xt73bk16n087 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73bk16n087/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19471107  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November  7, 1947 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  7, 1947 1947 2013 true xt73bk16n087 section xt73bk16n087 The ECentucky Kernel

Team To Come In
Sunday, 9:53 A.M.,

Southern Station

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1947

Kentucky, Villanova Pi Tau Sigma
Pledges First
To Battle In First
UK Woman
Great Lakes Bowl
Blue And White
To End Season
At Cleveland
'

'

By O. C. Halyard
Kernel Sports Editor

'

11

Thai football ladder climbing
tlie Kentucky Wildcats have
been doing for the past two
years has already raised them
high enough so they can reach
out and dig deep into the coffers
play. Kcntuiky
of
lias accepted a bid to play in
the annual Great Lakes Bowl
game to be played on December
6 in Cleveland, Ohio.
The Wildcats' opponents will be
Wildcats the Wildcats of Villanova. Several long time top flight
schools expressed desires to participate in the game, but Kentucky
received an earlier bid and accepted.
It will be the inaugural event for
the Great Lakes Bowl, but the
Cleveland stadium's seating capacity
of 83.000 already makes it second
events to
in size for
the Rose BowL Of these,- - 60,000
seats, are under a roof in case of
bad weather.
6,00
Ky. Tickets
A block of 6.000 tickets all under
the shelter have been allocated for
Kentucky fans. Price range on
tickets run from $4.80 for box seats
to $150 for general admission. Reserved seats will sell for $2.40 and
$3.60. Tickets will be available at
the UK ticket office in about a week.
Each team has three remaining
tilts of regular season play before
they tie into each other in the Great
Lakes Bowl classic The Villanova
Wildcats have an open date this
week, then games with Marquette,
Georgetown, and San Francisco.
Kentucky must meet hard charging West Virginia this Saturday,
and then Evansville before wrestling
with their arch rivals. Tennessee.
The Kentuckians will have two
weeks between their closing game
and the bowl bout, while Villanova
will have only one week. .
,
Team Records
And while both teams have two
losses inscribed against their records, the losses have been to first
rank teams.' Kentucky dropping its
two to Ole Miss and Alabama, both
present Southeastern Conference
osi-seas-

post-seas-

High of

UNIVERSITY OE KENTUCKY

Z2s

VOLUME XXXVIII

Mostly Cloudy,
Some Showers,

on

Marjorie Sulzer became the second woman ever pledged by Pi Tau
Sigma, national mechanical engineering honorary with 8,000 members,
when she was tapped last week by
Pi Lambda chapter. She is the first
University student to be honored.
The only woman in the mechanical engineering department at present. Miss Sulzer will be the third
woman ever to be graduated from
the engineering college with a
bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering.
Miss Sulzer, daughter of Prof, and
Mrs. Elmer Sulzer of Lexington, is
a student instructor, a member of
the staff of the Kentucky Engineer,
and will be graduated in June.
Initiation ceremonies and a banquet honoring Initiates will be held
next Friday at the Lafayette hotel.

Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant

Schacter Stresses
Need Of
Co-Operati- on

For State Progress

Stressing the need for cooperation for progress, Harry Schacter,
chairman of the Committee for Kentucky, opened the annual YMCA
discussion group meetings last week
at a dinner at Blue Grass lanes.
The discussion group this year will
work for the committee here in ap- an addition to other aeronautical
proaching problems confronting the work.
state.
The trainees take one hour of
A good moral climate is conducive ground school training and two
to progress and it must come from hours actual flying each week.
the hearts, the minds, and the spirAfter the training is completed,
its of men, Mr. Schacter said. each student will receive six hours
Progress, he continued, can come credit from the college and his pias a result of preparation for prog- lot's license.
ress.
Mr. Piersall said that within the
Pulling together is conducive to next week several more trainees
and pulling apart will be ready to make their first
is conducive to
he solo flights.
added.
The Committee for Kentucky has
objective: (1) To see
a three-fol- d
what can be done lor education
welfare and opportunity; (2) to help
the unfortunate; (3) and to give Candidates for ten Student Government Association posts in the
more real meaning to democracy
Nov. 18
"Our plan to reach our objective nounced election have been an
by the Constitutionalist
is to get the facts and to disseminate
Independent parties.
them throughout the state. We want and
They t are as follows;
to 'stimulate, community - organizaArts and Sciences: ' Lowerclass
tions so they can solve their own man Chick Watts, C; Graydon
problems," Mr. Schacter said.
Bell, I. Upperclass man
John
"We hope to center a program in Crockett, C; Haskell Short, I. Lowpacers.
Villanova 's two setbacks every college in Kentucky that will erclass woman Kathy Barnett, C;
(Continued on Page Pour)
stimulate students to think of doing Joan Rehm, I. Upperclass woman
something
for Kentucky," the Ridgely Park, C; Evelyn Caudel, I.
speaker said, adding "We hope the
Upperclass man
Agriculture:
students will carry back to local George Freas, C; Woodrow England,
communities
a "constructive pro- I.
gram."
Commerce: Lowerclass man Don
The Committee for Kentucky, Robinson, C; Jack WaddeU, I.
An award for the best homeEducation: Representative - at -coming decoration by a downtown' however, has not been without opretail merchant, will be presented position, the speaker pointed out. large Carlisle Myers, C; no Indeby SGA. Claude Sprawls, SGA pres- Manufacturing and banking groups pendent selected yet.
Upperclass man
Engineering:
have three major charges against
ident, announced.
The decision, to be announced at the committee, which Mr. Schacter Dick Gillespie, C; Howard Mann,Ev-I
half-tim- e
of the Tennessee game, said are that the status quo is in Lowerclass man Jim Line, C;
will be made by student judges se- danger, that it costs money, and erett Wick. I.
Law: Representative - at - large
lected from SGA s Homecoming that it gives Kentucky a bad name.
Leaders for the fraternities, sor- Fred Perkins, C; John Barstow, I.
Committee, of which Betty Ree
All colleges will vote in the' Y
orities, and organizations in carry- Rhoads is chairman.
ing out the committee's program are Lounge of the Student Union build
The award will be made annually,
open from 8 ajn.
Polls
with the cooperation of the Lex- , or. Dewey Steele, Aipna Sigma rni; ing. p.m. will be
ington Chamber of Commerce and Dean A. D. Kirwan, Alpha Gamma to 5
;Rho; Dean L. J. Horlacher, Alpha
its president, Charles Sturgell.
(Tau Omega; Dr. Lysle Croft, Delta
Tau Delta; Dr. Robert Miles, Kappa
Alpha; Prof. Robert Lunde, Phi
ODK officers have' announced
Delta Theta; Prof. Edward New- that the deadline for filing for mem
Kappa Tau; Dr. Thomas bership is today, Nov. 7, and that
bury, Phi
Clark and Prof. William Mathews, only eight and not ten activity
The Renfro Valley Polks, coming Phi Sigma Kappa; Dr. Frank Trim- points are necessary to be eligible
straight from the Big Red Barn, and ble, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Dean C.
campus talent will present a Ren- R. Melcher, Pi Kappa Alpha; Prof. for membership.
fro Valley program tonight at 8 in Elvis Stahr, Sigma Chi; Prof. Lawrence Bradford, Sigma Phi Epsilon;
the Alumni Gymnasium.
Acts have been prepared by many Dr. Adolph Biggs, Zeta Beta Tau.
DeMarche, professor
of the sororities, fraternities, and re- Leaders for Delta Chi and Lambda of Dr. David F. at the YMCA College
group work
sidence units. Chosen by their pop- Chi have not been arranged.
Other leaders are James Terry, in Springfield, Mass., will visit the
ularity with the audience, talent, and
to the sooriginality, four of the acts will John Schneider, Marvin Jackson, campus Monday to speak
cial work classes.
and George Yankey, Bradley hall.
receive prizes.
Winners of the amateur tests will
give a show at intermission at the
Sadie Ham-kindance tomorrow

Candidates Named
For SGA Election

'

SGA To Give Prize

For Best Decorations

Deadline Is Today

Renfro Valley Show
Scheduled Tonight

DeMarche To Speak

s

night.

