xt71zc7rnz50 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71zc7rnz50/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19380315  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 15, 1938 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 15, 1938 1938 2013 true xt71zc7rnz50 section xt71zc7rnz50 f

The ECentucecy ECernel

TUESDAY EDITION
KERNEL

SEMI-WEEKL-

CONVOCATION
10 A. M.

TODAY

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXVIII

Z2

LEXINGTON.

KEN

I

LCKY. TUESDAY. MARCH

j.

NEW SERIES NO.

41

VOCATION GUIDE
High School Tourney Opens TO BE SPEAKER Prom Queen, Attendants
WILL SPEAK AT
Thursday With Sixteen Net AT COED CONVO To Be Selected By Vote
GENERAL CONVO
Of Junior Men Thursday
Teams Out For State Halo

MORGANSTERN

Meeting Is Compulsory
AH Freshman And
Sophomore

'Austria In Central Europe'
To Be Discussed
At Meeting
Today

Ptay In Alumni Gym Will
Climax Two Weeks Of
Regional, District
CONCLAVE SLATED
Basketball
FOR THIRD HOUR

Pan-Politik-

Fast-Movin-

g

Five-Gam-

one in a series of lectures on "Central European Economic and Political Policy." when he speaks at
a general convocation at 10 a. m.
today in Memorial hall.
Miss Sarah O Blanding. dean of
women, will preside. All third hour
clashes will be dismissed in order
that students may attend the convocation.
His lecture will deal chiefly with
the country's economic and political relationship to the rest of Europe, with special emphasis on recent developments in Hitler's invasion of Austria.
Brought to the University under
the auspices of the College of Commerce, the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace, and Pan
Politikon. Doctor Morganstern has
lectures
been making
at 4 p. m. each Wednesday and Friday afternoon in White halL Beginning this week, he will discuss
"Exchange Control" for the remainder of his lectures.
As guest speaker at a meeting of
the International relations ' class.
Doctor Morgenstern discussed "The
Mediterranean and Its Portent for
Peace and War" at 6:45 o'clock
last night In the Commons.
In addition to his professorship
at the University of Vienna. Doctor
Morgenstern is director of the Austrian institute for business cycles,
managing, editor of an Austrian
economic review, and a member of
four financial, economic, and statistical committees of the League
of Nations.
Author of two books on economic
theory and numerous articles on
the theory of value, costs, producand business
tion, methodologv.
next
cycles. Doctor Morgenstern
rear will publish an .economic history of Austria.
Doctor Morgenstern plans to eive
lectures at the University of Wisconsin. University of Chicago, and
Harvard and Yale Universities.
semi-weekl- y

1918-"ZZ-

University Senate
Chooses Trimble
TO Probe Courses

By GEORGE IL KERLER

By BOB RANKIN

Climaxing two
of extensive
district and regional tournament
play, 16 high school basketball
teams will play at the Alumni gym.

Thursday

afternoon

and

night.

