xt7g1j977f7n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g1j977f7n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19500106  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1950 text The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1950 1950 2013 true xt7g1j977f7n section xt7g1j977f7n The Kentucky Kernel

Pay Parking
Fines Soon!

UNIVERSITY

VOLUME XL

Rain And Slowly
Rising Temperature

KENTUCKY

OF

KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1950

LEXINGTON",

NUMBER 12

9

Broncos Kick Cats As 64,816 Look On; New
Basketballers Win Sugar Bowl Trophy
Second Half Ruins
Kentucky Eleven
By Tom Diskin
MIAMI. FLA, Jan. 2 Santa
Clara's Bronros kicked high and
hard all over the field here today
to defeat the Kentucky Wildcats,
in the 16th annual Orange
Bowl Gridiron classic before a re21-1- 3,

cord crowd of 64.816.
The Broncos from California knew
how to kick and run.
Immediately after the startling
upset. Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant
stated that he believed "kicking
was the decisive factor in the game.
That's what beat us as much as
anything else. I think Haynes, their
kicker, was the outstanding back
for Santa Clara".
Kicking Outstanding
With Halfback Hall Haynes doing
the punting, Santa Clara was able
to keep Kentucky away from pay-di- rt
throughout most of the afternoon. The California eleven set a
new Orange Bowl record by averaging slightly better than 44 yards per
kick during the game despite a
gusty 20
wind from
mile-an-ho- ur

the East.
The Broncos, called by Florida
sportswriters "the mystery team
from the West", entered the tilt
a a three to five and one-ha- lf
point
underdog but when it was all over,
the Wildcats turned out to be the
mystery. Every one here was asking "what happened to Kentucky in
the second half?"
Cats Look Good
The Big Blue looked very good in
the first two quarters. They completely outplayed and outclassed the
Californians and the half time
statistics bear that out. Mike Welds,
Santa Clara publicity man, said, "I
thought we had run into another
Oklahoma powerhouse for a while".
But in the fatal second half, it
was a different story. The red and
grey uniformed Santa Clara ns, who
were expected to fold under tfc-- ;
warm
Miami sun, had
"the new look" in the final 30 minutes of action and scored three
times, while Kentucky tallied once.

Kentucky "Outconditioned"
We talked with Santa Clara's
Coach Len Casanova After th game4
and he said, "we ve been a second-ha- lf
ball club all season with the
exception of our first game with
California. I think we outconditioned Kentucky, which greatly surprised me. You know we took it
easy down here. . . . Didn't work too
hard. We were warned about that
by the father of Jack Roche (SC
backfield coach) who trains greyhounds down here in Miami.
"He told us that you couldn't
work greyhounds hard in this climate and expect a good showing

out of them and that human beings are much the same way."
Broncos Wanted Win

Earlier, while the Wildcats were
quietly dressing, with only the running showers and a few scuffling
6hoes breaking the stillness. Coach
Bryant told the three or four sports-writearound him that "Santa
Clara was entitled to win. . . . They
wanted to win more than we did".
Turning in good games for the
Cats were Leskovar, Mackenzie,
Ignarski, James, Phelps, Odlivak,
Clark, Parilli, Yowarski, Howe,
Jamerson, and Bruno.
rs

Engineering Students
Help Plan Bridges
Thirteen engineering
students
have been named to help draw plans
for state bridges and highways.
The students are Morris J.
Douglas M. Farleith, George
T. Sparrow, Thomas B. Deen, Robert R. Breeden, Robert A. Brunson,
Carl E. Chappel. Byrnes C. Fair-chil- d,
y,

Clarence C. Fox, Theodore C.
Gesling Jr., Warren C. Grubbs,
Frank Kemper, and Robert J. Wood.
E. D. Smith. Highway Department
bridge engineer, stated that the
necessary drafting equipment had
been installed in a section of the
UK Engineering building.
James
E. Black of the Highway Department will direct the student work.