Mack Hughes, local photographer,
will award $10.00 in pictures to the
best dressed couple, and $10.00 each
to the two who are dressed most like
Tenderleaf Erickson and Stupify-in- g
Jones. Members of Keys will
Judge all entrants.
The Alpha Gams are planning a
short parade through Lexington
with some of the participants and

others this afternoon.

Ford Representative
To Be On Campus
Wilson A. Jones will be on the
campus Nov. 24 and 25, to interview
Interested seniors for the Ford field
training program.
There have been two revisions in
the program this year. The age
range has been increased to 26
years, and the wages to $250 per
month for bachelor's degree and
$275 for master's degrees.
Students interested should report
to the personnel office, room 9, Administration building to fill out applications and make appointments
v.ith. Mr. Jonas.

NUMBER

mm P

UK Students Lose Fight
For New Constutition

"Dark and Bloody Ground" was there is still plenty of fight left In
the name given to Kentucky in the U.K.
Not First Time
days of the Indian Wars. When the
It is not the first time that students
political wars came along, the name
fought for their education and their
was given a new significance.
U.K. students have done
In the little garage opposite the teachers as
to do. The futsite of the new arts center build- and will continue for education in
a little political ure is not so dark Bloody
ing on Rose Street,
Ground".
the "Dark and
war was fought Tuesday. Some pol- People
are slowly- becoming informwere there as
itical science students
ed, and informed people can not be
observers. The somewhat puzzled called ignorant. The adjective, "igcn their faces might poss- norant", will no longer be associated
looks
ibly have been traced to one councilwith Kentucky when the state
man candidate's strategic switch enough informed people to vote has
for
from Home Town Ticket to City reform and against graft.
Ticket on election morning.
When this time comes, the UnivStill Plenty Fight Left
ersity of Kentucky will be able to
In the fight for a new constitu- pay good college professors enough
ts
and others took two money to keep them at U.K. If some
tion,
hour turns at the polls. From six in of the ' people of Kentucky, who
the the morning until four in the back the university football team
afternoon on that raw November with such enthusiasm, would look
day, students fought for their school beyond the stands on Stoll Field,
as hard as any football player ever they would see an old university,
fought on the gridiron. They lost strained to breaking point, in an
that battle just as surely as the effort to educate people who will
Wildcats were overwhelmed by the someday bring light to the "Dark
i Crimson
Tide last Saturday, but and Bloody Ground",
Tri-Del-

Turnip Chompin

UK Instructor

To Present
Piano Recital
As

the second number on the

Dean

M. M. White, of

the

Today and Saturday brings
to a close the
which enable all
member of the weaker (?)
to use words instead of glanies
to promote their romances.
Contests, in which cacliVsoro-rity- ,

colanre-

lege Of arts and sciences,
nounced that all students
quired to take the proficiency
examination in foreign languages should sign up at his ohice
not later than Tuesday. The examinations will be given Thursday.
All students graduating in the
college with a department major are required to pass 10 quarter hours and a proficiency examination in a foreign language.

Students graduating

m.--

fraternity, and iiulcimknt
organizations are
ai ticip.mtv
legin this afternoon with the
Turnip Chompin' at 4 o'clock.

ith a

specialized degree are not
quired to take the test.

re-

The contestants will be Danny
O'Malley, Lambda Chi; Bud Lusby.
Kappa Sig; Tom Gilmore. Alpha
Sig; Paul Kunchols, Delta Tau
Delta; Larry Brophy, Sigma Nu:
Jack Hibbs, Phi Delts; Joe Stephens.
Triangle; Bob Planitz, ATO; B:U
Dale, Phi Sig; John Vigle, Phi Tau;
R. L. Morgan, SPE; L. K. Burckam.
Alpha Gamma Rho; Tom Griffin,
SAE; Bill Boggs, Sigma Chi; Haywood Alves, KA; Owney Hail. Stray
Greeks: and Herbert Arnold, Zeta

