xt7x959c6k52 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7x959c6k52/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19370818  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 18, 1937 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 18, 1937 1937 2013 true xt7x959c6k52 section xt7x959c6k52 IBest Copy Available

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

SUMMER
ISSUE

UNIVERSITY

VOL. XXVII

OF

KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST

CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL
GRADUATES

NEW SERIES NO.

18. 1937

71

32 Will Receive Degrees On Friday
Preside
Grads To Be Feted Tonight Doctor Adams ToExercises
At Graduation
Alumni Sponsor Banquet
On Behalf Of Graduating
Students Of Present Term
Annual Dinner Will Re Held
At 6:30 P. M. Today In
Gold Room of

SPEAKER

Lafayette

A

4 p.m. In Memorial Hall

Message

lake this opportunity
of cxpresNing to you my appreciation for your fine attitude and
I he
excellent work you have
done this summer.
Wc have enrolled in the two
terms of the Summer Session
more than twenty-ninhundred
studentts. This is the largest
Summer Session enrollment in
the history of the University. It
it gratifying also to know that
the faculty has been universal
in its praise of the quality of
work done.
It shall be our hope next year,
as it has been this year, to arrange a program that will apJesse E. Adams
peal to the various interests and
needs of our students. Any suggestions you may have along this
line will be cordially received.
I want you to know as you return to your homes, that you will
not be forgotten by the faculty of the University. We shall be
thinking of you as you go to your respective fields of work, and
shall wish for you a most successful year. If the Universitytcan
render a service to you at any time, feel free to ask it.
We' shall hope to see you and many of your friends in the Summer Session of 1938.
Cordially and sincerely,
Jesse E. Adams
Director of Summer Session
May

SPEAKER

I

DEAN W. S. TAYLOR
TO CONFER DEGREES
University

Salon Orchestra
Furnish Music
For Program

I

Will

e

McCLAIN TO MAKE
PRNCIPAL ADDRESS
Marcus Rcdwine, Alumni As
sociation Prexy, also
To Give Talk

v

3

'

"

:

With students receiving degrees
as guests of honor, the annual
commencement dinner of the Sum
mer 8esslon will be held at 6:30 p.
m. today In the Gold Room of the
Lafayette hotel.
Dr. Jesse E. Adams, director of
the Session, will act as toastmaster

at the dinner. The principal address of the evening will be given
by a. Lee McClaln, Class of '19, adjutant general of Kentucky.
'

Marcus

Red wine,

Class

of

'19,

president of the University alumni
association will greet the guests.
Response to the greetings will be
'

given by W. T. Thomas, A. B. "37,
and Miss Geneva Foust, M. A. "37.
' Students who will receive degrees
at the commencement Friday will
be the guests of the alumni association at the dinner. Alumni of the
University, friends of the graduates
and Interested students are invited
to attend the banquet.
Music on the program will consist
y,
of three piano solos by John A.
two vocal selections by Miss
Mary Eleanor Clay, and group singing of "On, On, U. of K." The group
singing will be led by Miss Mildred
Lewis of the music department.
The commencement dinner committee is made up of Nancy Caroline Allen, arts and sciences; W. T.
Thomas, arts and sciences; Edna
Mae Campbell, agriculture; John H.
Bell, Jr., agriculture; Baldsmerb
Menchero,
engineering;
James
engineering;
Richmond,
John
Blackburn, law: Robert L. Smith,
law; Marie Goodwin Halbert, education E. A. Davis, education; Donald Irvine, commerce; Curtiss
commerce;
Geneva Foust,
graduate school and O. L. Kaiser,
graduate school.
An alumni committee for the dinner is composed of Miss Willy King,
chairman; Miss Marguerite McLaughlin, Mrs. T. R. Underwood
Miss Tilly Logan and Mr. James S.
Shropshire.
The complete program for the
dinner follows:
Jesse E. Adams
Toastmaster
Director of the Summer Session
Piano
John A. Gilkey
"Smoke Gets In Your Eyes"
"When Day Is Done"
"Mood Indigo"
Mary Eleanor Clay
Vocal
"Out Of The Dusk To You"
"Chinese Lullaby"
John Toohey, at the piano .
Greetings
Marcus Redwlne
President, University of
Kentucky Alumni Association
W. T. Thomas
Response
A. B. -- '37
Geneva Foust
Gil-ke-

Wll-mo- tt,

M. A.

......

