xt7wst7dsh1t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wst7dsh1t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19380329  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 29, 1938 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 29, 1938 1938 2013 true xt7wst7dsh1t section xt7wst7dsh1t The Kentucky Kernel

CLEARING
HOUSE

KERNEL

Y

Z248

TUESDAY,

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY.

MARCH

L'. ll38

NEW SERIES NUMBER 13

Experiment

This is an experiment. We hope
noble. There was a need seen

It x

for a common bulletin board for
odds and ends comments on news,
editorial opinions, personal grudges.
last minute news or bulletins toe
late for the rest of. the paper and
so this column breathes its first on
March 28. 1938. If you like it. tell
us. If you don't like it. by all means
let us know.

Two Hundred Attend
Three Day Conference
At Experiment Station
Farmers

From

Thirl

RADIO LEADERS

SWINGSTERS HIRING
GIVEN TO ONE MAN

COUNCIL
STARTS DRIVE

New Arrangement Will End
Confusion In Selection
Of Musicians

Approval by the majority of so
rorities,
fraternities, and other
campus organiaztions for the cen
tralized band booking plan included
in the Student Union Constitution
was announced yesterday by Leon
ard Carr. chairman of the Student
committee.
s
Trial Campaign Union Constitutional will nlare the
The Dlan. which
Was Launched Yesterday
house director of the building in
charge of all orchestras engaged
To Protect Campus
for University functions, is hoped to
From Abuse
confusion
eliminate
and render
more efficient service in the selecEFFORT TO RID UK
tion of bands.
OF BARBED WIRE
Final passage of the Student
Union constitution will be made by
If No Improvement Appears the constitutional committee the
latter part of this week, Carr said.
After Trial. All Violaters
Complete plans will th?n go to PresWill Be Fined
ident McVey and the board of
trustees.
A
trial campaign to
Provision is made In the consti
protect and preserve the Univertution for a board of governors,
sity campus from false pathways which will be composed of three
was launched at a meeting of the faculty members, nine students, and
a house director. Although not of
Men's Student Council late yester- ficially approved, the president of
day afternoon in the office of Dean the board probably will become a
T. T. Jones.
member of the Men's Student Coun
It was stated at the meeing that, cil.
at the conclusion of the trial perThe first board of governors for
iod, if a decided improvement was
the building will be appointed by
noticed in student attitude, the President McVey, the Men's Stu
campaign would be continued along dent Council, and the A. W. S.
the same lines. If there is no notice- The following year, the board will
able improvement,
however, the be made up of students who have
council agreed that definite steps worked on
would be taken to police the camEased on the merit system, each
pus and fine all violators.
member of the committee will reThe program, it was announced, ceive points for service.
is being inaugurated in an effort
to arouse the students to a sense
of responsibility in order that the
e
barbed-wir"unsightly
entanglements" will be made unnecessary.
Passing to other business, the
group discussed the problem of high
school students attending UniverIn in address before the study
sity dances. Complaints have been
received from the students' parents class of International Relation last
and high school faculty asking that night in Room 111 McVey hall, professor John Kuiper. head of the
the council cooperate in discouraging these individuals from attend- department of Philosophy, discussed
ing campus dances. All University aspects of the "Russian Situation."
Giving the principal causes for
students have been asked to assist the council in excluding high the fall of the Romanoff dynasty.
Professor Kuiper told about the
school students from the dances.
Also included in the business of Russian Revolution in 1917 and exgovthe
the meeting was an announcement plained the trials of years new postof
that all bids to supply freshman ernment during the readjustment.
caps for the coming year must be war depression and
Miss Elizabeth Cowan, secretary
in the hands of the council by April
25. Departing from the custom of of the Y. W. C. A., presided at the
asking only for estimates of cost, j meeting which was the eighth in
this year's group is urging that all a series being sponsored by the Unimerchants submit materials, sam-- versity Women's Club and the Lexpies, and designs along with the ington branch of the American AsWomen.
i sociation of University
bids.
body
The council also discussed the ad- a Designed to give the student relawider scope of international
visability of a change in the organization and number of council mem- tions and problems as well as help'
bers. When the Student Union ing them understand the workings
building is completed, the president of their own national government,
of the Board of the series is made up of dinner
or
Governors will probably be asked meetings, speeches, and round table
discussions.
to sit with the student group.