Tau Beta Pi
Pledges 24

Tau Beta Pi. national engineering
tapped 24 engineering
students yesterday in the largest Beta Tau.
pledge group in the history of KenTwo cartons of cigarettes will be
tucky Alpha.
awarded to the individual downing
Men selected in the traditional the most turnips.
ceremony at Memorial hall were:
Race At 4:30
Alexander Harrison Anderson, KenLiT Abner-Dais- y
Mae race will
neth Blythe. Jefferson Davis Cau-diJoseph Michael Connelly, Oli- be at 4:30 p.m. and the winner re- celves a box of candy. The Daisy
ver William Gard, William Guy
Jr.. William Thomas McClain, Mae contestants will be Jean Sher
Elmer Augustus McBride Jr, Fred man. Delta Zeta; Kathleen Carter.
Milton. Robert Francis Olson, Clar- Tri Delt; Mildred Cox. Alpna Gam:
ence Edwin Parks, Bart Nixon Peak Mary Ellen Price. Theta; Nancy
Lou Eden, Chi O; Barbara
Jr., John William Scott, Othniel
KD; Jayne Weston. ABPi;
Jr., James Brockenborough,
Morris Ernie Broyles, Andrew Har Betty Bimmitt, Alpha Xi; Jean
Waggoner, Stray Greeks, and Jean
rison Clark, Thomas Bruce Elliott,
Powell, Zeta Tau Alpha.
William Millard Jenkins. Bruce
The contestants for Lil' Abnrr
Carlton Edward Steele. are George
Caughey. Lambda Chi;
Carl Everett Swanson. Chester Earl
Bob Norris, Kappa Sig: Bob Gash,
Ward, and William Harold Wise.
Alpha Sig; Jack Outermuth Deit:
2.0 Standing Required
To be eligible for membership an Allen Frank. Stray Greeks: E.
engineering student must have a 2 Payne, Sigma Nu; Jack Bailey.
standing or better, must have wit SPE; Bob Stroube, Ajpui Gamma
nessed two previous tappings, and Rho; Eddie Coleman. 8 A3: Rav
qualify on the basis of character, f Turley. Sigma Chi; Jack Judy. KA;
" eta nu.
personality, and personal appear- From i to 7 there will be a Sadie
ance
Pledged in the customary manner Hawkins Sweater Swim? in the SUB
of being tapped on the head with nd at 8 o'clock the Renfro Valley
nd mateur s contest wiU be
a wooden mallet, the men were pre- - &aR
sented with a rough aluminum cast- - "eld in the gym. The Renfro Val-in- g
of the Tau Beta Pi recognition teT folka rs sponsored by the Alpha
key. Each pledga will, wear) the en- larged key on a rope attached to his
Costune Cantest Saturday
belt, carry a sledge hammer tied ' Saturday night from 8 until 12
green ribbon ten feet long, the Sadie Hawkins dance and Daisy
with a
and finish and polish the key be- Mae and Lil' Abner costume contest
fore initiation Nov. 13.
will be in the SUB. Prizes will be
Initiation ceremonies, to be held awarded the winning contestants
at the Phoenix hotel, will be fol- and also to individuals wearing the
lowed by a banquet in honor of the best costumes. The music will be
initiates.
furnished by Kentucky Kavaliers.
honorary,

Service Fraternity
Hears Best Speak

At Banquet In SUB
Photo and layout by Mack Hughea

SURROUNDED Sigma Chi brothers, Don Russel and Jim Moore play
at being bashful, like any good
American boys, (namely Li'l Abner) when surrounded by the candidates for Daisy Mae,
to be chosen Saturday night. They are, starting at noon and going clockwise, Katherine Carter, Delta Delta Delta; Betty Dimmitt,
Alpha Xi Delta; Mary Nolan Fribble, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Barbara Bidweil, Kappa Delta; Jane Davis, Kappa Alpha Theta; Jean
Sherman, Delta Zeta; Dot Richardson, Independent; Patsy Allen, Chi
Omega; Trudy Clarey, Zeta Tan Alpha; Jayne Weston, Alpha Delta Pi;
and Mildred Cox, Alpha Gamma Delta.
ed

President Donovan

To Hold Dance 15th

Addresses Colleges!