March 17. in the Initial round of
Annual state high
the Twenty-Firs- t
school basketball tournament.
Ten newcomers are among this
year's representatives.
They are:
Bcllevue. Burgin,
Central City.
Frenchburg. Harlan, HiglYlaryisd-FrenchburHarlan. Highlands.
Madisonville, Lewisburg, Russell and
Sharpe.
Six teams. St. Xavier. Carrollton.
Corydon, Maysrille, Hazard and
Horse Cave, return for the second
consecutive year.
In view of the season's records.
St. Xavier of Louisville reigns as
favorite as Midway, last
year's champions, were eliminated
in the district play-ofXavier has
played in nearly every section of
the state and has defeated many
outstanding fives by large margins.
Bellevue. Northern Kentucky's
representative, also has an impressive record, having lost only one
early season game. This is the first
appearance of the Ohio river school
triumphs over
and Its
most of its opponents stamp it as
one of the teams to beat for the
title.
The tournament will get underway at 1 p. m.. Thursday, with a
program comprising the
opening session. Three games will
be played Thursday night, starting
at 7 o'clock. Thus, all of the teams
will see action on the first day of
the tourney.
Massive trophies have been selected for the winners, the champimi-rtii- o
one being about three feet
hieh and topped by a regular sire
basketball.
The
trophy is a modernistic designed piece with miniature players
grouped around the base.
A
d
basketball
mill
be given
th fhirrt nla
np'Th two losing
I wju
meet in a preliminary game
preceding the championship
tilt
Saturday night, with the winner
earning the third place trophv.
The ten men picked on the all
state team will receive plaaues far
their prowess. The championship
team members will be given gold
basketballs and the second and third
place teams will be presented with
silver and brcnze basketballs.
A
small cup will be given to the man
fudged as the cleanest and most
sportsmanlike player.
Ted Sanford. secretary of the
Kentucky high school athletic association, is manager fcr the tourney and succeeds S. A. "Daddy"
Boles in that position.
Drawings for the tournament
olay-off- s
were changed this year, as
heretofore coaches of each team
drew their positions the day before
the tournament began.
The first day's games are as follows:
I'pper Bracket .
1 p. m.
Lewisburg vs Harlan
2 p. m. St. Xavier vs
Central
City
3 p. m
Bellevue vs Burgin
4 p. m. Sharpe vs
Carrollton
Lower Bracket
5 p. m. Corydon vs Highlands
7 p. m. Maysville vs Rhkcii
p. m
Hazard vs Frenehhunr
p. m. Horse Cave vs
Madison.
vine.
g.

f.

top-hea-

five-ga-

gold-plat-

ed

D

silver-plate-

tl

-

semi-finalis-

Dr. E. O. Trimble, associate professor in the Department of Political Science, yesterday was chosen
bv the University Senate, at a meetcoming in McVey hall, to lead
mittee of investigation in an effort
to alleviate detrimental conditions
effected by overlapping courses in
the various colleges.
His appointment followed a discussion on the floor by Dean Alvin
E. Evans. College of Law. and Dean
Edward Wiest. College of Commerce,
who charged that there was an unnecessary loss of time and money
involved by teaching an identical
subject in more than one department at the same time.
Dean Evans had suggested the
elimination of the course "Adminis-- t
ration of Justice" from the commerce school, on the ground the
course was also offered to students
in the law college.
President Frank L. McVey. who
presided at the meeting, declared
courses would definitely tend tc
promote efficient learning because,
he asserted, it would center all ensingle point. He expresergy on
sed the opinion that some courses
lose their importance as a result of
being listed under departments.
"One chooses a subject limited
to a department." Dr. McVey said,
"when it uhe subject! might be
much broader, if the department
wasn't there at all."
Dr. Trimble stated last night that
the present system of offering an
identical course in two separate departments, was not only urvAl&e
from the educational point of view,
Dr. Edgar C. Palmer, commerce
but that it was a needless expannrofesor and chief statistician of
sion and duplication.
the Kentucky employment compensation committee. Prof. James MarILZCR TO VISIT ESTILL
tin Assistant statistician for the
same organization,
and Merton
Oyler. instructor in the College of
Elmer G. Suzer is leaving Wednesday for Estill county to Inspect Agriculture, attended a recent contwo listening centers which have vention of the Southern regional
committee o fthe Social Science rebeen established in that county.
search' council in New Orleans.
The faculty members visited the
Unemployment compensation commissions of Tennessee. Alabama,
and Louisiana in order to observe
the work of paying benefits.
The conference was divided into
three round tables on population,
on of which Dr. Palmer was chairman, speaking on "Population and
Social Security."
Tryouts for the fifth Guig-nDEAN TO ADDRESS BANQUET
production of the season.
"Steige Door." will be hfld'
Dean Sarah O. Blanding will be
from 3 to 5 p. m. Wednesday,
the guest speaker at the WAA banMarch 16, at the Guignol
quet, to be held Tuesday. March 29,
theater. Frank Fowler, direcat Wellington Arms. Miss Runelle
tor of the playhouse, anPalmore will be in charge of arnounced yesterday. All sturangements.
Reservations must be
dents and facility members
made in Miss Margaret Warren's
desiring a part in the forthoffice before March 28. Committee
coming production should remembers are Martha Hawkins. Sue
port at the stated time, Mr.
D. Sparks. Laevaine Lewis. Jane
Fom ler said.
Welch. Nathalie Dye and Hazel