Dr. Pardue Named Head
Of Oak Ridge Institute
-

UK Dean Succeeds
Emory Professor

Dr. Louis A. Pardue, dean of the
University Graduate School, and
current vice chairman of the Oak
Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies,
succeeded Dr. J. Harris Purks ot
Emory University. Atlanta as chairman of the Institute Council.
The Oak Ridge Council is composed of one representative from
each of the 24 Southern universities
comprising the organization.
Dr.
Purks has resigned his post to become associate director of the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation.
Faculty Trains at Oak Ridge
Dean Pardue has made important
contributions to the wartime atomic
energy research program both at
Oak Ridge and at the University
of Chicago metallurgical laboratory.
Under his leadership, the University
has participated in the Oak Ridge
research program and has used
facilities there to provide additional
training for its faculty.
Dr. Martin E. Weeks, recently appointed head of the Department of
Agronomy, participated in the Intechnistitute's first
ques course.
Dr. Alfred Brauer,
professor of zoology, and Dr. Herbert
P. Riley, head of the Department of
Botany, have recently completed
six months of research in the
Biology Division of the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory. Prof. L. W.
Cochran of the Department of
Physics has also spent several
months in physics research at the
National Laboratory.
Pardue Former Distinguished Prof
Dr. Pardue was named a "Distinguished Professor of the University" two years ago.
He received his bachelor of arts
and master of science degrees from
the University.' He was awarded
his doctor of philosophy degree at
Yale University, and did advanced
physics research at" the California
Institute of Technology and the
University of California.
radio-Isoto-

pe

Open Jobs
Listed By
Civil Service
The U. S. Civil Service Commission has announced examinations
for the following positions: Engineer, paying $3,100 and $3,825 a
year; Civil Engineer (Trainee), paying $2,650 and $2,875 a year; and
Junior Scientist (Chemist, Physicist, Metallurgist)
and Engineer,
paying from $2,650 to $3,825 a year.
Applications for these examinations will be accepted from college
students who expect to complete the
required courses of study not later
than June 30, 1950 .
Some of the positions are trainee
positions and are available to qualified sophomore and junior students.
The Engineer and Civil Engineer
(Trainee) Jobs are in the Bureau of
Reclamation in several Western and
Midwestern states. To qualify for
these positions, applicants must pass
a written test.
In addition, for the Civil Engineer (Trainee) jobs they must have
completed appropriate undergraduate study; for the Engineer jobs,
they must have had 4 years of education or experience in engineering
or a combination of such education
and experience. For the Jobs paying $3,825 a year, an additional year

of experience is required.
Junior Scientist and Engineer jobs
paying from $2,650 to $3,825 will be
filled in various Federal agencies in
Washington,
D. C, and nearby
Maryland and Virginia and in cerArmy and Navy establishments
tain
elsewhere in Maryland and Virginia;
similar Jobs paying $3,100 and $3,825
are to be filled at the WrighUPatter-so- n
Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.
All applicants must pass a written
test.
For Jobs paying $2,650 and $2,875,
applicants must have had appropriate college study, and for those payA collection of original pages ing $3,100 and $3325, they must
have
from rare editions of Bibles and had appropriate education
Testaments recently presented to perience or a combination or exof the
the University by Ross Sloniker of two.
Cincinnati is now on exhibition in
Applications for
the Fine Arts Building, according entist and Engineer the Junior Scijobs in Washto Prof. Edward W. Rannels, head ington, D.
C, Maryland, and Virof the University art department.
The collection, representing vol- ginia, must be received by the U. S
umes dating from the twelfth cen- Civil Service Commission, Washingtury, includes manuscript pages on ton 25, D. C, not later than Janvellum, early editions of German uary 31, 1950.
For
and Italian Bibles, the 1611 King neer the Junior Scientist and EngiJames Bible, and examples of fine tions jobs in Dayton, Ohio, applicaprinting by Aldine, Estienne, Plan-ti- tary, must be received by the SecreBoard of U. S. Civil Service
Elxevir, and Baskerville.
Examiners, Headquarters, Air MaThe exhibition will end Sunday.
terial Command, MCACXB, Wright-PattersAir Force Base, Dayton,
Ohio, not later than January 17.
Engineers To Apply