TO END

PATHS

Two-week-

--

s'

MATH

Russian Situation
Viewed By Kuiper
In 'Relations' Talk

WORK OFFERED

fire-trap-

p

y

Guignol Presents
Student Directed
Laboratory Plays

SPEAK

AT AG BANQUET

t.

Many Campus Organizations
Approve Orchestra
Booking Plan Of
Committee

PLAN

1

Physicist To Discuss Religion To Be Topic
Sound Interference Of Discussion Today

Summer Session
Will Include New
Curriculum Class

First of a series of three religious
Dr. H. K. Schilling of the physics
M.
department of Union college. Lin- discussions sponsored by the Y. will
C. A. committee on religious life
coln. Nebraska, will discuss his experiments on interference of sound be held at 5 p. m. today in the "Y"
at an open meeting of Sigma Pi rooms.
Bart N. Peak, secretary of the
Sigma, honorary physics fraternity,
ad 7:30 o'clock tonight in Room 202, organization, will lead the discus-

Hol-com-

All-thi- n

Pence halL
Dr. Schilling's experiments were
demonstrated at the seventh meeting of the American association of
physics teachers in December. 1937,
at Indianapolis, Indiana, and were
believed to be the most Important
of the experiments presented at
time.
The national executive committee
of Sigma Pi Sigma makes a yearly
selection of the most prominent
physicists to lecture to the individual chapters on their field of achievement in physics. Dr. Schilling was chosen to make this year's
tour and present his lectures on the
experiments presented at

Spragens To Speak

Broadcast

sions, with successive meetings being held on April 5 and 12.
These discussions will attempt to
present an answer to the problems
"Is There a Reason for Living?"
and " Is There An Adequate Philosophy of Life?"
Other problems concerning personal religious faith may be discussed in Interviews with Mr. Peak
during this series of meetings.
ZOOLOGY SEMINAR TO MEET

Harlan Shupert and Joseph

Far-ri- s

will discuss "The Biology of Sex"
at the weekly meeting of the zoology seminar at 3 p. m. today in
Room 108, Science building.

MEETING

At Lions' Meeting

By AI.I.tNBY E. WINER
chorus of over 100 voices singing in solemn tone; a crowded auditorium wrapped in an air of piety;
that was the picture in Memorial
hall Sunday afternoon as Handel's
Messiah, presented by the University Glee clubs, representatives from
the Lexington choir, and philharmonic orchestra, and Berea College,
closed the 1937-3- 8 concert series.
Befitting a grand finale, the concert was one of the most interesting of the season.
A departure
from the traditional Messiah was
noticed in that only chorus numContinuity was
bers were sung.
provided by the Rev. Harold C. Williamson. Christ Church, who recited
passages between the selections.
Technically
the performance
might have been better polished;
the intricate pfigi's in wie of the
A

Graduate Students

Will Name Officers

J

musical scores, and the timing in
another caused slight Inflections in
tone. These, however, were the only
faults. It must be said, the genuine sincerity of the whole thing, the
undivided attention afforded by the
audience, and the execution of the
program in general proved a fitting
and colorful climax to the vesper
series.
Under the direction of Prof. Carl
Lampert, head of the University
Music department, the performance
included 11 musical numbers dealing with the birth, crucifixion, and
resurrection of Christ.
Following the overture came "And
the Glory of the Lord." "O Thou
That Tellest Good Things," and
"For Unto Us a Child Is Born."
It was in the latter score that there
was audible a slight error in the
alto and bass section. The tones
missed harmony In the next selec

V

ALL COEDS REQUIRED
TO ATTEND MEETING

Executives And
Educators Will Meet With
Directors Of Mountain
Listening Posts

Lecture Planned For 4 P. M.;
Windows' To Be
Topic

Twenty-seve-

n

PRESIDENT M'VEY
TO OPEN CONFERENCE

Parts Of Meeting Will Be
Broadcast Via Short
Wave And Telephone

conference, in which leading
radio executives and educators will
meet directors of the 27 University
of Kentucky
mountain listening
posts to discuss education by radio,
has been planned for April 29 and
A