Faculty Members
Attend Convention

Stage Door
Tryouls Begin

March 16

ol

Women

War Drama Receives Plaudits
Of Impressed First Nighters

Viennese Professor's Talk Is ST. XAVIER ENTERS
MEET AS FAVORITE Wheeler And Thomas Star In
Under Sponsorship Of
"Idiot's Delight" Plotless
Contest To Start At 1 P. M.
e
"Austria in Middle Europe" will
With
Tragedy
be the subject of Dr. Oskar
Session
Viennese professor, as

"Idiot's Delight." Robert E. Sherwood's Pulitzer prize winner, a plotless play whose motif emphatically
demonstrates the psychological evolution cf several sane persons suddenly confronted by a war, opened
a week's run last night in the Guignol theater before a bow
gown audience that filled the house.
The Sherwood show is the fourth
production directed by Frank Fowler during this school year and ludg-in- g
from the vtgorous applause of
the customers he has coached another turnstile breaker.
Outside of a few long moments
in the second act when some American dancing girls spin through Individual routines, the play moves
with swelling Interest. It begins
with violin music and ends with an
aerial bombardment. The lines are
delivered with distinct enunciation,
all the more difficult because the
script requires accents for most of
the players.
It, is not until the close of the
second act that you realize that a
world ensnarllng conflict defies the
confines of a plot From that point,
every character becomes a special
study and their various attitudes
typify their homelands.
The entire presentation originates
and dies in the cocktail leunge of
Hotel Monte Gabriele. a social and
ski sanltorium in the Italian Alps
near the boundaries cf Switzerland
and Austria. Much of the hotel's
front lawn serves as a Fascist flying field. Considering the current
condition of Europe, "Idiot's De
light" Is Ironically apropos.
Because cf the seriousness of
the text, there Is little chance to
Incorporate an amorous situation.
What romance there Is brings together Harry Van (Wildan Thomas), an American chorus girl manager, and Irene (Kathyrn Wheeler),
sophisticated
an
International.
roommate, who base their affection
on a 1925 assignation in an Omaha
hotel.
With the Gabriele lebby serving
as a psychology laboratory, the audience follows the mental transformations of the guests.
Achille Weber (Walter Kirkpat-tick- )
is an European munition mogul
completely unpatriotic, self centered
and indifferent to the activities cf
the nations. When war explodes, he
seems to be viewing an April
on Page Two)

TALK WILL BE GIVEN
BY FLORENCE JACKSON

er at a compulsory convocation for
freshman and sophomore women at
3 p. m. today in Memorial hall.
Her subject will be "Vocational Opportunities for Women."
Mis sJackson, who was formerly
connected with personnel bureau of
Welleslev College, will hold personal 20 minute interviews with
upperclass women today and tomorrow. At 12:30 p. m. today she
will meet with women staff mem-te- e
of the.GTsosn ETA RA RA RD
bers at a luncheon in the Commons.
The vocational guidance committee of the office of the dean of
women will entertain with a tea
In Miss Jackson's honor at 4:30
p. m. today in Boyd hall reading
room.
At 12:30 p. m. Wednesday, the
vocational guidance committee will
give a luncheon in honor of Miss
Jackson, and at 2:30 p. m. she will
address ma tor students of the department of library science.
Mis Jackson, who was director
o fthe appointment bureau of the
Women's Educational and Industrial Union, Boston, for 14 years,
has acted as lecturer and vocational
consultant for women at a number
of colleges and universities.
She has been president of the
national committee o fthe Bureaus
of Occupations, national chairman
o fthe vocational committee o fthe
American Association of University
Women, chairman of the vocational
committee of the Boston branch,
and acting president of the Eastern
College Personnel Officers' Association.