Rare Books Displayed
In Fine Arts Building

n,

mmam

mm mm

iinffX1inirfFiWwjjn

Spectacular Shot
Beats Villanova

All engineers

art

requested

to

gineering building.

Sugar Bowl victory, unless of course,
it's one in the Orange Bowl. Kentucky's youthful pack of Wildcats
went down to New Orleans and succeeded where veteran Wildcat teams
with All Americans overflowing on
the bench had twice failed before,
squeezing by Villanova
and
downing Bradley 71-for the big
silver trophy.
Jim Line was the star of the tournament. He slipped under the goal
with the deciding tally in the opening round to defeat Villanova. and
fired the shots that killed Bradley
in the finals. With a rebound, two
longs, and a crip shot, he single
armedly shoved the Cats from a 4
deficit to a 7 lead which they
never relinquished.
A pivot shot by Bradley's great
center Paul Unruh gave the Indians
an 5 lead which they held almost
the entire first half, at one time
moving out by a five point margin. Walt Hirsh's one hander put
the Cats ahead as the rest period
neared, but Unruh tapped in a rebound to tie the score at half time

In the first contest of its kind on
campus, the University's Typ.cal Ed
and Typical Co-e- d
will be named
during College Standards Week
which begins Sunday.
The boy and girl, voted most
typical of UK students, will be presented at the Colleee Standards
Week style show on Wednesday.
The winners will be chosen bv student and faculty members of the
Student Union Board.
All fraternities, sororities,
and
dorms have been asked to nominate
A picture of the Typi
candidates.
cal Ed and Co-e- d
will appear in the

57-5- 6,

40-4-

V

50-4-

19oO

31-3-

well-know- n.

Dr. Louis A. Pardue

HIT

The Wildcats spurted ahead
after the intermission but played
dead ,as Melchiorre, Unruh, and
8
Mann changed the score
in
favor of Bradley. Then the old Lefthander started swinging and Kentucky rolled up a
6
lead which
padded them through to their third
Sugar Bowl title in six appearances
at the New Orleans midwinter
2

Elephants To Thunder
On Memorial Hall Screen

.

'

Elephant Boy." featuring Sabu,
will be shown today in Memorial
Hall at 3 p.m., 7 pjn., and 9 pan.
Admission is 30 cents.
!

69-5-

sports carnival.

Kentucky-7- 1

F
F

Line-1- 9

Hirsch-1- 0

UK Soloist
To Perform

Miss Helen Lorraine Houden, lyric
soprano, who joined the University
music staff this September, will be
featured in this week's Sunday
musicale.
Miss Houden, who is a graduate
of the Julliard School of Music,
was first heard In Lexington as
soloist , with the University Choristers in the Christmas program. Accompanist for Sunday's program,
which will begin at 4 p.m., will be
Ford Montgomery, also a member
of the University Department of
Music.
Freshmen students from Patterson-Hall
will serve as ushers and
will be special guests.
' The program will include:
Part one: "We 6ing To Him," by
Henry Purcell; "Seufzer Tranen"
(from "Canata No. 21"), by Bach,
and "Patron, das macht der Wind"
by Bach.
Part two:."C", by Francis Poul-enc- e;
"Air Champetre", by Francis Poulenc; "Stornello Love Song,"
by Pletro Cimara, and "Canto di
Primavera", by Pietro Cimara.
Part three: "Scene et Air des
Bijoux" (from "Faust"), by Charles
Gounod.
Part four: "Verborgenheit." by
Hugo Wolf; "Der Tod, das is die
Kuhle Nacht," by Brahms, and
"Meine Liebe 1st Grun," by Brahms.
Part five: "Love, You Are My
Music," by Gustav Klemm; "Sing a
Song ' of Sixpence," by Herbert
Hughes; "This Little Rose," by William Roy, and "Night," by Edwin
McArthur.

