R. Moore, and J. H. Haynsworth. WYGAL TO VISIT LOCAL Y. W. C. A. National Student Secretary of Organization Will Be Guest of University November 1 Miss Winifred Wygal. National student secretary of the Y. W. C. A., with headquarters in New York City, will be the guest of the university, November 9 to 11, at the invitation of the local Y. W. C. A. During the summer of 1931 Miss Wygal gave a series of addresses at Blue Ridge at the southern 6tudent of the Y. W. C. A. conference Eleanor Smith, president of the local Y. W. C. A., extended an Invitation to Miss Wygal to speak to the students of the university. Miss While at the university, Wygal will speak before various groups of the Y. W. C. A., including vpspers, Tuesday night, Pitkin club, Wednesday at noon, the senior and freshman cabinets, and the ad- visory board of the Y. W. C. A. Arrangements are being made for individual conferences with members of the cabinet and other students who desire Information concerning their vocational Interests. Miss Wygal will come to the university from the conference of the Y. W. C. A., at Berea, which will be held November 6 to 8. The conference will attract groups of students throughout the state. Attending the conference from the university will be Dean Sara Blanding, Misses Augusta Roberts, Eleanor Smith, Mary Allison Threlkeld, Polly Lee. Alice May Purling. Elizabeth Montague, Lois Neul, Elizabeth Ann Ewlng, and Emily Reeves. BLOCK AND BRIDLE MEETS Block and Bridle, honorary agricultural fraternity, met at 7:30 o'clock Monday night at the Agricu- ltural building, Scott McCluln, president, presiding. Further plans were made regarding the annual fall festival which will be held Friday, November 20, at the Judging pavilion. Frank Ball was eleoted publicity ageut for the coming event Photographs of Winners to Appear in Beauty Sec- DR. M. N. STATES university. Installed the local Lambda chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma last spring. Doctor States Is the of the honorary and was a professor of physics at the university until last year when he accepted a position as director of research at the Central Scientific company, Chicago, 111. U. K. FRATERNITY Mail COUNCIL FORMED Deposited in U. K. Absence Boxes Will Not Be Returned, Says Bean Plans of Great Advantage to Miss Carrie Bean, postmistress of Organizations to Be Disthe university postlfflce, recently cussed at First Meeting discovered that the boxes which are of Group placed in the various campus buildMEMBERS APPOINTED Plans of great advantage to all fraternities will be discussed at the first meeting of the newly appointed faculty fraternity council which will meet at 4 o'clock, Tuesday, in room 109, McVey hall. Each of the 19 members of the council was appointed by the fraternity which he represents as a member of the council and as faculty advisor. The council, organized by C. R. Melcher, dean of men, will hold meetings throughout the year in order to bring the fraternities closer together discuss relative problems, and provide for the general welfare of the organizations. Members of the council and the ings for absence notices are being used by many students Instead of the government mall boxes. These boxes are for the use of professors in listing the absences of students before and after holidays and should be used for no other purpose. Outgoing mall should be posted either at the university postoffice in the basement of McVey hall or in the regulation government mail boxes which are located on the campus. Miss Bean's discovery of improper use of the boxes followed an inquiry by a student who had posted two letters in the absence boxes which had not been delivered. An examination of the box In which the letters had been deposited disclosed 12 other misplaced communications. UK Newman Club James Shropshire alumni secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Enoch Ore-najournalism department, Kappa Alpha; Paul Walp, political science department. Kappa Sigma; F. T. McFarland, botany department, Lambda Chi Alpha; Leroy Miles, alumnus, Phi Delta Theta; Roy Moreland, Law College, Phi Kappa Tau; Paul P. Boyd, dean of the Arts and Science College, Phi Sigma Kappa; L. H. Carter, College of Commerce, Phi Psl Phi; H. H. Downing, departmathematical