xt779c6rzp5n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt779c6rzp5n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19360728  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, July 28, 1936 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 28, 1936 1936 2013 true xt779c6rzp5n section xt779c6rzp5n Best Copy Available

I

UNIVERSITY
VOL. XXVI.

OF

EDUCATIONAL BUILDING

i

First. Term Causes Them
To Re Continued
This Term

tx

Rlue and While Orchestra to
Play for Party From 9

to 12 o'CIock

First nummer school party of the
second term will be held from 9
to 12 o'clock Saturday, August 1,
In the recreation room of Patterson hall. The Blue and White orchestra will play for dancing.
According to Mrs. Sarah Holmes,
Fiimmcr school dean of women,
whether or not this will be the
only party of the term Is dependent upon how the dance this Saturday is supported.
There were two dances held last
term and they met with such popularity that It was decided to continue them through the second
term. The dances are Informal.
by Dean
Chaperones,
headed
Holmes, will include members of
University staff and faculty.
the
The price of admission will be 25
rents and all are invited to attend
by officials.

CONTRACTS ARE
LET ON PROJECT
Bids on PWA projects totaling
were let Thursday In a
meeting of the executive committee
of the board of trustees held In the
office of Dr. Prank L. McVey, president of the University. Additional
appointments to faculty were also
announced.
Contracts awarded Included the
following: Clarke, Stewart and
Wood, Lexington, central heating
plant building, $33,700; Babcock and
Wilcox, Cincinnati, pulverized coal
unit boiler for heating plant,
Hoffman Combustion Engineering company,
Detroit,
unit, $10,740; Link Belt company, Chicago, coal handling equipment, $14,495; United Conveyor Corporation,
Chicago, ash handling
equipment, $10,010; Sandy Metal
Products company, Cleveland, movable partitions for new engineering
building, $4,885.
Bids on a contract for furnishing
heating and ventilating systems for
the South and East units of the engineering building were not acted
upon at yesterday's meeting. Dean
J. H. Graham of the College of Engineering, who is In charge of the
university PWA program, was directed to give further study of these
bids to accertain that all specifications were understood.
In addition to awarding bids, the
executive committee at yesterday's
meeting announced appointments
to the teaching and administrative
staffs of the university and resignations of several faculty members.
Dr. Joe Lee Davis was appointed
assistant professor of English to
begin his duties with the opening of
the 1936-3- 7 school year. Dr. Davis
for several years has been on the
faculty of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.
Miss Ruth Melcher, who has
completed advanced work In
Vienna and who has won her doctorate, was appointed Instructor In
the nursery school. Dr. Melcher Is a
daughter of Dr. C. R. Melcher, professor emeritus of the university,
former dean of men.
Appointment of Dr. Jasper B.
Shannon, who recently has been
attached to TV A, Knoxvllle, as assistant profesor of political science,
was ratified. Dr. Shannon formerly
headed the history and political
hclpnre department at Transylvania
College.
Other appointments ratified by
the committee were announced as
follows:
Miss Dorothy Doerr, of the University of Tennessee library science
department, to assist professor of
library science; George Gaines Lec-k- ie,
New York, assistant professor
of pholosophy; Paul Phlllippe, Iowa
State Teachers' College, Ames la.,
instructor In crops and assistant In
agronomy; Dr. James H. By waters,
Iowa State Teachers College, Instructor In animal husbandry; Raymond C. Barnhrat, Chicago, Instructor In art, E. H. Huffman, Lexington, Instructor in chemistry.
Miss Willie Hughes Smith, Lexington, secretary
in the library
science department; Dr. Lee H.
Townseud, Chicago, with the Illinois Natural History Survey, Instructor in entomology; Miss Edna
llrumagen, Lexington, clerk in the
department of entomology and botany; Fred B. Bealty, Atlanta, of the
Oerugia School of Technology, instructor in the department of electrical engineering to till the vacancy of Brinkley Burnett, who is
on leave.
Miss Mary Cooper, Lexington,
clerk in the registrar's office; Mrs.
Kate Washington, Lexington, manager of the women's residence halls
(Continued on Page Four)
$101,655

$27,-82-

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?