-

37

Assembly
"On, On, U. of K."
Mildred Lewis, directing
G. Lee McClaln
Address
Adjutant General of Kentucky

Kentucky to Have
Large Delegation
At Democrat Meet
,

.

With a prospective delegation of
at least 1,000 young men and women, Kentucky will Invade the National convention of the Young
Democratic Clubs of America In
Indianapolis August 19-.accord- -,
Ing to Tom Logan, Covington, pres-- i
ident of the Kentucky clubs.
Convention plans were drawn up
In Louisville by Mr. Logan In a
meeting with Miss Ruth White,
Glasgow, and John Dugan, Louis- -j
ville national commltteewoman and
committeeman for Kentucky.
21

,
I

'
'

4

ilf

,A Z

I

MARCO? QEHVllNE

SYMPHONY

BILL

FEATURES

TWO

Pianist, Soprano Will Be On
Program As Orchestra Presents Final Concert Of
Summer Series
Directed by Prof. Carl A. Lam-per- t,
the University summer orchestra will present the last little symphony of the 1937 session at 7:30
p. m. Thursday, August 19, in Memorial hall.
Featured on the program will be
solos by Miss Hazel Brittain, sopra
no, and Thomas Pollard, pianist.
Miss Brittain will sing two num
bers; "Songs My Mother Taught
Me" by Dvorak and "By the Waters
of Minnetonka" by Lleurance. Mr.
Pollard will play George Gershwin's
"Rhapsody in Bule."
The complete program for the lit
tle symphony Is as follows:
From Italy A selection of
.. Otto Langey
Italian Folk-sonBallet Music from Faust .. Gounod
Songs My Mother Taught Me .
Dvorak
By the Waters of Minnetonka ......
Lleurance
(Soprano solo: Miss Hazel Brittain)
Valse:
The Skaters
Waldtenfel
Valse Triste (from Jarnefelt's
Sibelius
Drama "Kuolema,"
Blue Danube Waltz
Straus
Rhapsody in Blue
Gershwin
(Thomas Pollard, Pianist)
Farewell Symphony
Haydn
gs

Fall Registration Will Begin

At UKy On September

wheth-(Continu- ed

Final Exams
Are Slated

Saturday,
August

well-spe-

I

Got Out

The close will mean the end of
Interesting class sessions; disbanding of social and recreation groups
that shall never meet again; many
ed
friends departing
for distant places; and leaving that
beautiful campus that I have grown
newly-acquir-

Another happy, Interesting
summer has been my experience while attending the "Grandest" of Universities.
I feel it a privilege to attend with
others who have completed a very
strenuous school year but for a
genuine, sincere interact In both
their positions and Education, find
a way to spend summer months In
the halls of learning.
I have gained a great store of
knowledge to add to that reserve
that every teacher needs, both for
use In methods and in Interesting
factual material for her classroom.
I prize very highly the contact
with Great Minds that compose the
Faculty and know I have gained
untold wealth 4n the friendships
made.
nt

3

From all parts of Kentucky, from
To avoid placing a disadvantage
numerous other states and from on those students who register on
foreign countries students will corns Wednesday, half of each class secon the week of September 12 to tion will be held open for the second
register for the regular fall semes- day.
ter of the University.
Students will be allowed to regFreshman registration day, that ister only at the time specified for
hectic time when new students get them. If they set in the wrong altheir first taste of college life, is phabetical division they will be
slated for Monday, September 13, made to wait until their group regaccording to an announcement yes isters.
Numerous
terday by the Registrar's office
transcripts of high
Tuesday and Wednesday, Sep- school credits have already been retember 14 and 15, will be devoted to ceived but the registrar's office
the registering of upper classmen. would not venture to predict
to Page Four)
Students whose names begin with
the letters A through O will register
on Tuesday; the remainder on Wednesday.
Registration will be accomplished
for upper cla&men through the system put into effect last September.
Under this system different letter
21
groups register at assigned times.
This system did much last year
Examinations for the final
to alleviate the congestion that so
semester of the 1937 Summer
prevelant at registration In former
Session will be held at reguyears. It was devised by the Kernel
lar class periods Saturday,
and put Into effect last September
August 21, according to an
through th efforts of the registrar.
announcement yesterday from
There will be no change in the
Dr. Jesse E. Adam's office.
system this year, according to the
registrar's office.