Training Program
Positions Are Open
Students interested in applying
for admission to the third annual
New York State Public Administration Internship Program, a training
program to strengthen public service
through specialized recruitment and
training, should contact Dr. Lysle
W. Croft, head of the UK Personnel
Office.
Application blanks, intern placement forms, and booklets in connection with the 1950 and 1951 internship program will be received
this month, according to Dr. Croft.

C

Spivey-2- 2

Whitaker-1- 3

Barnstable--

2

Substitutions

O
G

Bradley-6- 6
Mann-- 6
Melichorre-1- 8
Unruh-1- 8
Grover-- 7
Preece-- 4

KENTUCKY:
Pearson, Strong and Layne.
Schlict-man-- 4,
BRADLEY: Chianakas-5- ,
Wat-son--

Behnke-- 4,

and

Humerich-ous-

5,

e.

Kentucky had to go Into their
first overtime period since the Notre
Dame game in 1944, to nip a powerful Villanova Wildcat team 6 in
the first round of the Sugar Bowl
Tournament.
Skippy Whi taker, the little soph57-5-

omore who only week before stepped up to the foul line and won the
DePaul game in the last five seconds, put the Cats ahead with a
long shot at the outset of the extra
period, but Villanova's Paul Arizin,
leading scorer of the game with 24
points, retaliated with a pivot shot.
Skip again bid for fame by sinking
a crip but a free throw and Arizin's
rebound put Villanova ahead where
Line's spectacular shot from behind
the back board turned the defeat
into a dramatic victory .for Kentucky.
Kentucky-5- 7
Line-- 8

Hirsch-- 5

Villanova-5- 6

F
F

Ricca-1- 5

Sabol-- 9

Arizin-2- 4
C
Wolf-- 2
O
Hannan-- 2
G
KENTUCKY:
Substitutions
Whitaker-8- ,
Layne, Strong,
and Townes.

Spivey-1- 4

Pearson-- 2
Barnstable-1- 1

Wat-son--

9,

WAC Captain

To Talk Here
Capt. Sue Lynch, WAC from Ft.
George G. Meade, Maryland, will be
on the campus next Thursday to
talk with women students who are
interested in careers in the Army.
Capt. Lynch will explain the
present plan by which college graduates go through an officers indoctrination course at Camp Lee, Va...
the completion of which leads to a
WAC commission.
Interviews will be held from 2 to
5 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday in room 204 of the SUB. An
informal group meeting will be held
at 5 p.m. in the same room. Students should make appointments in
the office of the Dean of Women.

Further information and

applica-

tion forms may be secured from the
Dean of Women or CoL G. T.
Mac-Kenz-

Harvard To Give Grants
In Business Administration

Dean David said.

April 1, 1950.

tJI
meet with

MMMftl j

,,,

Si

fcauLMaa

er

Ticket Holders Take Heed!
Illegal Parkers To Feel Ax

42-3-

!

I,

Members of the SIB activities committee
Miss Margaret Bruce Cruise (extreme left), social
director, to make last minute plans for College Standards Week which begins on campus Sunday. Seated
at the table are Joan Cook (left) chairman, and Jeanne Hubbard, committee secretary.

1.
38-3-

Kentuckian.