PATTERSON HALL
TO BE SCENE OF AFFAIR

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two-stok- er

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- T?AININO

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hour. According to Mr. Shropshire,
the ultimate purpose of Installing
this press, Is publication of a daily
paper. Just when the Kernel will
be published dally, however, is not
known at present.
The Kernel, will now be, without
doubt, one of the most efficient
community Journalism plants in the
state. It is thought to be at present
the mast complete college paper
press rooms in the country, having
been the pioneer in establishing the
plants.
college newspaper-owne- d
At the present time, a conservative estimate of the valuation of
the plant is approximately $40,000.

University of Kentucky Museum
Is An Archive of Knowledge
Often it is said that mere courses
do not make a college that a real
atmosphere of culture, and opportunities for Initiative must be provided, if an educational institution
is to achieve greatness.
For the student of inquisitive
bent, the University has much to
offer. An entire building houses the
museum of - Anthropology and Archaeology. In this museum are extensive collections illustrating ancient life in Kentucky by means of
restored graves complete with skeletons and asoclated artifacts. More
than 20 years of investigations by
members of the staff of the University department of Anthropology
and Archaeology are represented in
these collections, which are regarded as one of the msot complete in
existence, as far as any single area
is concerned.
On the second floor of the Administration building Is the geological museum, containing collections
covering a wide field of natural
phenomena. Portions of this museum are devoted to fossils, minerals from both in and out of the
state, products manufactured from
Kentucky resources such as pottery,
and refinery products, meteorites,
and cave formations. Several electric lighted cave cases are veritable
miniature restorations of Kentucky
cave Interiors. Gems, many of them
of foreign origin, comprise several
of the Kentucky flourspar specimens excite favorable comment.
In Norwood hall and in Dicker
hall rae smaller collections, the
Mining museum being located in
the former, and the Boyce Mineral
"library" in the later.
The new University library is a
model of its kind. Besides general,
and specialized reading rooms, an

Normandie Pays
Tribute to Statue
A memorable ceremony celebrating the 147th anniversary of Bastille Day and commemorating the
50th anniversary of the Statue of
Liberty was conducted aboard the
French liner Normandie as she
steamed slowly off Bedloe's Island
In New York Harbor, July 18, 1936.
With a group of U. S. Army officers and French and American
World War veterans participated in
the celebration, Captain Rene Pug-ne- r,
master of the Normandie, presented to Monsieur Maurice Roux
of the French war veterans a bound
volume of photographs connected
with the life and activities of Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, the famous
sculptor and designer of the Statue
of Liberty.
The bound volume of souvenir
photograplis, the gill of lite city
of Coluiar, Alsace, the Birthplace
of Bartholdi, becomes a part ol the
's
Statue of Liberty Museum on
Island.
Speeches were made by Captain
Pugnet, who is the
of Bartholdi, and by May
or Thomas L. Martin from Fort
Jay. "The
Banner"
played as the Normandie
was
passed the Statue of Liberty, and
following the speeches the baud
playde "Madelon" instead of "La
Marseillaise," at the instance of the
war veterans.
Red-loe-

ew

Star-spangl- ed

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UNlVPS'TV

Today's Issue of Kernel Is
Printed on Kelley Press
For the first time, the Kernel Is
being printed on a Kelley press,
the Miehle press having been dismantled and removed.
Present plans of Mr. James
Shropshire, graduate manager of
student publication, and Mr. Dave
Griffith,
foreman of the press
room, call for another Kelley press
and a duplex flat bed, high speed,
the latter to be put into use when
the boiler room Is cleared upon
completion of the central heating
system.
The Duplex is possibly the most
efficient of fiat bed presses, being
capable of printing 3,500 papers per

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TfcACMe

dience, the University Little Symphony orchestra, under the direction of Prof. Carl Lamport, present
the first of a series of summer recitals, Thursday evening at Memorial hall.
Professor Lam pert opened the
program with several selections
Faust. Following
from Gounod's
this, In order, came a cello solo,
and then a Hungarian dance by
Brahms. Then again a solist entertained, this time vocal Interpretations by the contralto Iva Dagloy
of Lexington who sang, "My Danny
Boy," and "With All My Life," by

4

.