What
(Ed. Note Last week. The Kernel
published a request (of students'
opinion as to what they got out of
Summer School. The following letters
are a response to this request. The
Kenrtl wishes to thank sinorrely the
students who responded.)

1

to

love.

,

In a very thoughtful, reminiscent
mood, I will leave, knowing I am
better person for having studied,
and laughed and lived at the University of Kentucky.

of Summer School
ation of the Irregularities on the
face of the eternal regularity underlying the purpose of creation of
man and his world, has become my
vision of education.
When teachers have this vision
they spill over onto their students
the cream of soul satisfying living.
I have been so drenched this summer by my three teachers that it
will take the rest of my life to absorb the implications of my drench-

ing.

If you will think seriously and
inclusively about your own summer and life you will understand
Fifty words are too few. Here what I mean. ' My case is not
special one.
are more for your consideration.
Norman Dodion
Deep flowing appreciation and
soul satisfying understandings are
so very difficult to express and to
This summer school has been the
detect In others that we tend to most interesting of any I have atthink they are living possessions of tended. The only trouble being trying to refrain from taking part in
only a Ood --selected few.
acThe pursuit' of an ever growing to many of the
better understanding of phases of tivities.
I have been taking physics lec
man's civilisation and an appreci
Ann Everaon

extra-curricul- ar

Democracy Will Be Topic Of
Dr. Boyd N. Bode, Ohio
State University,
Chief Speaker

J .V
).'- -

l)r. hoy a

FARMERS

1938

i.

,

ttoUe

PLAN

PROGRAM

Three Hundred Meet On Campus To Discuss Provisions
Of Proposed Agricultural
Conservation Scheme
In the first of the two State-wi-de
gatherings to discuss agricultural
adjustment, 300 farmers from central and eastern counties met at the
University of Kentucky Experiment
Station last Thursday. A similar
meeting was expected to draw at
least 200 Western Kentucky farmers
to the exDerlment substation at
Friday.
Princeton
County committeemen and agricultural agents
have been Invited to meet with rep
resentatives of the Agricultural Ad-

justment Administration to thresh
out provisions of the proposed pro-

gram for 1938.
Provisions of a tenative agri
cultural conservation program were
placed before today's meeting by W.
A. Milner, Washington, and O. M.
Farrington, State director of the
program.
Mr. Milner explained that the
program will not take definite form
until the farmers of the Nation
have been heard from in such meetings as was held Thursday. He also
said that any program made would
be sound and In the Interests of the
whole Nation, and made and administered with a sympathetic interest of all people.

The tentative program for next

Two hundred and thirty-tw- o
students, believed to be the largest
number ever to graduate from University summer sesion, will receive
degrees at commencement exercises
at 4 p. m. Friday in Memorial hall.
Complete records of the number
graduating In past summer commencements
were not available.
However, a checkup of the summer
graduates for 1935 and 1936 reveal
ed that this year's figure toped
either of those two years. In the
1936
commencement
212 received
degrees while in 1935 the number
was 155.
A tenative list of the number of
degrees to be given by each college
was released by the Registrar's office as follows: Arts and Sciences,
46; Agriculture 19; Engineering;
Law, 3; Education, 57; Commerce,
15, and Graduate School 84.
Dr. Boyd N. Bode, professor of
education at Ohio state university,
will deliver the commencement address in Memorial hall Friday afternoon. Doctor Bode will speak on
"Democracy in a Modern World".
Dr. Jesse E. Adams, director of the
Summer Session will preside at the
commencement.
W. S. Taylor, dean of the College
of Education and acting president
of the University, will confer the
degrees upon the students. Dean
Taylor will also give the pledge of
the graduating class.
Music for the program will be
furnished by the University salon
orchestra. During the program the
audience, accompanied by the or
chestra, will sing "Alma Mater".
The Rev. William E. Sweeney,
pastor of the Broadway Christian
church, Lexington, will pronounce
the invocation and benediction.
The order for the academic procession is as follows: director of the
Session and speaker of the day;
chairman of the board of trustees;
trustees and official guests; deans
of the colleges; officers of the department of administration; professors emeritus; alumni; faculties
of colleges of arts and sciences,
agriculture, engineering, law, education and commerce; candidates
for advanced degrees, and candidates for bachelor degrees.
Marshal of the day for the academic procession will be Major Irvine C. Scudder of the military department. Assistant marshals will
include Julian W. Boxley, Stanton
G. Dondero, George J. Flster, Fred
Flowers.Lewell Garrison Curtis Hut-to- n,
Sam Nlsbett, James Smee,
Joseph Spears and John Burke