In Separate Convos

The Scabbard and Blade society
will give an informal dance Nov.
Because of tne large enrollment at
15 in the SUB. Charlie Mack's orthe University this quarter and the
chestra will play.
limited seating capacity of Memorial
The dance will be cabaret style, hall. Dr. Herman L. Donovan, presand any campus organization that ident of the University, Will give a
buys 10 tickets will have a table series of talks to the students of the
reserved for them. Tickets will be various colleges.
on sale at the door for $1.00.
Dr. Donovan addressed college of
commerce students Monday and college of arts and sciences students
Tuesday. The schedule of his remaining talks follows: college of
law, Nov. 17; college of engineering,
The weekly sweater swing will be Nov. 25; college of agriculture and
held in the Blue Grass room of the home economics, Nov. 25; college of
Tuesday night education, Dec. 11.
5
SUB from
,

SUB Sweater Swing
To Be Held Tuesday
8:00-9:4-

UK Graduate Finds
Sleep Helps Memory

Reading Exams
To Be Monday
Reading knowledge examinations in French and Spanish
will be offered to graduate students any time Monday morning
or afternoon in the Romance
language department on the
first floor of Miller hall, according to Dr. Hobart Ryland, department head.
Students taking the examination will be required to translate
60 lines in one hour from an ap.

proved book.

German Club Elects
New German Club officers are
Donald Spillman, president; Mary
Nilda
Ann Galloway,
Latta, secretary; and Sara Ballenger,

tre8S'rT1

--

ll.

Ir-v- an

i

fac-

Chemical Fraternity
Names New Members

Recent initiates into Alpha Chi
Sigma, honorary and professional
chemical fraternity, were: Dr. L. R.
Dawson, head of the Department of
Chemistry, and Jack Fletcher, Prince
Harrill, Bob Seay, John Brown, Bill
Lewis, Jim Graham, and Clifford
Webster.
Dr. Dawson, an active member of
the American Chemical Society,
took part in the atomic bomb pro-

ject.

ulty members in the department of
journalism will be given Tuesday
by Theta Sigma Phi, honorary for
women in journalism
Dr. William M. Moore and Mr.
J. A. McCauley, who joined the
faculty this year, will be the guests

grocery
community
store for Cooperstown and Shawnee
town families will be opened soon
in a converted quonset hut in Coop erstawn, Cooperstown officials have
announced
The enterprise, to be controlled by
board of directors, was
a seven-ma- n
financed by the sale of stock to residents of the two projects.
met
Original plans for a "co-owith objections from local business
men, officials said, and a policy emphasizing "reasonable" prices and
convenience of location was formulated.
A

low-co-

st

of honor.
The picnic will be held at 5 p.m. in
Castlewooa barn. It is open to all
junior and senior journalism students and faculty members in the
department of journalism.
Garnett Gayle and Tilly Thompson are in charge of arrangements.

p"

Influenza Vaccine

Students Organize

Is Now Available

Democratic Action

ATO's Leading
In Tag Sale
Fraternities

Alpha Tau Omega
Sigma Alpha Epsilon

Phi Kappa Tau

$77.18
40.00
38.43

Zeta Tau Alpha
Delta Zeta
Kappa Alpha Theta

$59.54
38.20
. 30.00

Sororities

Home Ec Fraternity
Initiates Members
Iota chapter of Phi Upsilon Omi-cro- n,
national home economics honorary fraternity, held formal initiation services recently for the following women: Mrs. Margaret
Campbell Hook, Russell ville; Mrs.
Mildred Daniel Joseph, Jackson;
Miss Dorothy Ray, Lexington.