Nominees must have a good
scholastic standing, be active on
campus, and
Sponsored By SI B Committee
College Standards Week, sponsored by the SUB Activities Committee, begins Sunday at 4 p.m.
with a formal tea in the SUB Music
Room, and ends with an after-dinncoffee and musical in the
Patt Hall lounge Thursday evenini;.
The aim of the week is to give
college students an opportunity to
form good standards in their social
life. The program was originally
conducted every year in the women's dorms, but was discontinued
during the war.
This is the first attempt at making it campus-widand the actihopes to rearri
vities committee
both men and women students. The
Student Union Board is planning to
sponsor It annually.
College Head To Be Here
Mr. Robert Detchemendy, head of
the personal appearance department at Stephens College, will be
on campus to conduct a forum of
good grooming.
Mr. Detchemendy. a noted authority on hair styling and cosmetics,
will speak on the social significance
of personal appearance. Thursday at
4 p.m. He will be available for individual consultations on Friday.
Students may make appointments to
see him in room 122 of the SUB.
Events scheduled during the week

8--

The second annual scholarship of-- f
Regional
fer under the nation-wid- e
Under
Regional Scholarship
Scholarship program of the Harvard program, the actual amount of the
of Business Ad- award to the
Graduate School
depend
each scholar
ministration has been announced directly on individual willfinancial
by Dean Donald K. David.
need. Selection of
to
Providing $50,000 in awards to a the scholarship will men madereceive
on a
be
maximum of 55 men entering the basis of aptitude for business trainschool in September, the Regional ing, without regard to financial
Scholarship program is designed to need. In extreme cases,
the scholstudents arship may cover
insure "that
cost of
without sufficient financial resources a man's training the entire
for business adwill be able to continue their edu- ministration.
cation in the graduate field of busiTeaching is based on the "case
ness administration."
Each region of the country is al- method" in which the problems of
of
lotted its own scholarships under business are attacked in termsstuthe plan and recipients are selected actual business cases, and the
by competition on a regional basis. dent is repeatedly placed in situations where as an administrator he
The regional scholarships include:
Southern (ten scholarships): Ala- must not only evaluate evidence but
1950.
bama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, also act with responsibility.
For the Engineer and Civil Engi- Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Applicants should write to the
neer (Trainee)
Jobs, applications Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
Committee on Scholarships, Harmust be received by the Executive
School of Busi- vard Graduate School of Business
"The Graduate
Secretary, Central Board of U. S. ness Administration has always Administration, Soldiers Field, BosCivil Service Examiners, Bureau of prided itself on keeping its doors ton 63, Massachusetts for application
Reclamation, Denver Federal Cen- oen to men from all economic levels forms and detailed information. The
ter, Colorado, not later than Jan- and from all parts of the country," deadline for applications will be
uary 26, 1950.

Typical Ed, Coed
Will Be Elected

There's nothing sweeter than a

on

apply now for the Engineer In
Training Examination to be given
On Thursday, January 19. See
Libby Estill, room 341, in the en-

College Standards Week
To Begin With Tea Sunday

It you are carrying a spare campus parking ticket around in your car
at present you had better pay it before Tuesday, January 10, 1950, or
come up with a good sob story,
otherwise you may get soaked.
Beginning Jan. 10, the Student
Government Association will take
over the administration of traffic
regulations and violations on the
campus.
Ticket To Be Paid In Week
Effective this date, tickets for
traffic violations will cost the usual
$1 if paid within one week. However, after a week, the fine per ticket, if still unpaid, becomes $2. When
six or more tickets are accumulated
by a person without his making any
appearance to pay the penalties, the
fine for the sixth ticket and all
thereafter will be $5 per.
All fines are to be paid to the full-ticollecting secretary recently
hired by SGA. The office of the secretary is located in room 203 of the
Administration building.
Persons who have received tickets
from the beginning of this semester
and who have not yet paid the fines

.

