xt72804xhm2x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72804xhm2x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19421208  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  8, 1942 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  8, 1942 1942 2013 true xt72804xhm2x section xt72804xhm2x Best Copy Available

The Kentucky Kernel

ON PACE TWO
Are You Satisfied
With This Ye;ir's Work?

UNIVERSITY

VOLUME XXXIV

Z246

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY.

'Hanging Of The Greens'
Will Take Place Thursday
Night At 7:00 In Union
Program Includes
Christmas Tree,

Ken lucky liuskeleers Appear
Powerful, liul Reserve-Sk- y

Musical Numbers
Students will "deck the halls with
toughs of holly" and sing Christmas carols at 7 o'clock Thursday
night during the traditional service of the Hanging of the Greens In
the Great Hall of the Union build-

Regulars Defeat
Subs,
Before 1,500 Fans
70-3-

Potentially powerful, but weak in
reserves
that's the picture surbasrounding Kentucky's 1942-4- 3
ketball team. After Darnall's five
failed to appear for Saturday
night's exhibition against the 'Cats
because of slippery roads. Coach
Adolph Rupp sent his regulars
against the reserves, and the A
be- team walloped the subs,
y
fans,
fore some 1.500.
Only one thing was wrong with
the tilt it was too much like a
practice session, too mucn like the
daily routine. Evident throughout
the contest was the power being
held in reserve by the A team if
the B boys threatened, they'd use
it otherwise, they were content to
just coast along. In the latter

ing.

Entertainment will include the
hanging of the greens, a candle
lighting service by VW cabinet
members, a Christmas story related
by Clarence

Geiger.

English

7,

in-

structor, and several numbers by a
string quartet, and by the University Choristers, under the direction
f Mildred Lewis.
A Christmas tree, decorated
by
the Union committees, will be placed in the Great Hall together with
other decorations arranged by
members of the YW and YMCA.
The committee on arrangements
includes Jane Birk. vice president,
YWCA: Ethel Smith and William
Deep, social chairmen of the YW
and YM: and the Union committees. Members of Alpha Lambda
Delta, freshman women's honorary
fraternity, will usher.
All students are invited to attend
the ceremonies and take part in
the caroling procession to Maxwell
place following the service.

SEC Football Fate
To He Decided

cage-hungr-

L",thLla-

-

Carols Program
At Convocation

The University Choristers, under
the direction of Mildred Lewis, will
present a program of carols as the
last convocation of the quarter, the
third hour, Friday.
,
convocaUon is being
xhis
hM m order lhat students and

Christmas Letters
Now In Mail

to hear the Choristers in their annual Christmas recital.
The program will be repeated
twice on Sunday as the final mus- ,cae of the year, at 4 p.m. and
agajn at 8 p.m. Overflow audiences
aiways attend these Sunday
certs s0 the convocation program is
expected to take care of many peo- ve unable to attend on Sunday.
Friday's program will include
group singing of familiar carols,
led by Miss Lewis.

'

'.'

' ,' k?;

k: . - J

j

i Vi

ii

!i:i

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IS CANCELLED,
CARROLL SAYS

Transportation
Difficulties Make
Meet Impossible

Hillen-mey-

j

IS ANNOUNCED
Arts And Sciences
Professors To Speak
In March, April
The second annual arts and sciences college lecture series will be
given in March and April. 1943. according to an announcement received from the committee
in
charge.
The lecturers this year, chosen
by their colleagues as outstanding
scholars and teachers in the four
general fields of generically related
subjects are Prof. John Kuiper.
head of the department of philosophy, for literature, philosophy, and
the arts; Dr. Amry Vandenbosch.
professor of political science, for
the social studies: Dr. Charles
professor of organic
Barkenbus,
chemistry, for the physical sciences,
and Dr. William R. Allen, professor
of zoology, for the biological sciences.
These lectures are designed for
the university community and for
the general public and. although
scholarly in nature and based upon
rich research, will have a wide,
general appeal.
The committee in charge, appointed by Dean Paul P. Boyd, is
composed of the lecturers in 1941-4namely. Professors William F.
Gallaway, Martin M. White. William S. Webb, and J. Huntley
Du-pr- e,

i

...