attractive browsing room has been
provided where students may help
to volumes on the
themselves
shelves and enjoy them In a home-

The
like comfortable atmosphere.
main lobby of the library contains
cases in which rare
exhibition
books, maps, and other materials
are constantly on display. The
periodical reading room is- a haven
for students who wish to drop in
at their leisure and read late magazines or their home newspapers.
For the student desiring to do research work in the library, convenient work book have been provided in the stacks wher he can
study in close conjunction with the
books he needs.
A series of weekly Sunday afternoon musicales Is provided for students at the'Vnlversity. Besides the
University's own band, orchestra.
University's own band, orchestra
and glee clubs, national artists of
note are secured. Each year, many
speakers of national reputations are
brought to the campus for convocations and other meetings. All of
these features may be enjoyed by
the University of Kentucky student
without cost.
-

DR.

KtNTWCKV

8trauss.

The second part of the program
opened with selections from the
opera "Mlgnon," and then the playing of the famous "Narcissus."
Another soloist, Paul Mclntyre,
played the well known "Ave Maria"
on the viola, and the program concluded with the more popular of
tunes,
"Moonlight
and
College lighter
Roses."

J. B, SHANNON

ADDED TO STAFF
Former Transylvania
Professor, TVA Research
Associate to Teach in
litical Science

Po-

Dr. Jasper B.
Shannon, former head of the political science department at Transylvania College, and research associate In public administration for the
T. V. A. for the past five months,
to the staff of the political science
department of the University was
announced by Dr. Amry Vanden-bosc- h,
head of the department,
eraly last week.
Dr. Shannon will fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of Dr.
Esther Cole Franklin, who has Joined
her husband in Washington, D. C.
A graduate of Transylvania, class
of 1925, Doctor Shannon is a native
of Nicholas county. He received his
M. A. and Ph. D. degrees from the
University of Wisconsin and returned to Transylvania in 1930 as
a member of the faculty. He Is a
past president of the Kentucky
Academy of Social Sciences and a
member of the American Political
Science association.
The courses he will teach at the
University will include the theory
of political science, and the theory
of political parties.
Appointment

U. K. To Have Two

Booths At Fair

of

Two booths will be maintained
In the Merchants' and Manufacturers' building at the Kentucky State
Fair this year by the University.
One of these booths will be operated by the department of University Extension and will consist
of an educational moton picture
show. It Is planned to use sound
films exclusively.
The other both will be equipped
with a small stage where musical
concerts will be featured. Chairs
win be available for thr(le who
wish to enjoy the music and read
the University publications that
will be available.

Students To Have

Air Opportunities

Opportunities for a number of
University students to gain practical knowledge of broadcasting in its
many phases will be available this
fall In the University radio studios.
By means of practical work from
these studios, carefully supervised
programs will go out on the air
through WHAS.
A limited group of students will
be accomodated in the announcing,
production,
engineering,
musical
and drammatic departments, and
they will be permitted to do actual
Students are reminded by Julian work In taking part in programs.
Boxley. curator of the University
A dozen or more University stuArchaeological museum, that the dents are now holding professional
museum is open for visitors during radio positions through knowledge
the summer months.
gained in the University studios.
The museum will receive visitors
on Tuesday afternoons from 2 to GRADUATE'S BOOK PUBLISHED
4 p. m., on Wednesday
mornings
Leon H. Leonian. vho graduated
from 10 a. m. until noon. On Friday
afternoon It will again open for from the College of Agriculture in
visitors from 2 until 4 p. m., and 1926, has had a 96 page book, titled,
will again be closed on Saturdays, "How to Grow Delphiniums" pubreceiving visitors Sunday afternoon lished. Leonian now lives in
W. Va.
from 2 until 5 p. m.

Museum Hours
Are Announced

Mor-ganto-

Murdered The Prof
By RALPH MOORHEAD

Eoitoi'i Note This hort itory It
reprinted Irom the Unlverlty of Oklahoma Covered Wagon, the humor
publication of that unlverdly.