Tau Sigma Picks

11

vaccine S available
Service for those
who want it. Dr. J. S. Chambers,
head of the department announced today. The cost per
dose is 50 cents.
Influenza

An organization meeting of Students for Democratic Action was
held Friday in Room 128 of the Student Union. The group is a student
branch of the Americans for Democratic Action of which Wilson Wy-a- tt
is chairman.

at the Health

Political Science Class Gets
Votiug Layout First Hand
Members cf one of the political
science classes received first hand
information on how elections are
conducted when they visited polling
places during Tuesday's election.
The students, members of Dr.
Jasper Shannon's Political Parties
class, visited many of the polling
places in Fayette county.
Mrs. Sarah Finch, a graduate stu- dent, said that when she attempted
to take a picture at the Douglas
Kofolgis
Milton
Park precinct
threatened to break her camera as
he tried to prevent her from taking a picture.
Kcfo'igis Quotes Law
Kcfolgis said he was at the polls
as a challenger for one of the tickets
in the municipal election and that
he told her the law required all persons not voting or conducting the
election to stay twenty feet from

Tau Sigma, modern dance society.
selected eleven students for membership. They are Ann Carter, Doris
Coleman, Pat Edwards, Carolyn
Freeman, Marie Graves, Ruth Gra
ham, Marie Johnson, Ann O'Ban
non, Georgia
Portmann, Joan
Specht, and Wilma True.
Meetines for the bestinnine erouo the polls.
Kofolgis said while he was talk- will continue to be held at 7 o.m.
Wednesdavs. unit are oDen to all ing with Mrs. Finch a man who was
laccompsnytng her shoved hira end
stnci"!t?.

Bid-we- ll.

Al-s- op

To Hold
Cooperstown Grocery Journalists Picnic
Department
Nears Opening Date A picnic in honor of the new

Kleen was nroven to be one of"
the best aids to memory by an ex-

periment conducted by Mrs. W. W.
Harned, a University graduate student in psychology.
She discovered proof that sleep
after learning entirely eliminates
immediate forgetting. The highly
technical data was obtained as a
result of an experiment conducted
by Mrs. Harned, under the direction
of psychology department
staff
members, with 80 Asbury college
freshmen.
Sharp Forgetting Caused
"Learning followed by routine activities causes a sharp forgetting in
the first four hours and a gradual
loss in the amount remembered after
that," according to Mrs. Harned.
"On the other hand, learning followed by four hours of sleep, instead
of equal time spent awake, produces
an equally sharp increase in the
amount of learned material that is
remembered."
The chances are 99.6 out of 100
that the subjects who have slept
will remember more than those who
did not sleep. "It is supposed that
the old material in the mind is
wiped out by new activities when
sleep does not follow learning," Mrs.
Harned said.

I

Alpha Zeta chapter of Alpha Phi
Omega, national service fraternity,
held a banquet Monday night at the
Student Union building with about
45 members and guests present.
Dr. Harry Best, professor of sociology, discussed the relations of
Alpha Phi Omega and Scout work
with the community. Dr. Best pointed out that the country needed more
men in Scout work since the Boy
Scout movement trains boys to be
better citizens. He praised the work
of Alpha Phi Omega and said that
in a world in which there is a desert
of crime and poverty. Alpha Fni
Omega and Scouting are "an oasis
in American hie.
Scout Executive Speaks
Calvin Hall, chief executive of the
Bluegrass council of the Boy Scouts,
told of relations of Alpha Phi Omega
with scouting. Mr. Hall stressed the
need of more college men in scout
work as well as leadership work in
the service organization.
Prof. C. A. "Povlovich. faculty adviser
Alphaj Ph Omegas discussed
the relations of the organization to
the campus.
Bob Unterreiner, pres'dent of
Alpha Zeta chapter, presided and
Introduced Don B. Towles, Bill
Brown, Martin Swanson, and Tho
mas Poe.'who gave talks on service,
leadership, fellowship, and history
of the fraternity.