30

V

Mrs. Helen Zagat, prominent producer, designer, lecturer, and expert in the field of plastic and decorative arts, will address women
students at a compulsory convocation at 4 p. m Thursday in Memorial hall on "Windows Their Architectural Meaning From Earliest
Times to the Present Day."
The lecture will be last of a seraddresses
ies cf vocational-guidancarranged for University women un
der the auspices of the dean of
women's committee on choosing a
vocation.
On Wednesday afternoon Miss
Sarah G. Blanding. Mrs. Sarah B
Holmes. Mrs. Marylee Collins, and
Mrs. Eda M. Giles will be hostesses
at a tea in the recreation room of
Patterson hall In honor of Mrs. Zagat.
She will be a guest of the home
economics staff at a dinner at 6 30
o'clock Wednesday night and at 7 .30
o'clock that night she will address
a group of women students in home
economics at the Agriculture building.
Mrs. Zagat, who has been prominent as a set designer, play producer, and actress, both in tlie Untied States and Europe, is also noted
for her art lectures and for her exhibits of art objects.
She will illustrate her talk with
a display of miniature rooms in the
form of stage sets, sterecptican
views showing interiors of homes,
architectural types, and other material pertaining to the lecture.
All students who will be unable
to attend the convocation, must obtain an excuse from the dean of
women's office before Thursday.

3
f

e

f
ft

at Gander, a little mountain

village in Letcher county.
The Rev. H. D. Caudill. director
of the Gander center, will open the
conference. John Jacob Niles. famed
authority on Southern Appalachian
folklore, will sing mountain ballads.
Dr. Frank L. McVey will; tell of
the history and operation of the
Listening Center system. H. W.
Peters, state superintendent of public instruction, will preside at one
of the sessions. Elmer O. Sulzer,
director of radio work at the University, will outline the U. K. studios
program for the mountains.
Three center directors will talk
on radio as an aid' to religion, as
a community factor, and as a recreational factor. Lee Coulson, director of station WHAS, will speak on
"WHAS. the Conecting Link."
Robert K. Salyers. state NY A director, will dicuss the work of that
agency in connection with the listening centers. Corsia Whitaker.
NYA supervisor of the system, will
tell of her experiences at the centers.
Open forums will be held on the
subjects "What's Wrong with Existing Programs," and "What Radio
Programs Are Needed That Are Not
Now Available."
Features of the program will include a demonstration of a typical
listening group hearing and disbroadcast
cussing an educational
and a mountain "preaching."
Broadcasting portions of the conference will involve the use of short
waves to transmit the program from
Gander to a point where telephone
lines are available to carry the program to the broadcasting station.

MRS. HELEN ZAGAT

BLANDING TO BE
BANQUET GUEST
Dean Of Women Will Speak
On 'Time For The Soul'
At W A A Dinner

Tonight
Dean Sarah G. Blandmg will be
the guest speaker at the first W. A.
A. banquet, which will be held at
6:30 o'clock tonight at the Wellington Arms. She wil use as her subject "Time for the Soul."
Eleanor Snedeker. president of
the organization, will preside and
introduce the speaker. Entertainment will be furnished by Jean
Megerle. Margaret Becker, and
Jean Marie McConnell. after which
a silver loving cup wil be awarded
to Josephine Hume, winner of Uie

King:, Clark, Brady

1937 W. A. A. tennis tournament,
and an arrow will be presented to
Frances Laval, the winner of the
1937 archery tournament.

To Choose Winners

The banquet committee is
of Runnelle Palmore. chairman: Jane Welch and Natalie Dye.
Invitations; Martha Hawkins, foods:
Sue D. Sparks and Lovaine Lewis,
program: and Hazel Perkins, dec
orations.
Plates will cost 75 cents each,
and reservations may be made until noon Tuesday in the office of
the Women's gymnasium.

The winners of the 150 award
given annually by Judge Samuel
M. Wilson, Lexington, for the two
University undergraduates owning
the best libraries of their own selection, will be chosen by a committee consisting of Miss Margaret
I King, chairman. Dr. Thomas D.
Clark, of the history department,
and Dr. George K. Brady of the
English department.
No candidates will be considered
for these awards after April 15. and
al personal collections must be in
the hands of the committee by May
I. Thirty dollars wilt be given for
the best collection and $20 for the
second best.
Elizabeth Hardwick and Mary
Frances McClain won first and second prizes respectively last year.
The best collections submitted will
be displayed in the library.
The following regulations are set
up governing the awarding of the
prizes:
1. The contestants for the prizes
must have been in attendance at
the University of Kentucky for at
least two years. In case the contestant enters the University in the
junior year, registration in the semester prior to graduation will be
counted as a part of the two years.
2. Any library entered in the competition must contain not fewer
than fifty volumes, and all the
books must be owned by the student entering the library.