Tickets for the state basketball tournament will be
sold for fifty cents at the
first three sessions of the
tourney. Admission for the
next two sessions will be
seventy;five cents with tickets
for the finals. Saturday night,
costing one dollar.
Anyone wishing to purchase
passes for the whole tourney
will save a dollar by doing so.
as they will sell for $3.00.

.

BOOKING

PLAN SUGGESTED
Lower Prices, Better Bands
Are Results Hoped For In
Of Power
Centralization
And Responsibility
Plans to out the power of booking
all orchesrtas for campus appearances in the hands of a centralized
agency under the director of the
new Student Union building are now
being submitted by members of the
constitutional committee to student organizations fcr approval
Leonard Carr. chairman of the
committee appointed to draw up a
constitution fcr the building, announced yesterday that a final
meeting of the group would be call;d
some time next week, to pass on the

completed document.
According to the present plan, all
organizations on the campus will
book orchestras for their dances
through the director or house manager of the Student Union building.
It is hoped that by centralizing the
oower and responsibility, more efficient and cheaper service will be
rendered the organizations.
The plan will be modeled after
one used by the Southern Booking
Association, which includes such
schools as Georgia Tech, Mississippi
State. University of Alabama, Swa-ne- e
and Vanderbilt.
It was stated that the director,
by virtue of the larger volume of
business done and his longer tenure of office, will be able to obtain
large orchestras more quickly and
economically than individual students.
27
As indicated in the proposed constitution, the director will have no
ODK-Cwen- s
power to limit the amount of money
spent for orchestras or in any way
control the selection, except in carsing spon- rying out the directions of the soThe annual
sored Jointly by Cwens and Omicron ciety giving the dance. In addition,
r
will receive no monethe
Delta Kappa will be held Tuesday tary
return for this service other
night. May 3, at Memorial hall, it
the building.
was announced yesterday.
All groups will be required to sing than his salary for other duties in
Carolyn Sigler and Joy Edgerton,
"Alma Mater" and one other number, while one extra number may members of the constitutional committee, this week are contacting
be sung if the group wishes, accordpresidents of the A. W. a.. Pan.
ing to the contest rules.
A maximum of 24 and a minimum Hellenic Council and the social soof 12 voices may be in each group, rorities to determine sentiment re
which may or may not have accom- garding the plan. Leonard Carr is
meeting with leaders of the men s
paniment.
Applications must be made by organizations.
April 27 to the committee in charge,
composed of Mary Lou McFarland. KIWAMAXS TO HEAR COOPER
Susan Jackson.
Virginia Pettus. I Dean
Harlowe Dean. Jr., and William College Thomas P. Cooper of the
of Agriculture will address
Young. Judges for the event wiU
the Lexington Kiwanis Club at
be announced later.
noon today at the Lafayette hotel.
The committee urges all fraternities and sororities as well as inde- Approximately 50 farmers have been
invited to hear him talk on the
pendent groups to participate.
new farm bill recently passed by
Congress, it was announced.

Petitions For AWS

Officer Nominees
Due On Wednesday

--

April
Deadline
Set By
For Campus Sing

Rannels Addresses
Cosmopolitan Club

Edward H. Rannells, professor in
the art department, addressed a
meeting Friday of the Cosmopolitan club in the University VMCA
rooms. He spoke on the Paris Exposition of 1937. Miss Rosemary
Taylor presided.
Mioses Barbara MacVey, Virginia
Krzak. Ruth Blankenship, and Mr.
Joseph E. Bourgeois were elected
to membership. Others present were
Elizabeth Cowan, Martha Huber,
Jane Lafetra. Grace Snodgrass.
Marie Antoinette
de Lafforest,
Bart Peak, Dr. and Mrs. A. E. Bigge,
Professor and Mrs. J. E. Hernandez, and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Schneider.

j

Petitions for president,
secretary, treasurer and town
representative of the Association of
Women Students must be drawn
up and turned in to Frances Sadler, president of the organization,
before 5 p. m., Wednesday. March
16. It was announced yesterday.
must bear the
Each petition
names of 50 accredited students with
no duplications. Election to offices
will be held the first week in April
after petitions have been considered and approved by Dean Sarah
Blanding and two members of the
A. W. S. council.
Qualifications for president include credit for at least five semesters of college work with three of
them acquired at the University

candidates
must have had at least three semesters work with two of them done
m'hile