I had no personal feelings against
the professor. It was not I against
the professor. It was his ideas
against mine. He had a black and
gold portrait of Karl Marx above
his fireplace, and ho knelt on his
stool every night in front of his
fireplace and spoke aloud his loyalty to the Image. He and I occupied the only two floors of the
building and I could hear him
quite plainly if I stood near my
own fireplace which opened into
the same chimney as his.
At first I listened merely out of
curiosity, then to reason against
him and his Socialism, then to argue, and finally to fight with myself against him. For four years
while I was In college the fight
continued within myself. I knew
that it was a losing fight. I felt
myself, the belief of my people,
that had ever meant anything to me in this life or any other, gradually recede from me,
leaving me desolate and alone.
Tl.ere was for me only one way out.
On Thursday night around eight
The
o'clock I went downstairs.
professor lived alons with a single
manservant, Osborne, who had
been in the profejw's service for
many years. I found Osborne in
the kitchen.
"Good evening, sir," he said to
me.

"Good evening, Osborne. You are
working late."
"I'm Just, finishing, sir. I'm going out to the movies in a few
minutes."
"I was wondering if you would
give me a hand upstairs. I would
like to rearrange my furniture a

K

au-

ll

Popularity of Parties During

NEW SERIES NO.

28, IMfi

7

First In Series of Date for Faculty
SPEAKER FOR
Term Recitals Is
Meeting Is Set COMMENCEMENT
Held Thursday
The summer session faculty
oc lock
meeting at
will hold
IS ANNOUNCED
Before a comparatively small
McVry hall, Friday
In Room

SECOND TERM TO

THIS WEEK

DANCE, 912, SATURDAY
PATTERSON HALL

KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, TUESDAY, JULY

FIRST DANCE OF

BE

PARTY

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

SUMMER SCHOOL
WEEKLY

bit. I'll only take a moment."
"Certainly, sir."
It has always been my policy to
be on good terms with the servants
anywhere I lived. It has always
e.
proved itself of utmost
Osborne was no exception. With his help I moved my
furniture around as I had been
wanting it for some time. At the
last we moved my large divan in
front of the fireplace. It was a
heavy piece of furniture and we
had a little difficulty lining it up
right with the rest of the room.
I stepped on the hearth and was
looking over the room when I
heard the professor speaking his
Marxian axioms to his ikon. All
was renewed.
the old struggle
Sweat broke out on my brow. My
clenched.
hands
His voice went on, "Capitalism,
unhindered, will one day brUig
about the fall of modern civilizaMarxism, the only truly
tion.
sound economic philosophy. . ."
It was then I decided to murder
the professor. I motioned Osborne
to shift the divan Just a trifle to
the left.
voice droned
The professor's
on. . .
I heard them distuictly,
three
shots in rapid succession.
up at me in
Osborne looked
startled surprise, "Could those have
been shots I heard, Mr. Oearhart?"
I hesitated, "I dont think so," I
said.
"It sounded Ifke traffic
noise."
"But I thought it came from the
professor's study. Hadn't we better go down and see, sir?"
I followed Osborne dowivstajrs.
He ran with the funny
gait of an old man, although to my
knowledge he wasn't over fifty. He
knocked at the door of the profes
conven-venienc-

stiff-legg-

sor's study. I was standing directly behind him. There was no answer.
Osborne cautiously pushed open
the door. Both of us looked with
rising horror at the limp, fleshy
body of the professor lying in a
crumpled heap before the hearth.
His body lay as it had fallen alongside his hearth with his fresh blood
dripping on the open face of a volume of the works of Marx.
Osborne was quite beside himself.
All he could do wa3 to stand and
stare at the professor's body and
wringing his hands and mumble
with a kind of surprised astonishment, "He's been murdered."
I stepped to the telephone and
called the police. In the minutes
before they arrived I tried to calm
Osborne and finally got him settled
In the large easy chair opposite
the fireplace.
I let the police in when they arrived. There were two patrolmen who had been sent Immediately to the scene of the crime.
I
"Good evening, gentlemen,"
said. "Come right in."
Officer
Blanton took charge.
He ordered the other patrolmen to
search the apartment while he arrogantly questioned poor Osborne
and myself.
Why should anyone want to murder the professor?
Did he have
any enemies? No. Osborne could
vouch for that. Then wtiat motive,
outside of robbery, could anyone
have? There seemed to be nothing
of value missing.
When the coroner thrived, he
found that the shots had been
fired at a close range of about four
or five feet. The body was lying
in a rather queer position. Although It was possible that, the
(Continued on Page Four

3

111.

afternoon. July 31.
There will be a discussion of
with the
problems connected
summer session and especially
those pretainlng to the new
plans for the 19.17 school.
'Signed) Dr. Jesse Adams
Director

John

Dr.