R

MISS DIVINE . . .
. . . cf the Lexington Children's bureau will speak at a meeting of the
VW social service committee today
in the "Y" cabinet room. Plans
will be made for sending Christmas
gifts to the girls at Greendale Re- form school.

!.

YW CABINET
.

er

.

.

Attention Kernel
Staff Applicants
Applications for Kernel staff
positions for the winter quarter
must be presented Dr. Niel
Plummer. head of the journal-tdepartment, before 10 a.m.
Thursday, it has been

...

will hold a dinner meeting at
the YW ofmeeting of

5:30 p.m. Thursday, in
fice. This is the last

two of
and Bart
the members whose sons are affil-

the quarter.

iated with Lances.
Mr. Hillenmeyer and Mr. Peak
appeared
as guest speakers at
Lances' annual banquet recently,
and told members of the new order
how the parent organization was

...

OUTING CLl'B
. . . picture
for the Kentuckian will
be taken at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in
front of the Union building.

e.

The intramural department has
continued its fall quarter program
with the inauguration of boxing
and wTestling meets. Boxing got
underway last week, ten three-roun- d
bouts. A large crowd attended this session as well as the
wrestling opener, which featured
fourteen matches.
Heavyweights
Ralph
Kohl of
SAE and Milt Kafoglis. Independent, furnished one of the top
opening night fights. Kohl winning
the decision after three
d
rounds.
The winner will
next meet Art Francis in what
promises to be a red hot encounter.
In the
pound class. Sonny
Hall of SAE beat Ed Jones of DTD.
while P. Young. AGR. gained the
decision over Bob Dean. DTD. In
the
class, another SAE.
Buddy Parker, was given the decision over AGR's Jim Hancock.
Jim Saunders of SAE got the nod
over Phj, Tau Joe Amato in the
class, while Mitch Yowell.
AGR. defeated SAE Bob Miller.
Heavy blows were landed in the
class as Independent Bob
Foote mauled K. Jones. AGR. to
win on a technical knockout: and
W. Duncan. Independent, registered
a technical K. . against Phi Tau
Bob Harden in the third.
5
In the
class. W. T. Steward defeated Phi Tau Joe Hyams
d
on a
technical K. O..
and in the'
SAE Marion
Smith gained the decision over Sigma Chi Ed Murphy.
The lone heavyweight wrestling
bout pitted Independent
Bill
Chambers against DTD Bill Hock-adaChambers won in one minute. 22 seconds.
punch-packe-

121-1-

128-1-

Donovan Declares
UK Will Be Run
Just As Formerly
Contradicting the rumor that the
University will be cbwed to all except military students next year.
Dr. Herman L. Donovan, president,
stated yesterday. "The University
will be run exactly a it is now.
There is positively no truth to the
rumor."
The government will not take
over any institution, either public
or private, according to Dr. Donovan. It will continue to make contracts with colleges and universities like the one it now holds for
the training of service men at the
University.
"We expect to have approximately 1.000 or 1.200 women: and
between 400 and 500 men who are
not able to pass the physical examination of the armed forces." he
explained.
"A contract will be made with the
government again next year and
we will have soldiers on the cammany more than are now
pus
stationed here. Bui the University
will be open to students just as it
is now.

EAST

ALL-STA- RS

135-1-

145-1-

155-16-

third-roun-

165-17- 5.

y.

Jim Welch. AGR. pimied Stan
Bryan in 3:40 in the
class
opener, and Davis. Sigma Chi. won
on a forfeit. Nixie Peak. SAE. won
on a forfeit in the
while
Gerald Schaffer. AGR. pinned Mor-rRosen. Independent, in two
minutes at. and Phi Delt Jim Floyd
pinned AGR Jim Hancock in 3:20.
Gene Barnett. AGR. pinned SAE
Ned Breathitt in 2:23 in the
class, as Don Wilhoit. of SAE.
downed Phi Delt Jim Beasley in
3:10. and Delt Jack Reed defeated
Tom Moore, SAE. on a time advantage.
In the
class. Bill Gayle
of AGR pinned Clayton Cruise.
SAE. in 1:20: John Russell. DTD.
pinned Al Parrish. Phi Tau. who.
at 142 pounds was fighting in an
upper class, in 3:45; Jack Swift. Independent, downed Ray Weber. Phi
Kappa Tau. in 1:10: Shelby Jett.
Independent, pinned Bob Bradley.
SAE. in 3:45: and SAE J. W. Davis
defeated Phi Delt Jack Veech on a
time advantage.
AGR Jack Leer pinned Delt Bob
Christopherson in 5:20. which Included two overtime periods, and
Goble Wright pinned Ted Beck.
DTD. in 3:40. Leo Yarutis. Independent, won on a forfeit in the
only
match scheduled.
121-1-