ment, PI Kappa Alpha; C. C. Jett, n, Engineering College, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; J. C. Jones, political science department, Sigma Beta XI; Rich ard Johnson. Engineering College, Sigma Chi; Maury Crutcher, superintendent of buildings and grounds, Sigma Nu ; John Dicker, Engineering College, Triangle. Organization of Catholic dents Recently Formed Co-ed- Annual Program Arranged The SuKy pep rally at 7:30 o'clock tonight In the new gym annex on Euclid avenue will mark the first of a series of events which will ac- company the homecoming game with Duke University to be played Sat- urday afternoon on Stoll Held. The program for Saturday includes a tea at the home of President and Mrs. Frank L. McVey, Maxwell Place, and the annual Alumni dance to be held at the Lafayette hotel from 9 until 12 o'clock. Kentucky's share of the proceeds from the Duke game will be devot- ed to charitable purposes, In ac- cordance with a decision of the Athletic council at the university last week when It was decided that Kentucky would not play a post- season game for the purpose of raising funds for charity. The game n; on Page Six) of Theta Sigma Phi to Extract Only Thin Dimes from Purchasers of Rejuvenated Kat s By JOHN M. KANE An ambitious editorlul staff and a speculative business organization are responsible for the new edition of the Kampus Kat, notorious scandal sheet published through the dirt collecting abilities of Sigma Delta i Chi, the honorary Journalistic f ra- ternity, which will appear Saturday Kentucky-Duk- e game. For at the the first time in the history of the publication, it will appear in magazine form and will be printed upon other than the poorest puper available in The Kernel printing room. This homecoming edition will have sixteen pages, of which not more than fifteen will be adveitlse-ment- s. It will be nine and Inches wide and about inches twelve and long. Besides all the other additions, the issue will be printed in bhu-ink. In spite of the Imposing cover and makeup, and without regard for the possible vast deficit in the bal th BKOWN ance sheet caused by such radical departure from the procedure of, the founders of the sheet, the news-girl- s, who Bhould be members of Theta Sigma Phi, the honorary Journalistic sorority, still will be re- quired to extract only 10 cents, one thin dime, from those persons in- terested in the shady doings of their avowed enemies and best personal friends. As in every previous issue, the Kat Is heralded to be the best of all the efforts on the part of the newsp a p e utui Among the attractions of the Kat will be a prize short story and a prize poem. They are the results of the Kat contest sponsored by the publishers of the magazine. It Is expected also lT. STl'DENTS HELPED A plan has been worked out at Brown University whereby the student may consider the temperament of the professor as well as the desirability of his course in making out his program. On the opening day of college a "Who's Who" is given to each new student, giving a short account of the degrees, professional experience, and principal avocations of each member of the faculty. I will-in-tli- e-- widely-announc- to contain the actual details and scandal concerning the methods used la determining the winners, and, for this reason alone, the sale Is expected to pass that of the pre- vlous issue by the number of con- tributors to the contest. The queen of beauty of the university, whose picture will occupy GO one full page In the beauty section of the 1932 Kentucklan, will be seBy RALPH E. JOHNSON lected by Flo Ziegfield, originator Coach Wallace Wade and his squad of Duke University of the internationally Known Follies and one of America's most noted Blue Devils will alight from a private coach this morning: in connoisseurs of feminine pulchri- Lexington and will go through a light drill this afternoon tude, according to anannouncement issued this week by Frank Stone, before meeting the Wildcats at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The game will be played before a large homecoming editor of the annual. Pictures of 48 of the most beau crowd, and the gate receipts will be turned over to local chartiful girls at the university will be ity