McVey To Talk At
Club Meeting

t

By ALLENBV E. WINER
Memorial hall seemed a chapel of
tones and colors Sunday afternoon,
when the University Women's glee
club, under the direction of Miss
Mildred Lewis, and featuring Mrs.
Genevieve Bosworth, soi) ano. as
as.'isting artist, presented the fourteenth vespers musicale of the season. Nine hundred persons listened
to the brilliant pro-a- m.
There was a picturesque setting
to this concert that made it doubly
effective. The chorus, numbering
40 voices, was arranged in a semicircle, each end flanked by a colorful bunch of flowers. The singers
wore long gowns cf pink, blue, lavender, and other pastel hues.
The lengthy program was devoted
to Kentucky ballads and European
works
folk songs, and 12
by Mrs. Bosworth. The American-bor- n
soprano displayed a voice of
wide range
and lyric quality.
Among her offerings were "At Eve
I Hear a Flute," sung in conjunction with William Mertjn. University flutist, and the chorus.
Other songs by Mrs. Bosworth
selected from the wcrks of a wide
lange of masters, included "Nevl-cata.- "
by Respighi; "A des ciseaux."
by Hue; "Carnival." by Fourdrain;
"Japanese Regelied." by Joseph
Marx; and Erich Wolff's "Fairy
Tales."
The program began with four
selections by the chorus, "Alleluia,"
a sixteenth century German hymn;
"My Love Dwelt in a Northern
Land." by Edgar; "A Violin Is Playing in the Street," and "The Last
Song," by Rogers.
Among the other songs offered by
the glee club were an Appalachian
mountain folk song, "I Wcnder as
I Wander." arranged for the glee
club by John Jacob Niles. and featuring Betty Phelps. Elizabeth Tompkins, and Wanda Lynch: "One
Morning in May," a Kentucky folk
song, arranged by Jchn Lewis; "Fellow Me Down to Carlow." an Irish
folk song, and "Stars." by Harriet
Ware.
Sunday's audience was slow in arriving. Those who came late missed
seme really excellent presentations
by the chorus, which is composed
if music students and others interested in music as an avocation
medium.
The chcrus' harmony was near
perfect, and especially fine in "I
Wonder as I Wander." Adelle
accompanied Mrs. Bosworth
and the ensemble.
n

Gen-sem-

er

Davenport Speaks
At Phi U. Banquet

McGoldrick, . Pettus, Gentry
here.
Two semesters of college work are
Are Initiated Into
necessary for candidacy for secreHonorary
tary, treasurer, and ftown repreAll members
sentative.
of the
Miss Iris Davenport, Athens. Ga..
A. W. S. council must have a Uniwas the guest speaker at the banversity standing.
quet which was given by Iota chapter of Phi Upsilon Omicron. national honorary home economics
fraternity, at the Lafayette hotel,
Friday night.
In the afternoon, initiation serBeginning today. Chi Delta Phi. vices were held for three girls.
national honorary literary fratern- Those initiated were Louise
Versailles; Virginia Petity, will sponsor two motion pictures.
"Penrod and His Twin Brother." tus. Stanford; and Dorothy Gentry,
and "Wide Open Faces." which are Henderson.
Grace Silverman presided at the
scheduled to be shown at the Ben
AH theatre for the next three days. banquet and Introduced the speaker.
A vocal solo "Sylvia" was presented
Tickets may be secured from Eileen Baker. Wilma Bush. Emily by Frances Young, and Julia Wood
Clark. Kadell Horn. Harriet Estes. and Minnie Ruth Pile sang a duet.
Leslie Lee Jones. Vera Gillespie. Jane Members of Omicron Nu and Alpha
Nu were guests at the banquet.
Lewis. Barbara Smith. Grace Silverman. Lulie Ruth Vivion, and Mary
Grlnter White.
U.