year has many features similar to Turner.
The complete program for the
this year's program, It was said.
commencement
exercises in Memorial hall follows:
PROCESSIONAL
MUSIC Salon Orchestra of The
University of Kentucky
INVOCATION
The Reverend
ture, and money and banking this
E.
Sweeney,Pastor
of
semester finding the last named William
course very interesting. The former Broadway Christian Church, Lex
is repitition of a high school course ington, Kentucky.
Salon Orchestra
MUSIC
I once had. The money and bankADDRESS
"Democracy in a
ing course has opened up an entirely new line of thought for me which Modern World." Boyd N. Bode,
In turn fills in and suppllments Professor of Education, The Ohio
State University Columbus, Ohio.
some previously known facts.
CONFERRING OF DEGREES
Facts, facts, and facts are the
requirements of this school.' Learn Dean William S. Taylor, Acting
facts. .Why doesn't this school have President of the University.
OF
PLEDGE
THE SENIOR
undergraduate
curriculum
and
Dean Taylor
which allows more individual work CLASS
Sung by audi
ALMA MATER
by the student and let professors
act as advisors. Let the student ence, acocmpanied by Salon Orcheshave time to work out problems In tra.
BENEDICTION
The Reverend
his own manner and acquire knowledge of where to find facts and Sweeney
how to go about about finding them.
WILL OPEN BIDS
In the long run which Is most important, the' few facts one gleans
Opening of bids for construction
from four years of college or the
ability to quickly find the desired at the ' new biological sciences
Information on dry topics one may building will be held Monday,
gust 30, according to Elgan B. Far-ri- s,
have presented to hlmf
chief engineer.
Howard Walters