associations. submitted to Mr. Ziegfield, who will Both Duke and Kentucky suffered defeat last week at the choose the beauty queen and her Co-eeight attendants. whose hands of strong teams, and both aggregations have worked photographs will be submitted have s,hard this week, but due to the been nominated by petitions of male traveling that the Blue Devil students, each girl's petition being squad has had to make, that signed by 50 students. The pic tures will be mailed to Mr. Ziegteam was cut down to three field next week, and are expected days' practice. The Wildcats to be returned to the Kentucklan played away, but were back editors within two weeks after that time. Final Meeting Prior to Open- in time to work out Monday Descriptions and measurements and to continue throughout ing of Annual Campaign of the beauty nominees will accom the week. Is Held by Organipany the pictures. The winner The Tennessee game uncovered a those receiving honorable menand zation new star for the Devils in a sophotion will be designated by numbers, more, Laney. This youngster is no names being sent to the Judge. COMMITTEE APPOINTED considered a pert partner for CapJames C. Lyne, feature editor of the tain "Kid' Brewer, Devfl back, and Kentucklan, has charge of the The final meeting prior to the conference high scorer thla season. photographs of the beauty enThe Alabama game eon tinned opening of the anual university T. trants. the Each sorority of the university M. C. A. drive for funds will take to prove the value of Kelly lawitn was allowed three entrants, and place Monday afternoon at the Blue backfleid, but the game the those three were photographed free headquarters of the association In the Red Elephants showed laid weaknesses that have been of charge. Each entrant exceeding Alumni hall. Committee will be apto every department of the team. the limited number was charged a poor. They have nominal fee. Independent girls en- pointed to carry out the plans for The ends are often, bat until been suspected tering the beauty section also were soliciting on the campus. the Tide contest it was only a susphotographed free of charge. y The association has been classed picion. As a consequence. The Judge of the 1931 beauty as one of the most beneficial groups ends have caught Hades all contest was Earl Carrol, New York on the campus. It assists in proweek in getting down under punt theatrical producer. The winner of viding employment for those stuSkinner has been called vicious the contest was Mary Virginia Wil- dents who are financially unable to by some writers; Duff looks plenty lis, Ashland, now Mrs. Frazee continue their college career with- tough; no one ever called Kreuter on Page Six) out working. Many positions have a sissy; but they all showed a caubeen secured this year for such tious strain against big men. It men, and the list of those waiting probably was due to conscientiousfor work Is decreasing with far ness and fear of missing tackles, greater rapidity than It was at first (Continued on Page Six) expected. Besides the emploment aid, the Six Organizations Pledge university Y. M. C. A. conducts the Nineteen University annual college night, the freshman Women social, and various banquets throughout the year. It furnishes Second bid day for women's Greek stationary, presents speakers at the letter social organizations was held meetings held at the dormitories at noon Thursday in the office of and fraternities during the year. Pupils Representing All Secthe dean of women. Nineteen wom- The salaries of the secreary and his tions of State Will Comen were pledged to six organiza- assistant must also be obtained and pete in Rural Tournament tions. The list of new pledges Is: the fund collected on the campus Zeta Tau Alpha: Carrie Lee Dan- aids In the total amounts received November 13-1- 4 iel, Atlanta. Georgia; Ben ah Een, and enables the organization to Somerset; Dorothy Clifton. Lexing- carry out its programs. xhe seventh annual rural school ton; Marian Schuler, Chicago, 111.; The cost of carrying on this work tournament will be held at the Carol Gilley, East La Port. North so great that the organization st versity Friday and Saturday. Carolina; and Zelda Shlpman, Lexsecure aid from outside vember 13 and 14. Punils