128-13- 5.

U

135-1-

145-1-

BEAT WEST 12- -0
Midget Hangers
Best Panthers
Kentucky's high school
proved better snow-grifield, and
ders Saturday on Sto
0
victory over the West
won a
Eastern

All-Sta- rs

--

d

12--

the Shriners' annual charity
classic for the benefit of crippled
children. The Chevy Chase RangIn

ers punched out a 12- - success over
the Strathmore Panthers in a
midget preliminary.
The score just about !nt1ica.r
the difference between the two
squads
at least In Saturday's
meeting. The Easterners outcharg-e- d
the West boys, and heavier Eo.-.backs found easier going than the
s.
West
The winners' scores came in the
second and third quarters one on
a pass, the other on a blocked punt.
In the second stanza, a toss from
Elliott Igleheart of Shelbyville to
Spencer Heaton of Ashland sent
the East lads into a 0 lead. The
third - quarter score was tallied
when Thurman Owen. Covington
end. blocked a West punt on the
West 17. picked the bull up and
carried it over.
e
Two great
stands were
made by the West in the first period, both inside its
line
Outside of these two performances,
the Easterners dominated the play
throughout. The East win was it.s
second in the
series, the
others havir.g ended in ties.
t

ball-toter-

6--

KOul-lin-

five-ye-

ar

Intramural Finals
Finals in intramural wrestling and boxing will be held at
8 p.m. Thursday instead of Friday in the Gym annex, officials of the intramural department announced vesterdav.

165-1-

...

run.
Invitations to membership in the
Mystic 13
because the
roster was limited to that number
were scrawled in red ink on torn '
pieces of brown wrapping paper.
The invitations always were discovered by candidates in the most
mysterious places and at the most
unexpected times. The paper might
be found dangling from the coat
tail, wadded up in the coffee cup

NEWMAN CLl'B
. . . will meet for mass and breakfast at 9:30 a.m. Sunday at St.
Photo by Bruckart
Catherine's academy. Carols will
be played by the St. Catherine
n
have hotli uim ret ugmlioii fur string trio. Picture for the
wllcl be taken that morning.

ed

or possibly stuffed in a salad. After
the
invitations were extended,
pledges were required to wear black
bearing a red 13 pierced
by a dagger.
When the day for initiation arrived, pledges were instructed to
go to some particular spot and
owait further orders. They were
kept waiting for hours, perched on
a fireplug, a house top or some
equally uncomfortable place. 'Mr.
Hillenmeyer was assigned to a seat
on a fireplug at Third and Dewees
streets.!
Mystic 13 actives hours later
a jolt wagon and team from
some livery stable and then went
the rounds collecting their pledges
and beginning the journey to the
initiation site.
This trip certainly must have
proved a nightmare to the prospecThey were cuffed
tive members.

Weight Classes

LECTURE SERIES

H

The Mystic 13 was organized at
the University in 1900 as a junior
honorary and social organization.
How the Mystic 13 functioned and
how it finally disappeared from the
campus on order of school authorby Louis
N. Peak,

Interesting Tilts
Feature All

SECOND ANNUAL

Kil-gor-

R

ities is recalled

al

By Phi Beta

AS CONDENSED

FROM
THE HERALD-LEADELances, junior men's honorary
leadership fraternity, may be a dig- lulled and respected organization
today but one of its ancestors
the Mystic 13 was a renegade of
the first order!