Proficiency Examination
Schedule Is Announced
The foreign language proficiency
examinations of the College of
Arts and Sciences will be given at
4 p.m. in McVey Hall, Room 111,
on the following days:
Jan. 17, German; Jan. 18.
French; Jan. 19, Spanish, and
Jan. 20, Latin, Italian, and Greek.
Students wishing to take the
examinations must register by
Jan. 14 in the office of Dean M.

will be charged $1 per ticket if the
tickets are paid before Jan. 10, otherwise the fees on the accumulated
tickets will accrue in line with the
policy stated above.

e,

Veterans Not Returning
Should Report To VA

Students Must Notify Secretary
Any veteran In training under
Any person who receives a ticket
Public Law 346 who does not plan
in the future or who now has an unpaid ticket and does not have the to return to .school next semester
money to pay the fine before Jan. should report this fact to the Veterans' Personnel Office, room 201,
10. or within the week time limit
after that date, notify the secretary. Administration Building, immediately.
The notification will be acknowledgwho will complete
Veterans
ed and the additional $1 penalty for
graduation requirements this selate payment will not be charged.
Parking penalties will be enforced mester and who desire the Veterans Administration to be billed
in the usual manner. Students owlor graduation expenses should
graduing fines cannot
ate, or receive a transcript of credit report to the Veterans' Personnel
until the fines are paid. After Jan. Office between Jan.
10, as heretofore customary, reveAlso any veteran in training
nue from traffic violation fines will under Public Law 345 who desires
loan fund.
still go into the student
to change his course the second
3, must obAt present parking conditions on semester, Feb.
the campus are undergoing exhaustain prior approval from the Vettive study by an SGA committee
erans Administration before his
and there may be other changes in registration under the G. I. Bill
regulations in the future.
may be accomplished. These vettraffic
erans should report at once to the

are:

3.

Sunday. Jan.- 8. Formal Tea, Music Room. SUB 5 p.m.
Monday. Jan. 9, Dating Forum,
room 129. SUB 4 p.m.: Table Manners and Service, Music Room, SUB,
5 p.m.
Tuesday. Jan. 10. Manners, Music
Room. SUB. 4 p.m.: Social Chairmen, room 128. SUB, p p.m.
Wednesday. 'Jan. 11. Style Show,
Bluegras Room. SUB. 4 p.m.
Thursday. Jan. 12. The Social
Significance of Personal Appearance, room 204. SUB, 4 p.m.: After
Dinner Coffee, Musicale, Patt Hall,
6:30 p.m.
Friday. Jan. 14. Individual consultations in regard to good grooming.
3--

Veterans' Personnel Office for
instructions in regard to obtaining
approval from the VA Regional
Of lice before registration on
Feb. 6.

Play Tryouts
To Be Held
Tonight

Tryouts for Medea, the opening
play performance in the new Guig-nTheater will be held tonight
at 7:30 in the theater auditorium of
the Fine Arts Building.
The play was translated from the
Greek by Melba McCloud, graduate
M. White, room 128, McVey Hall.
student in the Department of
Ancient Languages, and was adapted by Lola Robinson, assistant director, and O. G. Brockett, technical director of the production.
The play will be presented for a
week's run starting Feb. 13. Plays
will run for one week only since the
seating capacity has ben doubled
Vaughn Monroe's "Camel Cara- in the new auditorium.
van" will salute college fraternities
Students are also needed to work
and sororities each Saturday night backstage, in the props, and wardon the CBS broadcasts.
robe department.
On the broadcast of January 14,
Students are invited to attend
the song of Sigma Chi Fraternity, the tryouts.
"Sweetheart of Sigma Chi," will be
offered: Phi Delta Theta Fraternity's "Serenade" will be broadcast Self-portrai- ts
January 21, and on January 28th's
airing the program will salute the
Chi Omega Sorority by presenting
."
"In Life's Blithe
Profs. Raymond Barnhart, Virgil
The radio series starring Monroe Espenlaub, and Dord Fitz, of the
will continue to salut other frater- art department; John Gordon, sennities and sororities each Saturday ior art major in Arts and Sciences,
night at 6:30 pjn., local time.
and Charles Gordon Boggs, former
on disstudent, have
play in the J. B. Speed Art Museum
in Louisville.
The display is a special exhibition
Thomas E. Miller of the Courier-Journby Kentucky
staff, took colored photo- of recent
graphs of the various departments artists. It will continue through
of the Fine Arts Building this week. Jan. 15.
The pictures will appear in a future edition of the Sunday Courier-Journa- l.
ol