repre- ington. The senting all sections of the state will sources to operate properly. Kappa Delta: Jones, Elizabeth of the chapter rooms, also participate. The program consists Lexington; Mary Stanley, Beckle, requires expenditures for maga- - 0f music, achievement tests in West Virginia; Margaret and Edith zines and games. scholarship and athletics, and dec- Burke, Ashland. Bart N. Peak, secretary of the tarnations. Alpha Delta Theta: Virginia Mat- Y. M. C. A. at the university Is Approximately 900 pupils, teachthews, Susquehanna, Penn.; Lois highly optimistic regarding the pro- ers, and county superintendents are exGrubb, Akron, Ohio; Dorothy Stro- - bable results of the drive. He expected to attend. The following ther, Louisville. pects friends to be as generous as counties are sending representaDelta Delta Delta: Hazel Nelson, in previous years. tives: Anderson, Barren, Boone, Louisville, and Flora Knight, KeoBoyd, Calloway, Carroll, Caldwell, kuk, Iowa. CLIB TO MEET ALl'MM Daviess, Elliott, Fayette, Femlng, Alpha Gamma Delta: Willie Hood Floyd, Garrard, Grant, Grayson, The Lexington Alumni club will Greenup, Hurdin, Harrison, HenderHatchet, Harrodsburg; and Linda Wilson, San Bernardino, California. hold Its first dinner meeting at the son, Henry, Kenton, Lawrence, LaChi Omega: Elizabeth Redd, Lex- Layfayette hotel at 6:30 o'clock rue, Lewis. Logan, McCracken. Monday night, November 9. Dr. W. Madison, Mercer, Montgomery, ington. main Morgan, D. Funkhouser will be the Delta Zeta: Jeanette Hillis, Oldham, Scott, Owen, speaker. Nicholas, Pendleton, Powell, Rowan, Robertson, Shelby, Trimble, Webster, Woodford, and Union. The program follows: Friday, November 13 10:00 a. m. Glee clubs. Memorial PROCEEDS WILL TO CHARITY ds Y.M.C. A. FINANCE DRIVE TO BEGIN Ken-tack- SCHOOL CONTESTS TO BE AT U. OF K. Stu- The Newman club, organization consisting of Catholic students of the university, will hold its second meeting of the year at 10:30 o'clock Sunday morning In the ball room of the Lafayette hotel. All Catholic students of the university are requested to attend. Under the direction of the Rev. William J. Punch, the club was organized by students of the university several years ago. Activities of the organization, however, were discontinued during the past two years. The club was reorganized October 11, under the guidance of the Rev. George O'Bryan, rector of St. Joswill be eph's hospital. Meeting held at 10:30 o'clock the second Sunday of each month, throughout the school year. Officers elected at the last meeting are: president, Daniel W. Oood-maAnn Hull; secretary, Lynch; and Thomas treasurer. Mary Catherine Ambrose. Ruth Wehle Is chairman of the program committee. Members of the alumni advisory board are: Marguerite McLaughlin, Miss Miss Edith Mlnelian, and Miss Mary E. Clarke. Series of Events (Continued Preparation for Saturday's Battle on Stoll Field Will Hold Second Second Bid Day Is Held by Sororities Meeting Sunday fraternities they represent are: Homecoming Fordyce Ely, Agricultural College, Alpha Gamma Rho; D. M. Young, geological department, Alpha Sigma Phi; H. M. Meriwether, Pep Rally at 7:30 o'clock ToEngineering College, Alpha- - Tau night Will Be First of Omega; C. R. Melcher, dean of men, Campus Club; T. O. Williams, Extension school, Delta Chi; y Wallace Wade and Squad Scheduled to Arrive Friday in Time for Workout in tion of Annual well-dress- ed vention Lafayette hotel The convention CONTEST SPONSORED BY 1932 KENTUCKIAN The patience of Lexington citizens is to be rewarded when the freshman male population reveals to the startled Inhabitants Just collegian Is what the wearing during his sleeping hours. All of which means that the frosh. attired In pajamas, are to attend the SuKy pep meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the new annex. As no theater party will be held, the thinly-cla- d students will not pre sent their expected parade from the gym to the theater. Fraternities have promised their support to SuKy and a riot of color Is expected to flood the streets surrounding the building where the meeting is to be held. Billy Phelps has been appointed by the student pep organization to take charge of the arrangements. According to the chairman, at tempts will be made to have