Reynolds,

Hugh

President, Hendrix Collepre,
Will Talk to Graduates
At Commencement

IS AUTHOR OF

NUMEROUS ROOKS

Merchant Marines
Are Rehabilitated
A thoroughgoing

Exercises
4

Will

Be Held

P. M., August 21, in

at

Alumni Gym

rehabilitation of

Dr. John Reynolds, president of
the Merchant Marine as an arm of Hendrix College, Conway, Ark., will
our National Defense System and deliver the address to the gradas an adjunct of our foreign com- uates of the summer session commerce is now regarded by obser-e- rs mencement at 4 p. m. August 21,
to be a possibility. The 7th ConDr. Jesse E. Adams, director of the
gress passed the necessary legislayessummer session, announced
tion, and it has been duly approved terday.
by the President.
Doctor Reynolds, who has been
The new law creates a Maritime president of Hendrix College since
Commission and transfers to it all 1913, and president of the Trinity
merchant marine functions of the System, which includes Hendrix
Department of Commerce. It termand Oalloway Woman's College,
1931,
inates all ocean-ma- ll
contracts since books: has writtenofthe followArkansas
"Makers
through which shipping has been ing
History," "Civil Government of
subsidized heretofore, and substitutes a direct, dual system of aids, Arkansas," "History of the Univer-

one covering vessel operations. Experts hold that in each instance,
these aids represent the difference
between the cost of these shipping
functfons at home and In foreign
competitive countries. The measure
contemplates private ownership and
operation of our merchant vessels,
but provides for government ownership and operation should private
capital fall t omeet our national
Interpre-tersrequirements.
maritime
the bill hold that It also provides adequate safeguards to Insure
proper protection to public funds
advanced as construction and operating subsidies.
An analysis of the bill discloses
that the U. S. Treasury and the
public are protected. In the first instance, by prohibiting appointment
to the Commission of anyone who
within three years has been connected with the shipping Industry.
Further protection is afforded, it is
shown in the matter of excessive
salaries and profits, both direct and
indirect. Profits above a certain
amount are subject to recapture.
These safeguards apply to both
vessel construction and operation.
This new maritime measure is
hailed by disinterested and
citizens acquainted
with
this industry and the country's
needs as the best that ever has
been passed by Congress.
Many able and well qualified men
have been suggested for membership to the new
Commission created by the bill. It is
recognl.1ed as one of the greatest
importance that the Commission be
composed of men of the highest
integrity and other qualifications,
as a measure such as this with its
essentially wide powers is no better
than the Commission that the
Commission that executes it.
This new maritime measure. It is
averred, owes it existence and character to the patriotic devotion over
a period of several years of a few
able Senators and Congressmen.
They exposed the weakness of legislation then existing and developed
the plan and substance of this Act.
Foremost among these, it Is claimed,
is Senator Black of Alabama, who
has labored unceasingly through
weary months to Insure the Nation
a Merchant Fleet commensurate
with its needs. In these labors, it
is pointed out, he has been ably assisted during recent months by
Senator Guffey of Pensylvania.
Senator Guffey, it is stated, came
Into the picture as a harmonizer of
divergent views and interests, and
he will be known as one of its Joint
authors along with Senator Gibson
of Vermont. To the filibuster by
(Continued on Page Four)
of

fair-mind- ed

with
sity of Arkansas,"
D. Y. Thomas , and "The South in
the Building of the Nation."
It Is not known at present how
many will graduate at the exercises
this summer.
or