4

By Jeanne Vance

To Be Thursday

Univers-

Musicale series,
Robert Morgan, University instructor in applied music, will present a
piano recital at 4 o'clock Sunday
afternoon in Memorial Hall.
The University pianist, a native of
Pennsylvania, is the first faculty
artist to appear on the series of
outstanding musical entertainments.
He took his academic work in piano
at Syracuse University and was
graduated with both the bachelor
and master of music degrees. He
later was an instructor at Elon
College in North Carolina and the
State Teachers College at Blooms-bur- g,
Pa. He studied piano with
Karl Ulrich Schnabel in New York
City and in September, 1946, joined
the University music faculty as an
instructor in applied music.

Commences At

Proficiency Exams

ity-community

Scabbard And Blade

6

Sadie Hawkins Dance
Ends Turnabout Week

Two Veterans
Make Solos
The first solo flights to be made
by students of the University flight
training program were made Tuesday afternoon at Blue Grass field
by Horace H. Maxey and George D.
Wallace. The planes took off at 3
o'clock and stayed in the air 25 minutes.
Both flights went along smoothly, according to J. E. Piersall, chief
instructor for Bohmer flying service at Blue Grass field. Mr. Piersall said that Maxey and Wallace
"Did not seem the least bit nervous"
either before or after the flights.
The enrollees of the program, a
new course offered by the College
of Engineering, are primarily engineers who are interested in flying as

55

that he kicked back. Kofolgis said
the man was not a University student.
Mrs. Finch said she saw "many
Irregularities." Asked to explain, she
told reporters that, "I saw persons
led into voting booths for instructions on how to vote but no affidavits were executed."
She said she would hot file any
j
'charges or appear before the grand
jury to ask indictments for violation
of the law she said she saw.

Turner Is Sponsor
Of Mortar Board

I
i
I

Mrs. W. B. Turner, head resident
of Patterson hall, has been chosen
as a new sponsor of Mortar Board,
Helen
senior women's honorary.
Hutchcraft. president, announced
this week.
Other sponsors are Mrs. Dorothy
Evans, social director of the Stu- dent Union, and Dr. Ann Odor, instnictr in tbo Gtnnaa dtrjaxtment.

I

Bays Arc Coy
wuite a tew amusing incidents de
veloped under this reverse situation
of girl dates boy a few played hard
to get when Bud Lusby was
for a date he coyly replied, "I'll
think it over and let you know tomorrow."
This one might make Ripley's
column one male told a luscious
looking brunette that he was sorry
but he had to study. Don Clark,
before committing himself, wanted
to know who was to brinir the
"baby." "I can't understand it."
Charley Byreley said Monday night,
"the first day of Sadie Hawkins is
over and I haven't even been approached."
Proposal Expected
"I expect a proposal by the end
of the week," was Bill Hornback s
statement. When Roger Pate's date
arrived Monday night he was talking on the phone to another female,
his mother he said.
"Engineering students have a decided advantage over the others.
Russel Travis said, "because we
can fight the girls off with our slide
rules."
Ted Howard says that
preference will be shown to girls
with cars.
'John Perkins said quote, "free
(Continued on Page Two)

Music Department
In New Building
The University mQsic department
moved into its new temporary building on South Limestone near Memorial hall last week.
Burned out of the Arts center on
Euclid avenue last February, the
department will occupy the temporary building until completion of the
Fine Arts building, scheduled for
occupancy in 1949.

Whaley Is Eleded
Charles Whaley. arts and sciences
Junior of Williamstown. was elected
president of the Constitutionalist
party at a meeting of the clique last
week. He is a member of Sigma Phi
Epsilon fraternity.
Other officers are Betty Ree
Rhoads, Alpha Gamma Delta,
Marjean Hill, Chi Omega,
secretary: and Clell DeSpain, Phi
Sigma Kappa, treasurer.
The party is made up of representatives from all social fraternities and sororities on the campus.
Candidates for SGA art norruiiAWd