Boxing And W resiling Meets
Continue Intramural Program

The
convention of
the Kentucky Intercollegiate Press
Association which was to have been
held at the University, Friday, December 11, has been cancelled, according to James Carroll, president
of the association.
"This convention was to have
been the last for the duration,"
said Carroll, "but gasoline rationing and lack of transportation facilities would not permit all the
schools to attend."
The KIPA is made up of members
f'om Eastern and Western State
colleges. Murray State
Teachers
college, Berea college.
Teachers
Transylvania college. Union college.
Centre college, and the University.
Twice yearly a different group of
judges, selected by the convention,
consider the merit of newspapers
submitted by each of these colleges.
The papers ' are judged on ten
points: makeup, news stories, features, columns, sports, editorials,
news photographs, cartoons, adverpatisements and best
per.
The purpose of the convention is
to announce the winner of the trophy and the winners of individual
awards.
Grant Milnor Hyde, director of
the school of journalism of the
University of Wisconsin, is judging
this year's entries and the winner
of the trophy and individual winners will be notified by mail.
At the spring convention which
was held at Union college.
The Kernel took the trocollege
phy for the best
newspaper in Kentucky and placed
second In advertising and third in
Six first prizes out of
makeup.
nine were awarded to Kernel staff
members.
semi-annu-

'l

All Rumors That University-Wil-l
Be Operated Only For
Military Students Are False

Eight Initiated

ji

K

NUMIJER

Kampus
Kernels

Carries Out

The Spotlight At I

191'.'

2.

New Group
'

K.

KIPA CONVENTION

Lances, Junior Leadership Honorary
For Men, Was Once Ancient Mystic 13
High Ideals

DECEMBER

The dance Friday night will be
formal for girls, optional for men,
with admission set at $1.25 in advance, $1.50 at the door.
The Kentuckian queen and six
attendants will be presented to the
chairman.
student body during the evening,
and a trophy will be given to Alpha
Gamma Rho fraternity for having
the largest total sales of annuals in THEODORE D. WALSF.R . . .
the recent contest.
. . . who was interned in a Japanese
prison camp the day after Pearl
Eight new members wera initiHarbor, will be guest speaker at
into Phi Beta, national womthe meeting of Pitkin club, noon, ated honorary fraternity of music,
Wednesday.
in Maxwell Street en's
drama, and the dance, yesterday
Presbyterian church.
The formal initiation
afternoon.
JUNIOR-SENIOYW
followed the ceremony,
banquet
will have a picture with Wanda Austin, president, pre. . . commission
taken for the Kentuckian at 6:45 siding.
Phi Beta alumnae and patrons
p.m. today, on the mezzanine of the
joined the active chapter In honor-in- s
Union building.
the news members, who are
FRESHMAN C'LVB . . .
Anr.e Carter Felts. Marjorie Freep.m.
will be taken at 7
. . . picture
;" i
man. Kathleen Hagan. Shirley
i
today on the mezzanine.
Virginia Long. Frances Rowland. Anita Steele, and Jacqnelyn
...
CLUB
party will be held at Wiedeburg.
. . . Christmas
Joan Taylor was in charge ol ar7:30 p.m. today in the Stock Judgrangements for the affair.
ing pavilion.

es

.

-

Weems and his orchestra
will make their last civilian appearance from 9 to 12 Friday night
at the Christmas formal in the
Bluegrass room of the Union building.
Complete arrangements have been
made, it was announced by band
manager Bill Black and the Music
Corporation of America, for the entire Weems band of fourteen members to don the uniform of the
United States Merchant Marine in
the middle of December, playing
their final job here.
The band will be on" duty at the
Basic Cadet School in San Mateo,
Calif., where Weems will assume
the rank of chief petty officer and
the band members will become musicians, second class. The men will
be given regular duties at the school
since the merchant marine does not
authorize
enlistments for entertainment purposes solely. However,
they will be free every night.
Ted