com-poe-

In Library Contest

d

BLOCK, BRIDLE
TO BACK SHOW Trutza Lectures

Before Y W Group

All

Entrants Must Register
Before Friday, April 1;
World

Fellowship Members
Hear Teacher Discuss
Austrian Situation

Eight Stock Rings
To Be Shown

Block and Bridle will sponsor a
livestock judging contest at 1 p. m
Saturday April 2 at the judging
pavilion. All entrants must register before 5 p. m. Friday, April 1.
according to Carl Camenisch, superintendent of the contest.
Judges for the contest will be
Prof. L. J. Horlacher. sheep: Prof.
E. S. Good, beef cattle: Prof. E. J.
Wilford. hegs. and Prof. W. S. Anderson, mules. Chairmen of the
student committees for the different rings of livestock are B. F. Cot
trell. sheep: James Quisenberry.
beef cattle: J. B. Jones, hogs Julian
Smith, mules.
There will be eight rings of livestock to judge. Reasons will be
heard on cne ring each of the following livestock: beef cattle, sheep,
hogs and mules. There will be a
separate judging contest for dairy
catte on April 30 under the auspices of the Dairy club.
The freshmen and upperclassmen
making the highest score will be
awarded a trophy by the lecal Block
and Bridle club, while the senior
in the cub making the highest score
will be awarded a medal by the
National Block and Bridle cub.

Combined Glee Clubs Present Handel's
"Messiah" As Last Vespers Of Season

Quartette Entertains

Mrs. Helen Zagat Is Slated
For Final Vocational
Guidance
Talk

LECTURER

OF UK 'CENTERS'

MEN'S

book-end-

TWO TO

Women To Hear Art Expert
At Convocation Thursday

BOOK BANDS
FOR UK DANCES

Announcement
has been
made by the Men's Student
Council that all bids to supply freshman caps for the
coming year are due In the
hands of the Council not
later than April 25. Business
firms wishing to submit bids
are asked to include sample
materials, designs, and the
cost.

.