Coach Harry Oamage bring several of the Wildcats to the meeting so that the old grads who are returning for the homecoming classic will be able to meet Kentucky grid heroes before the battle Saturday. Slade Carr, head cheer leader, has arranged several new yells and the entire cheer leading squad is to be on hand to teach the fans According to new yelling tricks. Carr, the development of the student body into the finest cheering section In the south is anticipated. The annual homecoming pep meeting is the largest conducted by the circle and the old grads are induced to recall the pep meetings of their undergraduate days. SuKy circle is endeavoring to make the current affair the most successful meeting of the year. A speaker for the occasion will offer a novelty foi the fans. The man obtained is well known on the campus and is an alumnus of the university. He has promised to "pep up" the student body for the game Saturday afternoon. Prof W. S. Webb Will Deliver, 15 Game to Feature HomecomingDay BEAUTY WINNERS By BOB KEARNEY k uuke-Kentuck- Queen and Eight Attendants to Be Chosen by Originator of Follies to SuKy for Duke Pep Rally ORGANIZATIONS HOLD INSPECTION OF U. K. The second national biennial ZIEGFIELD TO select u. OF K. FLO Fraternities Promise Support Chapter Address of Welcome to Delegates NEW SERIES, NUMRER JUE DEVIL Freshmen of U.K. To Reveal Latest In Pajama Styles Speakers at Physicists' Meeting PEP MEETING HOMECOMING RALLY TO IJE HEM) TONIGHT IN GYM PHOTOtiUAI'IIEU RETl'RNS The photographer for the 1932 Kentucklan will be in the basement of (he alumni gymnasium Tuesday and Wednesday. No- vember 10 and 11. All seniors who huve neglected to have their pictures taken may still secure them on the above dates. Notice is again given that seniors wtio do nut have their pictures will names excluded from have tlu-imention in the annual. Tills apto members of organplies also izations which have contracted fur pages in the annual. r No-mu- up-ke- Gentle Witted Freshmen of U. K. Pull Boners When Struggling to Answer Classification Quizzes By A. A. DAIGHEKTY zither is a kind of snake, random perusal of answers given to questions asked In the classification tests prepared by and held under direction of Prof. E. J. Asher, of the department of psychology, for incoming freshmen reveals. Other freshmen branded the article as a kind of French gun. and as a sword, tho the greater number checked it as a musical in-A st anient. Tliut the L. C. Smith compuny manufactures motor trucks and steum engines is averred by the check murks of other neophytes to college life (ye Journalists know this to be Incorrect). A few defined habeas corpus as a term used in medicine. Several yearners after the great open, wild and woolly, eagerly stated that "All Quiet on the Western Front" was authored by Zane they. (In this tye of question, known as general information type, the test indicates four possible answers, the I hall p. in. Luncheon, training cafeteria, for participants and their chaperones as guests of the university 1:45 p. m. General meeting, aucorrect one to be checked by the ditorium of training school; ancandidate.) 12:45 school Lacrosse was variously described nouncements m tests, 2:00 p. Achievement as the name of a French explorer, training school building t, a kind of and a game 3:00 p. m. Declamation prelimplayed with crosses on a clucked inaries: boys, group A, McVey hall; bourd. Not a few set forth tliut a boys, group B, auditorium, training seismograph is used to measure building; Girls, Group C, auditorblood pressure, tho some held that, ium, training building; Girls, group it serves to indicate wind velocity. C, Memorial hall. Divers freshmen disregarded the 7:30 p. m. Finals delamation, Atlantic ocean and complacently auditorium, training in shool located the Burmada Islands in the 8:30 p. m Announcements of re Pacific, the Gulf of Mexico, andlKi,iw t ., u,,H.t,-even so far away as the South lulu training school. ui. China sea, if there is a South China Saturday murni... November 14 sea,;, 8 00 a. m Field meet, Stoll field I he. writer then learned tliut en- -, The 101,r of evt,llts as glven on tomology u the study of words. A pi4Me J5 of the Kentucky Rural limited number of candidates con- - School