Honorary Group
To Sponsor Show

Gridders Hold Open House
For Grandstand Coaches

By JOE CREASOX
The first open house by Kentucky's new football regime was
held Saturday afternoon as two
select teams battered each other
on Stoll field practice lot, climaxing two weeks of Intensive drills.
Availing themselves of Coach
Kirwan's liberal offer to witness the
practice sessions, several hundred
fans, who completely filled the
bleacher section erected for the patterns, added their enthusiasm
to
tkie gathering.
After viewing the
spirit and improved work of the
squad, not one pessimistic note could
240
be. found on the lips of any of the
"
spectators.
Pres. McVey will speak at a meetAnother player was initiated into
ing of the Committee of 240 Thursthe Wildcat Good Samaritan hosday night at 7.30 p. m. In the Uni- pital fraternity as a result of the
versity Training School. There will afternoon's
entertainment. when
be a Know Your University Contest Alternate Captain Bill Boston was
among the members of the commitfelled by a badly twisted right
tee and a 1938 Kentuckian will be knee late in the scrimmage. The
presented to the winner. Refreshextent of the injury is unknown but
it definitely removes Boston from
ments will be served.

Bosworth, Women's Glee Club
Featured On Vespers Program

Assembly Planned For 3 P.M.
Will Be Held In MemoNear Capacity Audience Hears'
rial Hall
Program Consisting Of
European Folk Songs,
Jackson, vocational
Miss Florence
Kentucky Ballads
guidance expert, will be the speak-

Tickets Are
Now Available
For Net Tourney

BAND

For

Ky. German Club
Will Meet Tonight

Dr. Oskar Morgenstern, University
af Vienna professor and director of
the Austrian institute of business
cycles, will address the University
German club at 7:30 o'clock. Tuesday. March 15. in the Woman's
the remaining exercises carded for building.
"Student Life in Austria" will be
spring football.
After four quarters of gruelling the subject of Dr. Morgenstern 's
contact, the score was knotted at address.
In addition to the lecture, the
as the two squads disputed
will consist of songs and
on even terms all during the game.
The squad of 50 hopefuls was ?ames. All who are interested are
divided into a Blue and a White invited to attend the meeting.
shirted team and after a generous
E. W. USKE ADDRESSES ASU
portion of calisthentics. the practice
moved into its advance stages. The
"Goya, the Painter" was the subBlue starters were Black, center:
Willoughby and Boston, guards; ject of an address made by Prof.
Edward W. Fiske. of the University
Brown and Eibner. tackles:
and Garland, ends; Shep- Art department, before a meeting
herd, Johnson, Carnes. and Powell of the American Student Union
Monday night in McVey hall.
in the backfleld.
Starting for the Whites at center was Parda; Vires and Sydnor, PROF TO TALK I.N LOUSVILLE
guards: Reid and Jacobs, tackles;
Spears and Phillips, ends; Mason,
E. F. Farquhar. professor of litCombs, Sanders and Ishmael as erature, will speak Thursday afternoon before a meeting of the Louisbacks.
ville Council of English Teachers on
The Blues inaugurated the scoring after 7 minutes play when a "The Law of Contemporaneity and
series of first downs carried the the Comic Philosophy to Which It
Gives Rise."
Continued on Pvt'? Four)
18-u- p

pro-?ra-

Prom Bids
May Be Secured

At Post

Nine Girls Chosen By Judges
From Field Of 30
To Compete For
Honor
STROHM TO NAME
COURT OF HONOR
Prom Bids May Be Obtained
At Postoffice
Todav

Office

Junior Prom bids will be
given out from 10 a. m. to
4 p. m. Tuesday and from 1
to 4 p. m. Wednesday in the
postofflce. Juniors are entitled to one date and one
stag bid. and seniors get their
choice of a date or a stag
bid.