SUMMER

UNION

TO

April 25

WllLRa

IV

iSTUDENT

Council Wants
Frosh Cap Bids
No Later Than

iMkkTINfl HKIJI
iBY ROOMING

Write Is
Counties Meet To Talk
No ulterior motive was involved
Over New Farm
in Inaugurating this column. Not
Program
meant to teach, to pound, or to
emotionalize, it is simply an overflow of heterogeneous matter which TOBACCO REFERENDUM
III A IT O T A117TI7DO
may entertain, may make you mad.
VOTE TO BE APRIL 9 11 U U O
U
but most of ail we hope it will lead
you to comment. If theie is any- General
Provisions Of Farm j City Housemothers Club Meet
thing on this campus that you feel
Act. Acreages. Quotas
To Discuss Housing
should be brought to light, write us
Will Be Discussed
a letter, be sure to sign your name,
Problems racing
and we will endeavor to print it.
University
Two hundred committeemen rep
W
resenting 39 counties are attending
SOCIAL CONFERENCE
For example the ladies:
a three day conference, to end WedTO CONCLUDE ACTION
Girl and women in general are nesday, at the College of Agriculture
all right to have around to bolster
your ego. Sometimes they present Experiment Station, in order to conApproximately One Hundred
fairly decent
pictures
scattered sider the new farm program and
Managers Attend
s
and the proposed burley tobacco quota
arcund the room as
Session
what-not- s,
but when it comes to the referendum vote which is expected
ordinary courtesies of living, they to be held April
Problems of the University and
9.
oftentimes show a lamentable lack.
Although the tobacco referendum rooming house managers in conWi have in mind the common
lack of '"thank you." or even a nod vote is receiving the greatest amount nection with student housing were
the subject of a round table diswhen you rush past a woman to of consideration, the general procussion of the City Housemothers
open
door for her. When you visions of the farm act and tobacco club
in Memorial hall Saturday.
forty-fiv- e
Ft rain at
degree angle program including acreages, quotas,
final social
be held
to held one of these inside opening new producers and small grower in Athe Woman's meeting to early in
building
doors back, and the "lady" prances provisions are being discussed.
O. M. Farrington, administrative May will conclude the activities of
past you without even so much as
group for the year.
a show of teeth, it well, it leaves assistant of the Agricultural Ex- the
Approximately 100 managers and
tension Division and state executive
a bitter taste in your mouth.
officer of the AAA told the county owners of rooming houses accomcommitteemen yesterday that the modating approximately 1.500 stuNothing Sacred
dents attended the meeting. The
"Among prizes awarded at tlie marketing quota for burley tobacco club composed of all the landladies
a
annual East St. Louis Chamber of probably would not requireacres re- who has student roomers and is
in
Commerce 'Advertising Nighf, was duction of more than 2.000
organized in an effort to bring
a free divorce service." Courier Kentucky.
Mr. Farrington added that bus housemothers into a closer relaJournal. What an excellent way to iness recession is tending to reduce tionship with the University.
improve public morals! Can't you
Immediate notification of Unicigarette consumption and that
just see Uncle Mert and his Mir- thewould be to
the welfare of the versity authorities In case of illness
years cf ups and It
anda, after sixty
farmers if they could hold sales to of a student roomer and eliminadowns, throwing
aside crutches as near consumption as possible.
tion of fire hazards in the rooming
canes with: "Whoopee!
Now
and
Because of the unexpected num houses are two prime objects of the
we can git unhitched."
ber attending the conference, the club.
The results on both these points
afternoon meeting was moved from
Columrai
Station to the have been gratifying, stated Dean
the
Numerous students have suggest- stock Experiment
T .T. Jones .organizer and manager
pavilion.
ed a column in the Kernel on world
of this group. Since the club was
events perhaps a summary or inhave been
organized, landladies
terpretation appearing in every
more regular in notifying Univerother issue. Also, a demand has
sity medical officials when their
befn shown for the return of the
student roomers were taken ill, acold literary column campus short
cording to Dean Jones. Several fire
stories, prose and poetry. What
escapes have been added to
about it?
student lodging, thereby
Bovd. Downing, And Brown eliminating attic
Editorials
check-uhad
preliminary
A
Will Teach First Term;
Among the items that will be inshown that many of the lodging
vestigated for comment in editorial
LeStourgeon
Latimer,
houses had student boarders living
columns this year will be lighting
roms without adein third-storDuring Second
Continued on Page Twot
quate means of escape in case of
The department of mathematics fire. Through carelessness on the
students and landand astronomy will offer work for part of bothillnesses were not reladies often
both undergraduates and graduate ported to the dispensary until they
rtudents at both sessions of summer reached the point of seriousness.
school this year.
The advanced courses are rotated
Under the general supervision of from year to year and during the
Mrs. L. C. Robinson, assistant di- first term this year Dean Paul P.
rector of Guignol. three student di- Boyd. Dr. H. H. Downing and Prof.
Marion C. Brown will teach ccurses
rected and acted plays were present- in mathematics of finance, college
ed Friday night at the little theater. algebra, differential calculus, theory
Ashes." a play dealing with the of equations, projective geometry H. B. Gavle And Sadie Wilgus
To "Make Principal Talks