* Best
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Tage Two

the
sented with a new field in photography
that would successfully enlarge. It
miniature,
OF THE STUDENTS OP
OFFICIAL HEWSPAPFT
was a result of the development of a fine grain
OF KENTUCKY
THB UNIVERSITY
developer and fine grain film emulsions.
d
Entarrd t tht Port OfTIca t L1nton, Kntuck, U
Now, with so many enthusiasts entering the
claw matter undrr tin Art o( March I, H".
field, you may be sure that rapid advancement
will be the order. From England comes the
Lrxlntton Board of Commarra
announcement that they have come out
Kentucky Inlarcollaflata Praaa Aaaoclatlon
with the ultra of ultra candid cameras. It is
Publlcatloru, rprntd by
A mrmbfr of tha Major Col
B.
about half the size and weight of a Leica or Con-tax- .
AJ
Nnrrll Hill Co., 416 Lcxtnton Ava., New York City;
d
Warkpr I'rlva, Chlrafo; Call Bulldln, San Frantlaco; 41
It has everything buit into it. It has a 3.5
Blvd., Lot Angelri; 1004 Second Art., 8aUH.
lens with an angle of 35 millimetres, and they
COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE claim without any of the disadvantages of most
wide angle lenses. The light metre is built in.
. Editor-in-Chie- f
Ross J. CllITEI.tr K
There is a built in variable filter, right angle
Manager view finder. The built in focusing device is comBusiness
Ike M. Moore
bined with the regular view finder. There is a
THE Sin- - ground glass focusing device for film pack use,
IS WITH
Congratulaccrest feelings that or you can use a roll of 35 millimetre film. But
The Kernel wishes to you will hear more of it if it is all they claim it is.
tions to
congratulate all stuA newspaper announcement the other day
Receivers
dents receiving de tells of a new lens just put into use. It has a
grees. Those who are about to graduate, those speed of f:0.024. Now that, brothers and sisters,
who are about to enter into the competition of is rather rapid. This new lens is to be used for
living, wc hope that knowledge garnered at this photographing the light from certain distant
University will be of material assistance. Those stars. In some instances it must be exposed for
(SO minutes before it will record the slight trace
receiving advanced degrees are doubly congraof light that falls on it.
tulated for their interest in education.
This spring Harry Champlin, an expert on
It is not without many hardships that one goes
through four years of college. Many times he is fine grain developers, came out with a new fine
discouraged, many times he is about to quit, but grain formula that will double the emulsion
it is that perseivercnce which distinguishes a speed of any film. Great stuff! Watch it grow.
college graduate from others that makes him
carry on.
Speaking of cameras reminds me that the huthe outside man eye is a pretty excellent candid camera.
A college degree still means in
the range finder is
world, superiority in ability to adjust oneself Everything is built into it
environment, which in turn, is culture. entirely automatic as is the view finder. The
to the
filters are all there and so are the hundreds of
But at the same time, graduates are stepping inother things expensive cameras have. The lens
to a world harboring many other college graduates, so it is now up to the Kentucky alumni to is one of the widest angle lenses there is. I suppose that it has an angle of almost if not more
prove that here in Lexington, exists an educational and cultural institution which is capable lhan 180 degrees, and it doesn't even distort in
o producing characters equal and superior to that angle even if the image is indistinct on the
those produced by any other University in the margin.
This "magic eye" camera of ours records scenes
country.
magic eye camera
You who are about to live, we salute you, and more rapidly than the
newspaper men use. The developement is inwish vou the best of luck.
stantaneous and is done at the same time the
thing is printed indelibly on your mind. There
this issue, is an automatic filing system that stores it away
The
Kernel conin the recesses of your mind for future reference.
cludes its second year
Ends
And what it more wonderful
it is all done in
as the official publifull color of truest value.
cation of the Univer
When you first learned that the motion picsity Summer Session, that is its second successive
ture camera didn't take moving pictures rathyear. During the ten weeks which this paper
has been bringing to the students the news of er many still pictures that appeared to move
the campus, Lexington merchants have been as- you were probably amazed. You were also
sisting materially in making the paper possible. amazed when you found out that the projection
Students of the Summer Session are a huge instrument shot those same pictures at the screen
like a machine gun so many pictures a minute,
market. They have purchased a considerable
and for every pictures there was a period of total
quantity of material from these Lexington merchants. It is unfortunate that there is no way to darkness.
That is not as amazing as is the theory that I
accurately measure just how much they purhave in regard to the eye. For several years I
chased.
have been noticing that whenever I watched a
But the facts remain evident, so it is with sinwheel it appeared to freeze still
cerity that The Kernel wishes to express its rapidly moving
for an instant every so often in its flight. It
thanks to the merchants, and to the students.
We hope that you have gained even a little from didn't seem right to me. Then on other occaI
the contents of this paper during the summer. sions have tried to read the name of the selection the phonograph was playing while the recWe hope that it has played some role in your
ord was turning at 78 times per minute. I found
life on this campus this summer.
that every so often the record would stop for me
for an instant.
Now 1 have decided that the eye makes snap
shots of all it sees and that the process is very
similar to a motion picture camera. I believe
that the nerves of the eye must be charged up
and
some how with nervous energy. Every time it
takes a picture it discharges that energy, then
By Ralph E. Johnson
regains it, in time to discharge it again before
movement has stopjed to completely. Whenever
worse than the yo-yplague! More infec- objects move too rapidly for this process to work
tious than athlete's fool! More contagious
the moving object becomes blurred. To some
than small pox! More
than love! this process might work more rapidly. Those
More exjxjnsive than a wife! This new candid persons are the better batters in baseball, the
camera craze that has reached the proportions better fighters in boxing, etc.
of an epidemic.
I don't know, but it sounds sort of reasonable
to me. Anybody knowing any better, please
But in its behalf one can say that it is a valuable hobby, for it is producing nd yielding
scientific results. When the amateur radio fans
stalled building home transmittals, the hobby
"Our higher education certainly fails of
look on all over the world and as a result the
its purpose if it does not produce individ"hams," as they choose to call themselves, have
uals who are at home in a modern world.
toimihutcd innumerable inventions to their
That it cannot do this by escape from that
field. And they have been invaluable in times
ivoild into a realm of abstraction and fanof disaster. Hoods this spring brought them into
tasies has been abundantly demonstrated by
the spotlight in this section. Fire, tornado,
the liistory of education itself." Dr. Harry
earthquake, inaiine disaster, and lost
If. Chase, chancellor of New York Univerfliers have all called on the tireless amasity, shows the futility of
teur whose willingness to sit all night with his
ear tuned to the wild air waves, or his weary finger pounding a key, have kept the anxious world
Fellow students suspected a joke when a
infoimcd of progress in search, fight, or assistLoyola student began carrying a little black
ance.
box containing a set of false teeth. But
In the many years that photography has been
they found that it wasn't a joke. The fela science actually veiy few change have been
low is working his way through school selmade. Suddenly, however, the world was pre
ling the manufactured molars.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

chal-langin- g

Weat-woo-

r.