HEAVIER TRACK

Election of the Junior Prom
Queen and her two attendants from
a group of nine girls nominated
Friday by a committee of judges
will be held from 10 a. m. to 4 p.
m. Thursday. March 17. in the basement of the Administration building. Only junior men presenting
some form of identification will be
permitted to vote.
Girls nominated for the honor
are: Roberta Wilson'. Somerset. Independent. Commerce College; Mary
Lee Hope. St. Petersburg. Fla.. Delta
Delta Delta. Arts and Sciences College Helen Robinson. Lexington. Independent, Commerce College; Peg-xPayne, Lexington. Alpha Delta
Theta, Commerce College; Estalene
Lewis. London. Delta Delta Delta.
Commerce College: Joyce Hicks.
Clinton, Chi Omega. Arts and
College: Mary
Louise
Sciences
Kappa
Naive.
Versailles. Kappa
Gamma. Commerce College: Nancy
Alpha Gamma
Crrell. Kuttawa.
Delta. Arts and Sciences College;
and Mildred Croft. Delta Delta
Delta. Education College.
Names of the candidates will appear on the ballots in alphabetical
order and will be voted on by the
men of the Junior class to their
flrst. second, and third choices The
?lection will be under the supervision of the Men's Student Council.
A court of honor to the queen,
consisting of one girl from each
sorority and three independents,
will be chosen this week by Bob
Strohm, president of the junior
class.
The Queen and her court will
reign over the annual Junior Prom
to be held from 9 'till 12 o'cUx-Monday. March 21. in the Alumni
gymnasium. Earl "Father" Hin-and his orchestra will supply the
rhvthms for the stomp.
Bids for the Prom will be given
out at the University post office
from 10 a m. to 4 p. m. todav. and
from 1 to 4 D. m. on Wednesday
Juniors are entitled to one dare
and one stag bid. and Seniors will
receive their choice of a date or a
stag bid.
The nine candidates were chosen
from a group of 30 girls Including
three from each sorority, and six
independents, by a committee comShropshire,
posed of Laurence
sports editor of the Lexington
Leader: Gerald Griffin. Lexington
for the Louisville
correspondent
Courier Journal: John Lewis. University band director: and Lieut.
Col. B. E. Brewer
Girls nominated for the honor,
other than the nine chosen, included the following: Marie Eba.
Kappa Delta: Sue Sparks. Alpha
XI Delta .Esther Rankin, Zeta Tau
Alpha: Gypsy Jo Davis. Independent: Alice Wood Bailev. Alpha Xi
Delta; Nancy Davis, Alpha Delta
Theta: Mary Holladay. Delta Zeta;
Roberta Payne. Alpha Gamma Delta: Virginia Alsop. Kappa Kappa
Gamma: Mariorie Wolfoik. Kappa
Delta: Florene Hurt, Delta Zeta:
Sarah Renaker. Alpha Delta Theta;
Jane Mitchell. Kappa Delta: Glen-dBurton. Chi Omega Charlotte
Wible. Independent: Dot Babbitt.
Kappa Kappa Gamma: Marie Snv-deDelta Zeta; Elaine Allison. Alpha Xi Delta: Runnelle Palmore,
Independent: and Vashti Albert. Independent.
v

DRILLS PLANNED
Coach To. Prepare Thinlies
For Time Tryouts; Vandy
And Cincinnati Are First
Foes On Schedule
Jack Crain former Wildcut track
captain in 1937, and present assistant track coach, announced that
extensive workouts would be given
the track squad for the next three
weeks, in preparation for time trials
at that time. This will enable fhe
coaches to place men in specific
events before the season's first
scheduled meet at Vanderbilt. on
AprU 16.

Track practice is now in its second week, with preliminary exercises, paces and conditioning constituting the past weeks workouts.
The freshman team is one of the
best in recent years. The varsity,
however, is handicapped in many
positions by lack of material-DavRogan. champion Southeast-3rConference miles and distance
man. has not reported for practice
yet, but Cecil He Hard, also an outstanding distance runner, is striving to fill his shoes. The loss of
the 'Cats' ace sprinter and hurdler.
k
to
Ben Willis, is a sericus
n
the team. Forden and Rankin,
dashmen. are being coached
to fill Willis' vacancy.
dash event.
In the
Hineman and McMakin are
trying out. The field events are
under the supervision of Captain
Simptcn. who is coaching. Hammond Foster and Kazanovich in the
weights and jumps.
Many of the men working out are
newcomers and will not try out for
any specific event until a later date
Coach Rupert announced that a
tentative meet fcr April 23 is being
arranged n'th the University of
Cincinnati.
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Eight University
Agriculture Grads
.