Discovery Of Oil
Fields Declining
The known oil reserves of thi3
country will last fifteen years at
the present rate of consumption,
according to a statement by Mr.
W. A. Sclvig of the Bureau of
Mines, Depratment of the Interior, before the Purchasing Agents'
Association meting at Hamilton,
Ont., Can., on June 17, 1936.
The present rate of consumption
is 900 million barrels per year, and
although new oil reserves are being
discovered, Mr. Selvig pointed out,
the frequency at which new fields
are being found Is declining.
The great increase in consumption of oil is due to the displacement of coal by oil burners for industrial and domestic heating; also
by the increased number of
automobiles,
busses,
and trucks which have replaced
some of the
railway
locomotives.
By way of contrast, Mr. Selvig
points out that at the present rate
of consumption the known coal reserves should last several thousand
years, only 1 per cent of the original reserves of the United States
having been consumed. These, for
bimost part, consist of low-ratuminous, he said.
In discussing the gradual decline
in the discovery of new oil fields,
Mr. Selvig spoke of the probable
necessity of supplementing oi wlith
liquid fuel from coal within the
present generation.
gasoline--

powered

coal-burni- ng

nk

ODDS AND ENDS
Little Finland continues to make'
her regular payment on the war
debts even after all the talk concerning them has died down.
surAccording to the nation-wid- e
vey of the Times recently, Roosevelt is gradually gaining back the
votes which he has lost in the past
two years.
Orville Love and Cecil Haight are
physics lab partners at Montana
State College.
Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
will receive the bulk of the setata
of James Anderson Hawes, deceased
New York lawyer.
C. C. N. Y. has Joined other Eastern schools in raising standards of
admission.

Jake Ruminates Of The
Sterling Qualities Of Betsy
I don't recollect as ive ever seen
a more foolish bunch of students
than they is over at the Kentucky
University law school. Them pore
fellers have planked down money
by the listfuls so as they could buy
books and pay for tuition. I reckon each one of them has spent
enough dough to buy Uncle Kash's
ole cow, Betsy. But shucksamighty
If them law fellers would Just use
their heads they oughter have
sense enough to know that If fen
they got married, they'd get the
law laid down to 'em for nothln'.
And besides, people down here
don't practice law the right way
Back home on Turkey
nohow.
Trot, whenever we have a court
trial the whole neighborhood
flocks In and alter we get through
awsappin horses and Jack knives,
why drat my hide, iffen we don't
Jest lock up the Jury for a little
while and let the defendant go
free. But down here no matter iffen a feller shoots another man's
ear off, they try to send him to
Jail.
Aand
haint never seen no
lawyer what even coined nigh to
approachin Uncle Kash's Ole Bet
1

to physical condition, book larnin', or Jest anything.
Course lawyers have got
money, books, autymblles. and all
sorts of contraptions to help them
out, and Ole Betsey haint gt nothln' ceptin some bones, hair, two
horns, and a big brass cow bell,
but that makes nevermind. Betsey has a physical hardyhood what
makes a humpbacked, squint-eye- d
lawyer almost die with envy.
She maintains her physical condition by alivin cleanlike and
the virtue of temperance. No my feller, you don't
catch Ole Betsey ausin terbaccer,
fine foods, drugs, or them
and Manhattan roostertalls.
Every minute she are a bootiful
picture of radyant health. Why 1
bet there haint a handful of lawyers what's ever head about "the
cow Jumped over the moon." But
glorytobe, iffen the pore misguided fellers would start afollerin at-ther ways, they'd shore get
strong and healthylike until a fore
long everybodyd think they was
ordinary human beins Instead of
Jest spectacled lawyers.
JAKE.
sey, when it comes

mint-Jule-

er

* Best
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Page 1 wo

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m. to 4 p. in., Univ.
News, 9
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138.

HERE SHALL

THE KERNEL ALL

S'lUDENT
'

RIGHTS MAIN IAIN

DEVELOPMENTS AT GENEVA

Developments during the l.tsl few weeks ;il
London and Geneva would hK';ii to indiaic
that Britain and the League ol Nations is in a
quandary in the fate of 'Italy's ininiuiahle poMany fail to find anything "immutasition."
ble" in the jositions of Britain or the League,
or in Italy, for that matter. Nothing but Icar
of Itaiy in the faec of a peculiar chain of
they declare, has impelled t
only
to assume this position-i- he
of which will be to give moie grounds for
fear in the future. As strange as it may appear
to the civilized woild, Mussolini, they point
out, holds the whip and the pistol, most of the
other members informing like the animals in
a show.
This is the meeting of the League observers
long looked forward to as inevitably the most
War
important in the entire
crisis, and which the Ethiopian Emperor, fleeing from his bleeding country, came to attend.
It is averred that decisions more important
than anv made at the time of the World War
are at stake in a crisis which may determine
the fate o countries in the Near East and the
Mediterranean Sea. Moreover, it is asserted
Italo-Eihiopia- n