Caravan Plans
Greek Salutes

Editor To Give
Lectures Here

Students To Address
Baptist Conference

Bernard DeVoto, winner of the

Three University students will
Prize for history, will
two public lectures here, speak at the State Evangelistic Conference program of Kentucky pasJan. 19.
Editor of "The Easy Chair" in tors to be held at the Walnut Street
Harper's magazine since 1935. De- Baptist Church. Louisville. Tuesday.
Voto apears here as the fourth The program is sponsored by the
State Department of Student Wort
headliner in the current UK
series.
The UK students are Waller
The author's "Across the Wide Price. Merwyn Borders, and WesMissouri" won the Pultizer Prize in ton Bergman.
1948 Pulitzer

deliver

literary-d-

ramatic

1948.

DeVoto is a graduate of Harvard
University and Middlesbury and
Kenyon Colleges. Having a long list
of prose works to his credit, he is
a former editor of the Saturday Review of Literature.

Most Popular Professor
Nominations Held Tuesday
Nominations for candidates for
the annual "Most Popular Professor" contest will be held Tuesday evening at 6:30 in room 123,
SUB. Any student wishing to
nominate a professor for the title
is asked to attend this meetiiis.
The "Popular Professor" election will be held on Jan. 16 with
voting booths in the Student Union
and the campus post office. The
winning candidate will rei;n as
Rex of the annual Mardi Gras
Ball on Feb. 17, sponsored by the

Engineers To Hear
In Louisville Museum Concluding Lecture
Hang

Hey-Day-

Building Publicized

al

Engineers Elect
Senior President

Students' Art Work
Displayed Next Week

An exhibition of paintings, drawings, prints, textiles, and ceramics
Bob Gibson, Lexington senior, by 12 former University students
was recently elected president of will open in the art gallery of the
the graduating class of the Engi- Fine Arts Building next week.
Names of the students whose
neering college.
Other officers include Roger Stark, works will be displayed have not
vice president; Paul Threlkeld. sec- been announced.
retary, and Dave Bingham, treas-

urer.

Kernel Staff To Meet
All Kernel reporters are asked
to attend a meeting at 4 p.m.
Monday in room 100 of McVey
Hall.

UK Commerce Group
To Hear Address

William Embry of Embry and
Company in Lexington will address
the College Chamber of Commerce
at a meeting at 7 p.m. in room 128
of the SUB Tuesday.
Mr. Embry will speak on oppor-

tunities in retailing.

Melvin Sack of the Henry Vogt
Machine Company in Louisville will
speak at 3 p.m. Monday in room 111,
McVey Hill.
His topic is entitled "Design of a
Heat Exchanger" and will conclude
a series of three lectures given by
Vogt
engineers
of the Henry
Machine Company.

Newman Club.

Votes Are Still Accepted For
'Miss Christmas SeaF Contest
The contest for "Miss Christmas
Seal" U now in the -- home stretch."
with Ann Guthrie. Kappa Kappa
Gamma, in the lead by 28 votes,
followed by Helen Heltsley of the
Delta Delta Delta sorority. Nancy
Brewer of Kappa Alpha Theta is in
third place, and Eleanor Gash. Alpha Delta Pi, is in fourth place.
The other contestants, in respective positions, are: Bobby Beam. Alpha Gamma Delta: Joan Graham
Kappa ueita: Manna iaunti. ai- pha Al IJelta; Baroara Harris. Vtu
Omega. Sara Davidson, Zeta Tau
Alpha: Virginia Meyers. Delta Zeta:
Gloria Travis, Tau Alpha Pi.
W. W. McLendon. executive sec- retary of the Lexington-Fayett- e
Association,
Tuberculosis
County
of the contest, in a recent
statement said, "We want to make
it clear that it is not too late to

?
.