Find Employment

Of the eight University students
who graduated from the College of
Agriculture In February, seven are
employed and one is married.
Elizabeth T. Taylor. Lexington,
is graduate assistant in the university home economics department.
Hazel Hicks. Bryantsville. is an assistant county home demonstration
agent in Fayette county. Julia Dixon. London, is teaching home eco- onomics in the high school at Clinton. Ky.. and the former Helen
Lewis of Crestwood is now Mrs.
Ervin Gillenwater. Cave City.
E. Logan Brown. Shelbyville. is
farming on his father's large farm
in Shelby county. Guy F. Boyd and
William F. Griffin, who came from
Tennessee to study agriculture at
the University, are both assistant
county agents. Arthur S. Johnson,
of River Falls. Wis., is taking graduate work in agricultural economics.

Geologists To 3Iake
Annual Field Trip

s

.

a

Kampus
Kernels
All SuKy tryouts are requested to
report to the SuKy concession stand
in the Alumni gymnasium at 1 p. m.
Thursday, to sel for the State high
school tournament, which wiil last
through Saturday night.

SuKy will hold its regular weekly
meeting at 5 p. m. today in the basement of the alumni gymnasium.

Accompanied by Dr. A. C. McFarThe meeting of the Freshman
land. head cf the Department of
jroup scheduled for today will not
Geology, and David M. Young, curato the Freshman and
tor of the Geology museum, a group be held dueconvocation.
Sophomore
of geology majors from the University will make their annual field
There will be no Freshman cabitrip to the Black Hills of South Da- net
meetuig in the YMCA rooms tokota, from May 29 to June 19.
While making the trip, the party night.
will study glacial geology in Iowa,
Rabbi Milton Graf man. Adath
and will do a considerable amount
Israel Temple, will speak to the
of collecting in Kansas.
Senior cabinet of the YMCA at
7.15 o'clock tonight in the "Y "
rooms.
.

Marriage Problems

Will Be Discussed

The

Dr. Caroline Scott and Dr. Josephine Hunt. Lexington physicians,
will speak on "Marriage Problems"
before a meeting of the Senior forum of the YWCA at 7 o'clock tonight, in the recreation room of
Patterson halL Following the lectures, a round table discussion mill
be held. A women students are
inr!tetl to attend
mcetins.

!e

Freshman cabinets

of tho
hold a taffy pull at
8 o'clock Wednesday night in the
"Y" rooms.
YM-Y-

will

--

There will be a meeting rt Theta
Sigma Phi at 4 p. m . Tuesday, at
the Woman's building.
There will be a meeting of the
White mathematics club at 4 p m.
today in ijcVcv tali.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Pag Two
sought a short cut and found them linking beneath shrubs. They caused your shoes to ooe
mud when von waded through the mire made
bv the diggers in ihe holes. They taught vou
what emharassinents you could surfer when vour
visitor asked vou whv students at kentuckv had
to Ik-- reared off the grass. Finally, thev aroused
vour civic consciousness.
Now practically a thing of the past on the
campus since the excavating, a necessary complement of ihe building program, is nearly
completed, these bathed wire entanglements
taught von a lesson, did they not?
With the approach of Spring the season ol
daffodils and voting love, when, some say. thev
Ixith blossom alike il is now your resxnsibilily
to prove that theie will be one kind of entanglement that you will will escajx the return ol
barbed w'uv. Consider the deliciencies existing
last tear during the height of the construction
work. Lex.k at the newly completed garden south
of the engineering quadrangle. Which path will
will walk ihe paved, which makes bailacl wiie
vou walk the paved, which makes bailied wire
entanglements necessary?

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
OFFICIAL mrSFAFKR OF TH1 STUDENT
cKTVBRerrr of kcntcokt

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PoM Offlc at Islington, Kentucky