?!Tr: le? Choristers To Give

nunuvviim l i no ji iv l.v . auu toil
up the landslide margin.
Pleasing
from the spectators'
viewpoint was the promise shown
by Kenneth Rollins, guard, and
Mulford Davis, forward, both soph- omores. Davis, although he didn't
play all the game, chunked in 10
points, and Rollins played a good
floor game, .showed up well on de- fense. and contributed eight points.
iwiu ncto.
ine inree veterans
Mel Brewer and Marvin Akers
Christmas letters for former
turned in their usually fine perstudents in the armed forces
formances, Ticco leading the scorwere distributed last week-en- d
ing parade with 22 points.
to women students for mailing
Ineluded in tne subs lineup were
should be in the mail by now,
two freshmen. Paul Noel and Tom
according to Miss Rebecca Van
Mosely. Outstanding among the
Meter.
was Bill Hamm. whose
If any students have failed to
nine points was the top B team
mail their share, they should
scoring mark.
....
return tiietn to the Union InThe Wildcats open the regular
immediately.
formation desk
season with the University of Cin- Vcinnati here Saturday night. 'B.M.
l

FINAL DANCE
Entire. Band
Has Enlisted
In Merchant Navy

ie

j

will

MARKS WEEMS'

Southeastern Conference football's future-wilbe decided at
a meeting of league officials in
Knoxville Friday and Saturday
of this week. Whether the conference will attempt to carry
on football at its present scale
will be determined.
President Herman L. Donovan. Dean W. D. Funkhouser,
Coaches Ab Kirwan and Ber-nShively will represent the
University. Dean Funkhouser is
secretary of the loop, and Coach
Shively is chairman of the committee which will conduct the
annual SEC basketball tourney
in Louisville in February.

j

last

XMAS FORMAL

At Meeting

70-3- 7.

TUESDAY.

open class of the
be conducted at
10 a.m. Friday In room 124, Biological Sciences building. Professor Morris Scherago will discuss "How Germs Cause Disease" as a part of his regular
course in Principles of Bacteriology.
The lecture, which can be
understood apart from the other discussions of the class, is
open to all students.
The

Christmas Swials Take

OF KENTUCKY

Last Open Class
Scheduled Friday
quarter

ON PAGE FOUK

I.IKE FATIIbK LIKE SON

Hull S. I'm ft. '., Irfl, unit liis fatlirr, avunid frotn lift,
leiidersliij) n) the t'nii'enily. The mine is true if Hob Hillenmeyer, riglit , and liis father, Louis
The sous are members of Lames, junior men's honorary leadership fraternity. SECRETARIAL CLl'B . . .
Hlleumeyer.
. . . will meet
5:45 p.m. today in
The fatliers weir affiliated uith tlie Mystic ?, leadersup g'vufj on the am jilts- from IVOO to the Football at
room of the Union
l''2S, ahull whs disbanded and later oniani.ed as Lames.
building. Members are to get their
meals in the cafeteria and go into
the meeting.
about, thrown down, stepped upon
On the surface, the Mystic 13 lenmeyer and Mr. Peak.
SGA . . .
(Incidentally, a third father-so- n
and generally made uncomfortable. appeared "wild and wooly." How. . will meet at 7 p.m. today in
Among other things, initiation con- ever, according to Mr. Peak and Mr. combination is Mr. Kelly and his
sisted of wearing a strip of adhes- Hillenmeyer, the members succeedson. George, who is a member of room 204 of the Union building.
ed in their purpose of assisting and Lances.)
ive tape around the hand, underMISS ROSALIE OAKES . . .
campus
leadership.
neath which was a pud saturated encouraging
According to William S. Ward, of . . . will be the speakea at the "Y"
with acid and bearing the 13 stamp They insist that the hazing prac- - the University English faculty, who lunch club at noon today In room
so that the number was burned intices merely reflected the tempo of serves as faculty adviser for Lances, 23-of the Union building.
the period and certainly did not the campus unit today has as its Ol'TING CLUB . . .,
to the flesh.
the encouragement . . . members will meet at the camTV.e initiation site ordinarily was reflect any perversity on the part basic purpose
of leadership and a recognition of pus door of the Student Union
some lonely sixjt out in the coun- of Mystic membtrs.
try. One of the favorite sites was
That the organization did pay; outstanding abilities. Lances offers building at 12:30 o'clock. Thursday,
Russell cave, located a leni wiles homage to the spirit of leadership two annual scholarships. $50 and to have their picture taken for the
from Lexington on the pike which is attested by the fact that many $25. to outstanding needy men Kentuckian.
Here pledges of its members today are outstund- - Juniors. Last year, in conjunction
bears that name.
UNION NOTES
Ken-tukla-