that Protestantism in Europe and liberal
thought throughout the world arc not only interested in but affected by this crisis. The decisions in such crises should not be based upon
fear, it is held, but on justice. What has immediately happened, through fear, it is explained, is the betrayal of a nation 3,000 years
free and yet and integral part of the domain of
the League and the
pact.
Bullying rather than bluffing would describe
Mussolini's latest role with the League, many
assert, as he takes quick advantage of the deplorable position of his former allies, the Central European Powers, which arc at sword's
point. It is the climax of the great game of
bluff that Mussolini has been playing in his
own country and with the Society of Nations,
they point out. It is too muih to say that Britain and the League's position has been one ol
putty in his hands? observers ask.
The League session convened June .10, instead of June 29, as had previously been announced. But already on June '22 the British
Cabinet, after acting on serious internal divisions of opinion within itself, made a decision
calculated to guide action at the forthcoming
Kellogg-Brian-

d

anti-wa- r

League meeting, a devision which, it is beliexed,
will go down in history as of disastrous imioil
to the interests of the British Empiic and to
human freedom. The Cabinet at this meeting
pronounced itself in favor of lifting the puni,
tive sanctions imposed on Italy, thereby ellect-inga complete aboui-lai- e
to all appearances,
by Britain.
On June 23, it was reported that Britain had
concluded, evidently at this Cabinet meeting,
some kind of "deal" with Italy, granting that
country "air supremacy in the Mediterranean,"
and apparently giving her the entire British
sphere of influence in Ethiopia in return for
vague assurances that Italy would not ally herself with Austria, Hungary, and Germany.
By continuing the sanctions, and making
their continuance an "immutable josition," it
is believed that Britain at leist could have
brought Mussolini to the creation of a small
independent state consisting of the former
Tana, the
British spheie of influence-La- ke
Blue Nile, the cities of Gondar and Aksuin-furnish- ing
a headquarters for the Abyssinian
branch of the Eastern Christian Church under
the League of Nations. This would have lelt
all the fertile sugar cane, cotton, collie and
rubber lands of southern Ethiopia to sotisfy
lt;rly in her aggression against a fellow League

nation.
By leinoving the sanctions, it is contended,
Britain reversed its own olicy and theieby not
only became the leader in giving away foiever
the British spheie of influence, but plunged
Abyssinia into a night of hojieless loieign
anny which the Near East and Euiojh: may be
many score years in overcoming.
At the session of July 2, Piemier Biuce of
Australia told the Assembly, "The Iioijc of

ti

Tuesday, July 28,

Arts and Science College
Is Largest in University

millions of men and women ha lcrn extinguished."
At the meeting the following day, July 3,
ncwspact man.
Stefan Lux, Czct hoslovakian
killed himself in the Assembly as a piotest
against the League's inattion in defense nf
Ethiopia and in the Jewish pioblcm in Ger-

Despite a contlniiel budding pro-JIwhich has made departments
Into separate colleges from time to
time, the College of Arts and Sciences maintains its place by far as
the largest clllege In the University.
From a small beginning back in
the 1880's as a part of the old Agricultural and Mechanical College,
the College of Arts and Sciences
has grown until this semester 1088
student are enrolled. The atari of
184 persons Includes 133 Instructors
and 24 graduate assistants In addition to a number of secretaries
and stenographers.
Prof. James O. White, for whom
White hall Is named, was the first
dea nof the College. H ewas followed by Prof. A. M. Miller. Dur- ng

re

many.
July 4, Galileo Soli, of Panama told the
League its action caused "bitter disapintment

t

ff

through the world."
On the louith, a vote was ta4.cn on Ethiopia's
request for a loan of $50,000,000 "to defend her
integrity." Twenty live Ixraguc members abstained fiom voting, which, it is averted, disclosed the fe