Degree

With

Kernel
Another
Year

This Campus
That IDorld
o

heart-breakin-

round-the-worl-

d

Wednesday, Aujrmt 18, 1937

The

Seem1

Thursday, August It
13:30 p. m. Agricultural
Program.
1:15 to 1:30 p. m. "Piano Fantasies."
1 :30 to 1 :45 p. m. "Answer Me This,"
No. 4. "San Francisco.
ECKDAI1L
Friday, Angnilt 30
California's San Francisco will be 13:15 to 13:30 p. m. "What Farm
Asking," by L. C. Brewer,
Folk
the city discussed at the fourth In College are Agriculture.
of
the series of "Answer Me This" at 1:15 to 1:45 p. m. Bill Cross'
1:30 p. m. Thursday. As usual, Son-dr- a
Rogers and Bill Cross will give
might
Smoking in moderation
the questions and answers.
aaa
have a beneficial effect, says Dr.
L. C. Brewer, assistant editor of Arthur Bine, professor chemistry
at the University of Berlin. Cora-min- e,
agricultural extension division of
a derivative of tobacco nicthe College of Agriculture, will otine, stimulates the heart.
broadcast In "What Farm Folk are
Asking" at 13:15 p. m. Thursday.
Brig.-OeSam milman attriMr. Brewer will answer questions butes his good
health to the fact
farmer-listenesubmitted to him by the
that he has worn suspenders all
of the University studios. his life.

to

13:15

DoiiV The

Dials

Shows
ANDREW
Closing today at the Strand are
"They Gave Him a Gun" with
Spencer Tracy and "Dangerous Adventure" with Don Terry. Josephine Hutchinson In "Mountain
Justice" and John Lodge In "The
Tenth Man" Is billed for Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. William Powell, Clark Gable and Myrna Loy in
"Manhattan Melodrama" Is slated
(or Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
Also on the bill Is "Hit Parade" with
Frances Langford and Phil Regan.
"Woman Chases Man" and "Big
Business" are on the schedule for
Tuesday
The
and Wednesday.
rs
Marlam Hopkins
former
and Joel McCrae; the latter has the
Jones family.

n.

rs

a

a

At 1:15 p. m. on Friday Bill Cross'
a
orchestra will present its regular
broadcast. This popJack Oakle in "Super Sleuth"
with Ann Sothern closes today at ular orchestra presents modern
the Ben All on a double bill with dance music in a delightfully rhyStaurt Erwln in "Dance, Charlie, thmical fashion.
aaa
Dance". Thursday through SaturWednesday, August 18
day the Strand offers Fred Stone
in "Hideaway" and an old Ginger 13:15 to 13:30 p. m. "Doings of Ken- Rogers picture "The Thirteenth
tucky Farm Folk," by C. A. Lewis,
Gueft". The new MOM picture assistant editor, Agricultural Ex"Topper" with Constance Bennett tension Division.
and Bary Grant will be shown Sun 1:15 to 1:45 p. m. John Jacob Niles
day through Wednesday. Also on
"Salute to the Hills."
the bill will be Chester Morris In
"Flight From Glory".
semi-week- ly

Paul Muni and Lulse Rainer in
the cinema version of Pearl Buck's
"The. Good Earth" will (continue

through Friday at the Kentucky
theatre. Starting Saturday and
the next week is
"Broadway Melody of 1038". This
musical comedy stars lover Robert Taylor and dancer Eleanor

Term Paper
Covers
5c

"

fu

77" V'
X

SEE!

V

CARDINAL
OPTICAL CO.

'

S

,

CAMPUS BOOK
STORE

SPECIAL RATES
TO STUDENTS

For Quick, Dependable
A"d
PHONE 5768

Service

155 W. SHORT

Powell.
"Woman I Love" with Paul Muni
and "Night of Mystery" with Ros-co- e
Karnes ends today at the State
theatre. Nelso Edy and Jeanette
McDonald in "Maytime" and Guy
Gibbee in "Jim Hanvey, Detective"
Is billed for Thursday and Friday.
Saturday brings two westerns;
"Riders of Whistling Skull" and "It
Happened Out West". Lee Tracy In
"Behind the Headlines" and "Case
of the Stuttering Bishop" will be
shown Sunday and Monday. "Par-nel- l"
With Myrna Loy and Clark
Gable and "Outer Gate" closes the
week's bill at the State.