psychological outlook of marriage and calculus of variations.
During the second term. Prof. C.
written by Betty Vosmer, a student
At Dinner
of the University, was one of the G. Latimer and Prof. Flora LeApril 4
productions. The cast consisted of Stourgeon will offer analytic geomOrville Patton, Greer Johnson, and etry, integral calculus, series and
and
H. B. Gayle. county agent,
Louise N is bet. It was directed by higher agebra.
Besides these scheduled courses Miss Sadie Wilgus. home demonFrank Fowler Davis.
stration agent of Union county, will
there mill be epportunity for
The second play, "Roots." was dispeakers at the
to do independent be the principal
students
rected by Milton Rosenblum with
be
work and to work on their theses agricultural banquet to Aprilheld 'at
the assistance of Mary Frye. In
4. in
6:30 o'clock Monday.
cast were Jeanne Beckett, Irma under guidance.
the
the University Commons. The presiJane Re is. Jane Crump. Ruth Mardent of the Agricultural council.
cus. Irving Danziger, Harry Schild-krauCharles Barrett, will preside as
and O. D. Hawkins.
toastmaster.
"Wurael - Flummery." the third
David Pettus and Julia Hali,
play, a comedy of maners, was diseniors in the College of Agriculrected by John Lynn. Avis Norman,
ture, will speak in behalf of the
Esther Montgomery, Morry
men and women students in the
Kibby Vogt, and Robert
Three nationally prominent edu- College.
made up the cast of the final cators will be included among the
Pledging services for Alpha Zeta.
production.
instructors in a new three-cre- dit
honorary agricultural fraternity and
Organized as a training depart- course in curriculum to be offered
Upsilon Omicron. honorary
ment for persons interested in dra- during the first term of the 1938 Phi economics fraternity will be
home
matics, the laboratory plays serve summer session, from June 30 to conducted.
to develop talent for future Gulgnol July 16.
Awards will be presented to the
productions.
The instructors are Dr. W. C. winners of the Block and Bridle
Bagley, of Columbia University, Dr. judging contest and the Alpha Zeta
Henry H a r a p. George Peabody medal will be awarded to the most
Teacher's College. Nashville. Term., outstanding senior in the College
M
and Superintendent Zenos E. Scott, of Agriculture. An award will be
of Louisville.
given by Phi Upsilon Omicron to
Dr. Bagley, one of the best known the freshman girl who made the
"Present Conditions on the Camday on the curricuhighest standing last year.
pus." an interview with Tom Sprag-ens- , writers of the
lum and methods of teaching, is
A new arrangement of tables,
president of YMCA, will be the writer of numerous books on the lights and decorations is planned
featured on a broadcast from 5:15 subject, and has been a professor for the banquet. This banquet
to 5:30 p. m. Tuesday over station of education at Columbia since 1917. serves as an inspirational and good
Dr. Harap is the author of "Cur- will builder among students, faculWLAP.
riculum Making," "Technique
in ty, staff members and alumni of
Selections wil be given by the Curriculum Making." "Consumption the College of Agriculture.
YWCA and YMCA chorus, wiih Economics." and "Education
for
Tickets for the banquet should be
Virginia Pettus as accompanist. The Economic Life." Mr. Scott is superbought by Saturday noon, it was
chorus is composed of Bettie Phelps, intendent of the Louisville city announced yesterday.
Irene Wilmott, Nancy Duncan, Rae schools, has been connected with
Drane, C. P. Johnson, Deane Pat- state teacher's colleges in the East,
terson, Ralph Kendall, and Clifford and has participated in some imBailey.
.
portant national studies in the eduThe committee for the broadcast cational field.
includes the following: C. P. Johnson, Carl Raney, Homer Knight,
Harlowe P. Dean. Jr. University
BOTANY SOCIETY MEETS
Ray Sutherland, Ralph Kendall,
student, and his quartette composed
aiid (Jordan Drushal.
Phi Epsilon Phi, national honor- of Dawes Thompson, tenor; Jesse
ary botany fraternity, held a busi- Montjoy. tenor, and Palmer Evans,
ness meeting in White hall Thurs- bass, presented a program of spiriday night, March 24, at which cur- tual and modern songs at the lunchrent problems facing the club and eon meeting of the Lions Club Saturday,
a program for the remainder of the hotel", t March 26, at the Lafayette
semester were discussed. Joe Moore,
Election of officers for the Gradgiven
Included in the
uate club will be held at noon Sat- president of the local chapter, pre- were the spirituals selections Away
"Stealing
urday in Room 111. McVey hall at a sided.
to Jesus" and "The Animals are
meeting of aU graduate students.
sung by the ensemble as
Announcements will be made re- YMCA GROtPS TO HEAR TALKS Coming" "Smilin'
well as
Thru" delivered as
garding changes in requirements
The senior and freshman cabinets a solo by Montjoy, and "It Ain't
for advanced degrees, dates for
Necessarily So" sung as a solo by
these and final examinations, ap- of the YMCA will meet at 7:15
degrees and plans for o'clock tonight in the "Y" rooms in Dean.
plications for
In conclusion the quartet sang
Alumni hall. The freshman group
commencement.
well known number "Home,"
is important that all who ex- will hear Rabbi Milton L. Grafman the
It
S. Gensemer.
pect to receive degrees In June be speak on "The Hebrew Faith." irmmmnied bv Adele
program chairman
present, since they will be held re- while the senior cabinet will hear E. C. Handorf,presented Dean, who
sponsible for observing the rules Judge Chester Adams deliver an of the Lions,
address on the subject "Can a Man introduced the other members of
and regulations which will be
be Hoist In H'jilness and Fslitics. the ensemble.