bulletin will be followed, extended, however, that it is the study cept the high Jump which will be-i- n races, and testimony was not gm at 8:00 o'clock, lacking that it Is the study of moral n:30 a. m. Luncheon, Training sciences. school cafeteria. Participants and In addition to those who recot- - their chaperones will be guests of nized in a marsupial an animal tile university, with an external pouch for carry- 12 30 p. m Awarding of trophies (Continued on Page Six) stoll Held. row-boa- i,i,..nt - * Best 7 TH Fatre Two on Tuesdays and Friday Published Member Katlnn&l Cnllrrr Vrrm Awnelatlon nmmorr lilnirtnn Board of (P. A. Member K. I. In conclusion The Kernel bethat the council could spon-s.- ii nr entertainments, contests niliiM- nelivities vlnch would brine in a comthe fr.iternii ies intere.-.If these or similar mon ciiaiiees enn lie iintde b the present councilors, we reiterate our pledce of suppoil OfTlelal Newspaper of the Students of the University of Kentucky, Lexington lieve'! Subscription $2 00 a year. Filtered at Lexington. Ky., Post office s second clnss mail matter t HFRE SHALL TUF, KFRNF.L PRLSS ALL srunr.NT RIGHTS MAINTAIN WII MAM ARDERT PANIFX W. GOODMAN. I.Ot'lPF THOMPSON . COURTESY IX KENTUCKY Mmmum Fditor Asst. Mur. F(1 tnr When an inhabitant of the Dlue- t:ras. l'ei.s .m1 ill lllieiii a lie mumiih. the chivalry, (he honor, the paean- try and the courtesy which existed in Ins section of the state in War days. He tells of the great leaders who have taken their places in the history of the country, and he cites the customs of former years as being those most conducive to the formation of a purely cultural clvllzation. Doubtless this respect for the past is wholesome and good, perhaps It acts in making the present habitants of the country more nearly like their ancestors. It appears, however, that the members of the present generation are content to commend the cultural attainments of their forgetting that upon forebears, them rests the responsibility of i '' ASSX"TATF. PDITOHS Frn: H'Hinr'1 Jnrq Robry f"on- nillv Hllhblf k Mart. n ASSISTANT Wm A aimfrr loAnlrv pre-Civ- il FrtrTOKS Miirvln Wschs Bports Fditor RALPH E. JOHNSON VERNON D ROOKS ..Special Sports Writer WRITERS Bill Luther Nornrrt Campbell rioudlBi Webb J. D. Adm Stanley Bach Day Rt SOCIETY EDITORS ELEANOR SMITH EMILY HARDIN ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITORS Elizabeth Hardin Lillian Clown SPECIAL WRITERS Den emythefleld Jnmes Curtis DAUOHERTY Feature Editor k A A. Dramatic Editor EUOFNTE BECK fr tha equal, thus opet aline fmternlty the of Improvement pronp as a whole, Cnder this phase of tlir new plans it nlo would be the Of'en- pns .hie tii regulate I foil Week " condemned ly The Kentucky Kernel maintaining the delightful and charming customs and usages for which the South has become noted. Already that country which gave birth to a distinct and beautiful culture Is being called the "Old South." Does this not reflect the attitude that the South of the present fails to measure up to the standards which were erected and maintained by those who passed News Editor LAWRENCE HERRON A88ISTANT NEWS EDITORS John M. Kane OUbert Klnfrsburj: Jolin Watts Mary Alice Salyere REPORTER8 Robert Baxter, Marjorle Hoagland, John St. John, Ray Stark, Joan Carrlgan, Scott O Osborne. Robert H. MiOauRhey, Mary C. Terrell, Betty Watkins. Phil Ardery, Oeorire M. Spencer, Charlton Wallace, Virginia Plt7er. Edith Marie Bell, Bernam Mary Jo before? Pearlman, Leonard Rowland, Laflerty, Carol Ollley. Jane Hamilton, Ann As members of the student body Coleman, Dorothy Bishop. Marjorle Weist. at the University of Kentucky Cart Howell, Herman Graham, Earl Car-raDorothy Smith, Mndlyn 8hively, Leon should be found the sons and Cogswell, Betty Dlmmock. Robert Kearney daughters of the aristocracy of COLEMAN R. SMITH Pvelyn Treabess John Good Kentucky. Here should be those voung ladies and gentlemen who, have been reared in the way of the the courteous. It is at this university that we should find the qualities which we have come to venerate and revere, the principles w hich we believe most honorable, and the ideals which we com-sidmost laudable. We should find a group composed of young people who lack nothing in breeding or training. Instead