Correctly Placed
Walks Will
Save Grass
Says Scribe
Slowly but surely a mutation has
transpired on Ball State's campus.
The once fresh, flourishing greefl
grass has, in two places at least.
practically become extinct.
In days of old, large beautiful
lawns were the pride and joy of
those persons fortunate enough to
be the owner of some large estate.
Even colleges once looked upon a
vast expanse of green grass as a
thing of beauty.
Today, however, there are two
sides to the picture. One is that
most people still look upon a well- kept lawn as an added feature of
beauty to any home, public build
ing, college, and so forth. The problem comes in trying to keep a
lawn in good condition.
Ball State is confronted with the

GRADUATION GIFTS
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WATCHES
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RINGS

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"icmonoywworta,r"S I ft

V

Established

Since 1883

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that needn't be
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Now,
problem of "campus-cutters- ."
most students are always ready and
willing to prove the rule that "a

straight line is the shortest distance between two points" with the
unavoidable result that the grass
whereon they trod must suffer and
slowly die.

There are ways to overcome the
unsightliness of these bare stretches
of ground, denuded of their once
lush grass. Of course, there really
la no need to tell where these bare
strips of ground are located, but for
the benefit of those whose eyes re
fuse to see the all too obvious lack
of greenness, they are located, one
near the Arts Building, and the
other from the Pine Shelf to the
Ad Building walk.
The college might hire a watchman, whose sole duty would be to
keep the students from cutting

campus; they might erect "no trespassing" signs; they might fertilise
these barren strips (fertilizing was
tried a few years ago, but did not
prove very successful); or finally,
the college might acquire sufficient
funds to permit the construction of
walks
concrete or
over these spots.
Constructing walks seems to be
the most logical way to overcome
the continual, unbreakable habit of
the campus cutters. If walks should
be constructed where there are now
but paths, let us hope that the
builders will follow the exact line
of the paths, for years of use have
proven that these paths are truly
the shortest distance between two
points. Ball State News.
hard-surfac- ed

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Hundreds of
new styles
to

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from

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Back to School and College
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Available
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Wednesday, August 18, 1937

Tage Three

Leader Editor Gives Opinion
'Shorty' Shropshire Agrees
UK Is No Rose Bowl Team
h

The University of Kentucky football camp, still pretty much deserted
but soon to be a beehive of activity again, Is no sounding board these days
for great talk about a mighty gridiron machine.
The atmosphere prevailing therein as the 1937 season approaches Is
us
not necessarily one of pessimism. It simply Is not one of

WILDCAT CAPTAIN

fry

over-eealo-

optimism.

nothing to presage a brilliant campaign tor the
Wildcat eleven which will begin to take shape soon after Sept. 1, the
date set by the Southeastern Conference for the opening of football
practice. There Is plenty of reason to expect a OOOD team In the Blue
and White moleskins this fall, but a conquering championship outfit Is
Apparently there

.'

Toogh Assignment Faced
i
Kentucky escaped comparatively
easy on the score of regulars lost
from the 1936 eleven through completion of their collegiate careers,
!

The Spot To EAT

'

Corner Lime

Coach Wynne himself said: 'Taken as a whole we have the hardest
schedule Kentucky has had in recent years."
He added, however, pointing out
that his expected squad of 46 was
the largest he had ever found in
his present alignment, that "we do

"RED" II AG AN
more reserve

End

material than

we have had heretofore."
A more evenly rounded

club is
In prospect, according to the Wildcat boss, and it should be able to
ed
play a
brafrid of
ball. He concluded: "Even though
we may not win many games, I feel
sure the team will give a good account of Itself."
better-balanc-

Vandy Fans Talk Points
Opening the card, in place of the
customary workout on Stoll field
against some such team as tiny
Maryville's, will be an engagement

with Vanderbilt on the

Commo-

dore's home lot. That game comes
within only about three weeks after practice opens, and the always-ominoCommodores are usually
toughest early in the season.
Reports from Nashville have it
that Vandy fans consider the opener in the bag and are talking about
points for their wagers.
The second fray also will be away
from home, the 'Cats going to Corcoran field in Cincinnati to meet
Xavler. The pugnacious Muskateers
always make it an Interesting interlude for Kentucky in any kind
of an athletic contest, and would
like nothing better than to hang
one on the Wildcats.
Georgia Tech's Yellow Jackets,
who surprised even their supporters
by the manner in which they annihilated the Wildcats last season,
will be in