-

.

arm-ban-

-

j
.-

0--

'

'

'

were blindfolded and forced to do
many things which added to their
mounting discomlorl.
In 1928. rough hazing sent one
pledge to the hospital for treatment and led to a University edict
that the organization be disbanded
in the interest of the students and
the University.

ing civic, educational and business
leaders in their respective com- nullities.
A few of these leaders are Major
Gerald Griffin, William S. Embry,
A. D. Kirwan. W. Emmet Milward,
Elmer iBaldy Gilb. Major Waller
Jones. James Park. G. E. Kelly of
'Lebanon. Guy Hunuelet. Mr Hit-- ;

with SuKy. campus pep organization. Lances sponsored a spring
carnival which netted approximately $300 for the Red Cross. This
event will be held annually, according to present plans.
Membership in Lances is limited
to 20, and the present list includes
17 junior men.

Today
YMCA
p.m.

cabinet, room

Wednesday
Zeta Beta Tau, room
p m.
ThiiTMlay
Avon trainees' dunce.
j room.
8 to 12 p.m.

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* The Kernel Editorial Page

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
p A,1(,r,A
'

6FMT WFEKL Y DtTRtNQ THE SCHOOL TEAR
HQMDAT8 OR EXAMINATION PERIODS

EXCEPT

OP KENTUCKY

OF THE UNIVERSITY

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
-

VMrrrA at th
Port Office it t1ngton. Ktntiirky.
pfond rlas BiRtlfr under the Art of March 3, 1879.
member

M",

Bf.ITY PlT.H

aa

'nso

IAV

Kentucky IntercoMelite Press Association
Lenlnfrtnn Board of Commerce
Kentucky Press Association
National Editorial Association

c."
ii

oo

Ave

-

one Semester

$;

one Tear

iw

artirlrt end columna are

All titrne

,e;ecf thr nr.ini,it

fo be cos.idered

ttir

Thr Keraej.

o

- society Editor

Advertising Manager
GEORGE BARKER
Associate Editors
JIMMY HURT, JIM CARROLL
Cartoons
JUNE WYATT
Circulation Manager
FILLMORE BOWEN
NORMA WEATHERS POON ...... Assistant NeWS Editor
BETTY M ("CLAN AH AN
Assistant Society Editor

t tiirtt fmkiiJun

What Have You Accomplished?
will I1 omplclcd in
u Tiaxc accomvou sav that
U
i
usl
win thwliilcr
at
wli.it vou have done luiv

the

Now thai
a lew davs.

tan

It--

plished . ii
awhile alxiul
mIiooI. Was mining to mIiimiI worth sX'iiding
the time and inoncv vou haxe sh iii'-- II it wasn't.
ou need to take some action. At a tiinc wlicn
tlic dions of evervone arc needed so lnll. no
one should waste liis time at scIkkiI Inn should
make every el tort to get the most from his
You may have done ptariitallx nothing. If
so, you have wasted valuable time anil inoncx
and have nothing to show for it. Not only
have you not studied Inn sou haven't anxthing
that you ran show for the time exxndcd. exim
cept of course, vour wasted opportunities.
didn't enter into campus aiiixiiics or praiiiial-anxthing Kiiaining to tJic I'nixcrsiix. You
might just as well haxe Urn somewhere else
wot king or loal ing.
Maxlx- von have woiked toward Incoming a
r.MOC oi a IIW'OC. bui il wm haven" studied
meanwhile, where has it gotten vou? Afict .vou
have finished school, vour RMOC m I1UOC
laiing will he worthless. .
On the other hand, vou who have applied
ourselves to vour (planer's work might well
Ixiast
that vou have gotten vour inonev's
worth. Vnu are the one who will realic the
Ik'iicIhs ol to! lege ten and liliccn years hence.
If vou are not satislied with wliat vou have
done, vou have ample lime to start the way vou
waul, come next quarter. ( I here's not nun h
thai an lie done alxiul il in the last week ol
this one.) II vou are wasting vour lime and the
'time ol the I'niversitv .and insist on continuing suih a tourse, there is mulling mm II thai
.an Ik- done alxiiil it. Hut. if you have used
vour lime lo good advantage, vou are one whom
the I'niversitv is proud to tall its student.
--