-

sea,

,

t

aunn? December. Evervone realizes
,
ri
th hll rhvt. m

j

delay sending contributions for tro
Christmas seals. Now that the
Christmas vacation is over. I feel
confident that the students at UK
will justify the confidence held m
them. Also I feel sure that a continued interest will be shown in
selecting their choice for "Miss
chrLstm.K Seal"
Contribution should be mailed to
the Lexuiton-Favett- e
Countv Tu-abereulosis Association. 212 N. Upper
Street, by Jan. 15.
The winner will be presented wi:h
an enf. raved cup from the
lion by the president. Dr. W. Erooks
Hamilton, at one of the University's
social functions.
nd

* vcmauie

Free

THE

2

KENTUCKY

Friday, January 6.

KERNEL

as the Editor of the Kentucky Kernel in that he failed altogether to
even summarize the contents of
said letter, and in that he presented
In 1( Tense of statements made in the Kernel and in disputing
Regardless of the outcome of the Orange Bowl game, the Uni- only one view of the controversy, his
own, and
accusations made in the letter printed this week and referred to versity of Kentucky's name has become a national sports-pag- e
WHEREAS, the Kentucky Kernel,
sports-footb- all,
in t'ie editorial Took lieview" of the last Kernel issue:
in its capacity of student publication,
1949's remarkable records in the three major
sento
placed the Wildcats in line has a duty the truly reflect the that
basketball and baseball-ha- ve
1. "Masterpiece of manipulation" signed statements will show
student body in
timents of
both sides of student issues should
tint Dr. l'hunincr was led to lx'lieve by the SGA committee that for the best publicity the University has ever received.
be presented, and
Especially to lie congratulated are the players who stunned
the Kernel stalf (no member of which had been consulted) was
Bar
WHEREAS, the
feels that in this
y
using SC. V as a lever to promote
publication of the the entire country with their basketball win in the Sugar Bowl. Association of the Kentucky respect
Kernel
The University community has rallied lx'hind the "kills" who the Editor to live up to the high
pnper ami that he (Dr. l'lummer) offered complete
has failed
with a thrill a min- standards of journalistic ethics and
Mr. Crote, the printing plant manager, was told that Dr. weren't supposed to win this year; basketball

Having Read The Book

At The Top
by-wor- d.

Student

semi-weekl-

y

semi-weekl-

en-c-

situation?

The judiciary committee suspected of future political

par-

practically admitted as such in the same
lr'ter. Thev were, officially, resolutions and not suggestions. If,
control is impossible or unthinkable, why try?
as s!
5. n.cu'lv mcnuVrs as jurors was not one included in the plan
4. "Toothless farces"

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

LEADING LINES
RECOGNIZED
NATIONALLY

ORCHIDS

GENE MYERS

Michler Florist

OF KENTUCKY

Assistant News Editors

AUTOMATIC
EQUIPMENT CO.

Earl Conn, Kent Hollingsworth
Asst. Sports Editors
Herbert Allen Moore, Gene Phillips

.

Kinds

Photographers

DAILY
Under New Management

Ma-lon-

ShftMij SwileW to TTHJroot Cream-0- 3
Because lie Flunted The Finger Nail Test

J. Paul

c
V

A:--

4

--

r2

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Wildroot Company,

lac, Buffalo

1 1,

N. Y

mit

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3

of
Iou7tdd7n6petrupTiT)ew-worI- 3
SmoEIng'pleasure by lighting up a Philip MobbiJ
definitely
the , on cigarette-proveJess.irritating, definitely, milder, than,
Vny. other) leading brand..
d

Vis