bj tb marchers

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THE KENTUCKY

Pag'e Two

Cat Cagers Finish
3rd Week Of Pratice

SX's Down DX's,

By Kent Hollinjsworth
Behind closed doors, the University of Kentucky Wildcat basketball
team continued practice this week,
under the close scrutiny of Coach
Adolph Rupp.
Dale Barnstable, tallest guard on
the squad, has been outstanding all
week with his deadly accurate long
shots, perfect ball handling, and. all
around aggressiveness. "Barney" is
is quick and iast as any member on
the squad and is giving
Ralph Beard and Jack Parkinson a real fight for the first string
guard position next to Capt. Kenny
Rollins.
Jim Jordan, forward, has been
missing considerable practice this
week because of an attack of flu.
In the light scrimmage sessions
this week. Cliff Barker and big Walter Hirsch locked good at the forward positions, Jim Line shot some
accurate right handed shots, Joe
Holland got most of the reboui.ds,
and Jack Parkinson hit some shots
from far out.
With two scrimmages each week.

In Intramural Finals
By AUaa Terhana
was the strong right arm of
It
Bill Branch nailing pass receivers
plus plenty of poundage in the
forward wall that enabled the Sigma Chis to streak from behind and
cop the intramural championship
from a determined Delta Chi
squad Tuesday afternoon in the finals of the elimination tourney.
This makes the second consecutive year that Sigma Chi colors
19--

Coach Adolph Rupp plans to work
extensively on defense next week
and will stress offense the following week, to prepare the Wildcats
for their first game December 6,
with Tulsa. There is an open date
on November 29 that hasn't been
filled yet.
After practice Friday, tarpaulins
will be spread on the gym floor, as
the Renfro Valley gang, will use
the gym for their show.

19-1- 2

have been hoisted in victory after

capturing the intramural trophy
and while the feat came as no great
surprise to the majority of fans,
neither team was playing tiddledy-winon the field Tuesday.
Stokley was the main spring in
the Delta Chi attack, and for individual performance he had no
equal on the field as his passes were
punts long, and runs
accurate,
ks

shifty.
Delta Chi took the opening kickoff
in Sigma Chi territory after a bad
boot let the leather touch the
ground at that point. Five plays
later Stokley faked an end run and
flipped a pass to Jones in the end
sone. Stokley's pass to Jones for
the extra point was incomplete and
the score stood
13-- 6
At Half
Sigma Chi retaliated minutes
later as Branch tossed to pay dirt
and made the extra point count
to let the readings favor his side
Then Just before the half closed
Branch connected again for a
touchdown and made the intermission score
In the third quarter the Sigma
Chis racked up their third and final
six pointer of the afternoon on a
aerial handled by Branch
and with 30 seconds remaining in
the ball game the Delta Chis broke
loose for a TX. with the same combination as before . . . Stokley to
Jones . . . and the final count was
2
in favor of Sigma Chi.
Rain dominated intramural play
for the most part since the pairings
had been made and the finals had
to be postponed a day because the
fields were too wet to try to play.
Other results of the elimination
tournament found SX downing the
Sig Eps
Phi Taus edging out
Delta zeroing
the Men's Dorm
the ATO's
and the Delta Chi
0
outfit whipping the AGR's
all
in the first round.
ls
Sigma Chi
In the
downed .the Phi Taus 24-- 0 and after
a hot and heavy scrap the Delta
Chis nosed through with a 13-win
over the Delts.
Bill McCubbin, intramural direc
tor, expresses his thanks to the various students who volunteered
to
officiate the intramural games, and
reminds all team managers that the
volleyball tournament begins Monday night, November 10.
6-- 0.

7-- 6.

STUDENTS

VETERANS

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13-- 6.

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By Em Asbury

ap-

preciate the colorful fall assortment of

Still longing for the sweetness of
victory, the Glamorcats of the WAA
tasted the bitterness of defeat at
the hands of Cincinnati, 10-in a
hockey game played in the Queen
0,

city recently.
Playing on a wet sloppy field and
in almost blinding rain, the UC

Arrow's

STARTS SUNDAY!

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Friday, November 7, 1947

Alabama's Surging Tide
Drowns Wildcats, 130
By Tom Dlsfcin
With one gian. swoop, the Red
Elephants of Alabama thumped
Kentucky,
last Saturday on
Stoll Field, stopped the Wildcats'
five-gastreak, and
winning
eliminated them from a bid to the
Sugar or the Orange