of the student we should have we find that the dominant campus type is he who rarely considers anyone but himself, who is direct and blunt in his speech and his actions, who comes in contact with true courtesy so seldom that he is prone to think anyone who does possess this rarely seen characteristic a triflle "different." The lazy softness and the irresponsibility of the past are gone replaced by the desire to "get ahead." command attention, and false respect. Not only in this larger conception! of courtesy has the undergraduate at the university failed but this failure has brought about a of the simplest forms and conventions which formerly were so Implicitly followed. Appreciation Is seldom exercised, requests take the form of demands, between dislike and antagonism members of the student body are not concealed but are permitted to be seen in all then- - ugliness. This last will be excused by many persons on the grounds that any other pose than utter frankness would be hypocritical. Our forefathers were courteous always, frank when frankness did not conflict with courtesy. It Is foolish to believe that on editorial or a dozen editorials could remedy the present situation. To observe that It exists, to tell the student body that It exists, is all that The Kernel can do. Werj we writing for those persons who first settled in the Bluegrass, that would be quite enough. Business Manager Noll Dlshinan Oscar Hah'ht well-bre- ADVERTISING STAFF Advertising Mur JAMES MORGAN H P Kirkman J. Proctor Randol Mary Edwards Bliss Warren CAMERON COFFMAN, Circulation Manager er PAN-HELLEN- committee of members of the council of the university was appointed recently which will attempt to enroll all campus social fraternities as members and which will make plans for drafting a new consititution and widening the scope and the usefullness of the organization. The new movement has been sanctioned by university authorities. For several years it has been generally accepted that the council has not been an effective organization, that it has failed to fulfill the requirements of a body of its nature, and, in short, that something should be done about it. Until the present comment has been the only step in this direction. If the members of the present council are in earnest in their endeavor to reorganize the group and make it a useful, effective factor in the university life, then they have the congratulations of The Kernel. Many changes would benefit A ic ic and, through it, the in- dividual fraternities on the campus. With a complete reorganization and with every fraternity as a member the council could become an active agent for student betterment. It should be possible for it to accomplish that which for many-yearit has failed to do: draw up and enforce definite and effecive rushing regulations. To The Kernel this is of primary' Importance. s When the rushing question is settled it would be wise for the group to turn its attention to bringing about a closer and more relationship between harmonious the members of organizations In actuality as well as in theory. Many plans have been tried in the past, and most of them have failed. It Ls our opinion, however, that such a relationship could be establish-- 1 ed by an active and interested coun- -' ell d, : WHY FRATERNITIES? That fraternities matter much less than freshmen are lead to believe during rushing season ls evident from the lack of interest in their organizations many Greeks evidence alter they are pledged and initiated. The ideals which were so important at the first of the year fade before the more realistic urging of the puddle, and the ties of A unilied, complete set of regu- - brotherhood which seemed so strong la turns which would pply to all to the freshman become no more pledges and which would be en-- 1 binding than are the ties of a forced alike by every fraternity in casual friendship. Considering these regard to study hours, wearing things, can we believe the existence freslunun caps, attending dances,' of fraternities Justified? cutting classes, drinking, etc., could If it is possible to select certain be drawn up by the council and of- -, boys from the student body and fered to the fraternities for their combine them into small groups, approval.