On Y

SEMI-WEEKL-

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXVIII
Am

TUESDAY EDITION

tion. "Pastoral Symphony." played
of the accompanying
orchestra, the violin section concluded its part off beat.
Other chorus numbers on the program were "Glory to God," "Behold
the Lamb of God." "Surely He Hath
Borne Our Griefs," "Hallelujah,"
and "Worthy Is the Lamb That Was
Slain."
And so closed an interesting
season. There have appeared
on the Memorial hall rostrum such
notable personalities as Ernest
lyric tenor; Ezra Rachlin.
brilliant virtuoso pianist; there were
ths University Philharmonic Orchestra, the University concert band
and many others. Almost all attractions at vesper programs were
received enthusiastically,
and the
entire serie add up to a valuable
background for every
cultural
by members

mu-sic-

Mrs. Peter Trutza. Rumania.
spoke at a dinner meeting of (Tie
World Fellowship group of the YW
CA last night at 6 o'clock in the
Woman's building. Following her
speech, she led a discussion on the
situation in Middle Europe with
particular reference to Austria.
Mrs. L .M. Lebus and Miss Elizabeth Cowan entertained in honor of
Mrs. Trutza with a tea at the Woman's building at 4 p. m. yesterday.
She will speak at a meeting of the
Sophomore Commission today at 5
p. m.

Dean Boyd To Talk
At Dallas Conclave

room use and books of a highly
technical nature will be excluded

,rm

fration'
,Jfh.

Dean Paul P. Boyd, of the Co- l,
lege of Arts and Sciences, will read
P';ed 00 th
of
three papers before a meeting
the Southern Association of Col- - tne c,
5. Individual
taste
c,
i
h,h will be emphasized, and initiative
and no set patwill be held this week in Dallas, tern is required.
Texas.
6. The books must be in good conBefore a conference of deans of dition, with allowance for volume
liberal arts colleges. Dean Boyd will of age or scarcity.
give a report on a Louisvill? ex7. The student must be aUe to
periment, in which it was found tell why he has chosen the books,
year's and must be able to give a fair and
that students of only three
high school training, but ranking intelligent account of the contents
high in their classes, have done of the books.
average work or better In college.
8. The Committee on Awards will
Dean Boyd, as chairman of a consist of three persons appointed
committee on entrance matters, will by the President of the University
report the findings of his commitThe committee will make personal
tee.
inspection of all libraries entered in
the competition.
9. The prizes will be awarded the
latter part of the second semester.
10. Information may be secured
from the Student Library Prize
Committee. University of Kentucky.
Henry Clay chapter of Phi Alpha Candidates for the prizes must regDelta, national professional legal ister their intention of competuig
fraternity, held initiation services before April 15.
for seven men Friday afternoon at
the Lafay?tte hotel.
Following the initiation, a banquet in honor of the new members
was held in the Red Room, with
Henry Wall, justice, presiding.
Walter N Flippin. Somerset, was
New members are: Jason Gilli-lan- d. elected president of Alma Magna
Stanford; Joe Orr. Bowling Mater in a recent meeting at MaxGreen: Harris Rhodes. Stanford: J. well Place. The organization is
Wirt Turner. New Castle: Claude made up of students whose parents
Asbury. East Lynn, W. Va.: Lee at one time attended the UniverLanter. Dry Ridge, and Charles sity.
Zimmer, Lexington.
Elizabeth Ligon and Susan JackDr. W. H. Pittman. Dr Roy A. son. Lexington, were elected
Moreland. and Dr. W. L. Roberts,
and secretary-treasure- r
professors of law. gave brief talks. respectively
I

i.

'

j.

Legal Fraternity
Initiates Seven Men

Flippin Is Elected
President Of Group

* ocoi uupy

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

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TO THE FORMER EDITOR OF
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T m Fktnsv.
ui wrote vour final article as
editor of this Mier. You c alltxl il a joiling
down of siniie ersonal whimsies