A-

house to warrant dis-- t
enough from an ojx-out inuaiu c nierelv Ixiause of their absence.
liclorc those with authority ahandon these
events altogether, we hi nk thai thev should
((insider i lie fail lhai an
house ai the
women's halls provides a mixer for the whole

on

noiiietl in a recent topv ol The lxing-loHerald thai the I'niversiiv studenls are
receiving something
adverse trititism
in their contacts wiih the soldiers stationed at
the Phoenix hotel. Puhlitilv of this kind will
help enlighten the misinformed
eople around
Lexington who ihink thai the students and
soldiers on the tampus do not get along together, l'revionsli. we students had laeen accused of leaving the soldiers out of our activities, hut the Herald lisis some of the activities
with the soldiers and also tells of sot ial events
for the soldiers in the near future.
This kind of puhlicitv wins the applet iaiion
. H.
of the I'K students.
W'c

n

IT'S ONE MORE WEEK
AND ONE MORE DAY
One week and one tlav from lodav, vacation
will hegin.
Those arc the most pleasing words we have
heard in a long time.
ust think, we will get
lo go hack to the farm for three whole weeks.
doing al.solu.elv noihing. Thai will he ,h(.
.
.
until, oecause with gas rationing anct our liv- ing so lar in the tountrv, there won't lie anx
running around ihis year.
We haxe a lot of work to do
the holi- davs. though, and thai makes the time seem
very short. Those term pacrs we left for the
xetx last minute, and the last minute Is ;"
hand. And the Ixxiks we just haven't had time
to read would liegii. a g.xid sized lihrai x. Must

ell
that it should li.ipx n more often., and we
agiee.
I he
fraternities and sororities have many
sixial allaiis. Inn the dormitories only on rate
otcasious. It is tine that inanv of i lie residents
ol the halls Ik long to wiroriiies and Iraierniiies,
lull this is one ol the lew mixers lor both indeIf slit li get lo gel hers
pendents and Creeks.
tould lx- arranged regularly, we Inlieve that
thev would toniiiuie siutesslullv.
I he main tihjettiou seems to lx? that these
c tuts would
he tx exxrnsive for war limes,
cxx-nsbeing almost wholly the tost of
the
fresh mt nis. Refreshments certainly add lo
it
any paiiv. I.nl their hit k would not detract

,

,

11

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iiii

'Nuls' To Those Who've Been Kicking
co-e- ds

who was interviewed and I was
one of those who said, "I wish I
were a hnv ripht. now I'd flt?ht."
inai suuemeni sun goes. Ana i m
not
not saying It Just because-ia boy and I'm not subject to "front
line" work. I'm not saying it be- .

c
ABOUT TO LAND,
HOW IS A PLOT
HCMINPCO TO

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COAfCAfrtATJKS.

may have been Shakespeare's, but
to SX Walter Robbins it doesn't
he has been running
matter
around like a race horse in the
Kentucky- Derby in a mad effort to
keep SAE Ralph Farmer from
pledge Frances
Kappa
courting

SAE Dickie Arnspiger signed his
peace Treaty and is now back in
the good graces of Betty Brannon.
-The orchids to the first couple
of the week of this column go to
SAE Terry Noland and KD Joan
Taylor. They have been pinned as
....
long as I can remember, and they
c
.uin ...
marrled on or near De- are to
Niesje Wilder Handicap. Bob Hicks cember 20. at Cynthiana.
is out in front . . . but. look out . . .
yep. here comes Seabiscuit Don
Hays up on the rail . . . what a
prize for the winner!
Every third man whom Bess
Gravitt danced with at the Persh.
ing Rifie Ball plug) was none oth- -,
By BOB AMMONS
er than the worthy Captain Lee
porter Witt
My word. Captain,
are you trying to maneuver your
We've always been a great beway to her heart? . . . better watch liever in freedom of expression.
In
those defiladed areas : . . you know fact, in one of our rash moments.
what Major Dohl says . . . you may we once wrote an editorial in which
ru int0 811 enemy Patro1
said that every student oueht
What's this we hear about Ben to
auowed to express himself in
Kessinger's
little brother thigh th- - coiurnns 0f The Kernel. But
school 111 have you knowi being now bv BOsn things are different,
l umber one man in Tri Delt Janet If you"
someone sam don.t quit crowding my column off
Ertw'ards ECluad'
that college boys were lucky to be tne editorial pj,ge. someone's going
m "le ra,1Kto get hurt.
For some unknown reason, da
1
Hm "a "i""c
"appv uay
AH this furor about the women
mpnfinnpri in this column .
nun W1C Will, anvu-ais rainpr
. jir i
i
bums is mai nes nave qune a mi- poinded. The last word was said
ficult time choasing between some severai years ago by a writer on
the the Daily Princetonian, who com- girl and the Main Spring
.
...
.QnfiTitr fan tntrp vrtll nut nf
.
"l".
i
ao.' mv bov: but the mf
,hls
'
women is tvuiiirn is wuiiirn la
girl is mighty cute.
women . . . and nothing can be
Guy McConnell. the big politician done about it."

...

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Wise and

Otherwise

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tr rA0ACHtTfAM.'eA'S
AM0 O0sfrl'ro tecoit
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at mfooA'S

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ANSWER:

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VUVUlttUll, 1 1I1CI1 IXV
Hint
be a ,awyer bccauRe he
could never pass a bar. . . . One of

coud never

promi-T.xcu-

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3rVN3 IV

.

What with Mel Brewer. Milt Tic- and Marvin Akers on the first
team, it looks like every nay going
to be
for the wildcats tnis
year.

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.

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liroken down into several siili-- t oininii lees
ild vaiioiis dniies ih naming to the siutt ss
of it I nion. Im nit ni.illv
of the social
i
il has
tlei hired thai one uln has stcn
it i
the I'nion has seen the 1'iiixersiiv
tvpital of neailv evcrv phase ! student
lile.
miii
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...

I.l.itkuess in the iiioriiing is 'noi iiiiiisii.il at
an eailx hour. Inn ii is pietlx tough xs lieu im
loi lunales preparing lor eight o'clmk t lasses
linil lhuisele groping ahoul at seven a.m.
M.ivIm- il is jiisi the cloudv dav. or mavlx- il is
a lilac koul prat lite for d.ivtiine ail lanls.
l.iMkiug through the pigeon holes assigned
to iiiciiiIh is ol the stall of I he kerne one
lintls curious olrjec is. One piotlaiming to the
wm ltl thai it lx longs to essica (.ax loiii.tins
a gleaming knile Im puixsts unknown ot un
aunouni eel. Siiic lv there is no ultetior motive
iinderlving this itiniHCnt piece of ciultrv.
Another laUled "Flc." contains nothing less
than three glass test iuIks. Without investigation we would sax that this is the equipment,
or part of same, used in the si. tilling jxills ami
opinion gatherings vvhith leaiuie these pages.
I

Cash And Cany For The Customers'
,
Again sounding the warning that
"big things won t be delivered next
year unless you carry little things
now," the onice of ueiense rrans- Donation this week urged buyers to
tarry home their own packages
when Christmas shopping.
Besides forbidding special deliv- and multiple trips
eries.
to thesame section, the ODT has
ordered all delivery service to re- duce their mileage by at least 25
percent. This means that one out
of every four delivery truck trips
must be eliminated.
Specific ways in which college
students can cooperate in cutting
down deliveries include: planning
necessary buying so that purchases
from the same store which are too
large to carry can all be delivered
in the same trip: cutting out the
habit of having things delivered on
approval that may have to be sent
back; and carrying home an small
purchases, even it it means using
a shopping bag.
call-bac-

junior
his credit is eligible foi
a year.
demist job. at
No examinations will be given for
these jobs, and applications will be
unti, tne need is fined.
There are n0 age ljmlts and women
cnemists are particularly wanted,
The government also needs tel