xt7j0z70wt4s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j0z70wt4s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19370811  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, August 11, 1937 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 11, 1937 1937 2013 true xt7j0z70wt4s section xt7j0z70wt4s I.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

SUMMER
ISSUK

UNIVERSITY

VOL. XXVII

.

(

OF

ARTIST
WILL PLAY AT
CONCERT
LAST

SYMPHONY

All students receiving degrees In
August will be the guests of the
Alumni association at the annual
commencement dinner at 6:30 p. m.
Wednesday, August 18, In the GoI3
room of the Lafayette hotel.
These students are requested to
make their reservations either at
the Alumni association office in the
Administration of Dr. Jesse Adams'
office in the training school. It is
necessary that these reservations be
made by 4 p. m. Tuesday, August 17.
Other students who plan to attend the dinner may make reservations either at Dr. Adams' office or
the office of Mrs. Sarah Holmes,
dean of women, in the Administration building. The ccx.t of the dinner for these students is $1.00. The
deadline for these reservations is
('4 p. m. Tuesday, August 17.
Dr. Jesse Adams, director of the
,
Summer Session, will be the
at the dinner. Musical selections on the program will include
a piano solo by John Oilkey graduate student, and a number of vocal
selections by Miss Mary Eleanor
Clay, one of the graduates.
Marcus Redwlne, Class of 1919
and president of the alumni association, will extend the greetings to
those present. The response will be
by W. T. Thomas, Louisville, who
will receive his AB degree in Au
gust, and Miss Geneva Faust Ow- enaboro, who will receive her MA
degree in August.
The principal address will be giv
'in by O. Lee McClaln, an alumnus
of the University, and adjutant
general of Kentuckgy.
Singing of "On, On, U. of K." led
by Miss Mildered Lewis, will close
the program.
More details of the program will
be found in next Wednesday's issue
of the Kernel.
toast-mast-

er

well-round-

Corine Harmon, noted concert
pianist, will be the guest artist at
the final little symphony concert of
the Sumer Seslson at 7:30 p. m
Thursday, August 12, in Memorial
hall.
Miss Harmon studied for five
years under the late Qabrlelowltch
of Germany. She has also studied
under the famous Leopold Oadow- sky at the Conservatory of Paris.
As a concert artist with several
symphony orchestras, Miss Harmon
has made numerous radio broad
casts. At present she is touring the
United States.
Directed by Prof. Carl A Lam pert,
the University summer session or
chestra, will accompany Miss Hermon. The selection she will play
has not yet yet been chosen.
Also on the program will be a
violin solo by William Baker. Mr.
Baker will play the andante from
Sonata No. 2 and the allegro from
Sonata No. 3, both by Handel.
The complete program follows:
Sullivan
Mikado
A Song of India
-

N.

Rimsky-Krosak-ov

Violin solo:
Andante from Sonata No. 2
Allegro from Sonata No. 3
Handel
Andante Cantabile (from First
.symphony)
Beethoven
Gounod
Faust, (selection)
To be selected:
(Corine Harmon, concert pianist)
Selection from "Peer Gynt
E. Orieg
Suite"

Phi Delta Kappa
Plans Initiation Pictorial BulletinPress
Of U-Is Off
Hi

Frat,

Initiates Friday

gust 13.
W. S. Taylor, dean of the college
of education, will be the principal
speaker at the dinner which will
follow the induction services. It
will be the last opportunity students
Mil have of hearing Dean Taylor
before he goes abroad for a year's
iitudy.
Reservations for the dinner can
be made by calling Dean Taylor's
office. It is necessary that those
planning to attend signify their in-

tention by soon Friday.

Bowling
Farmers

y,

nt,

UKy Studios Plan
, Radio Series For
Incoming Students
A series of six addresses to incoming students at the University of
Kentucky under the supervision of
Dr. T. T. Jones, dean of men at the
university, will be broadcast each
Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. from the university studios of WHAS, Louisville,
beginning August 10. The topic will
be "Looking Forward to College."
Dr. Jones will be the opening
speaker and will be followed on consecutive Tuesdays by Mrs. Sarah B.
Holmes, assistant dean of women,
who will discuss "The Students,"
Miss Bess Parry, secretary to the
dean of men, who will discuss the
relationship of new students to the
whowllltakeupthe relatlonsh ipofthe
dean of men; Dr. Leo M. Chamberlain, who will take up the relationship of the Registrar with incoming
students; Miss Helen King, assistant to the director of publicity, who
will discuss "The Publicity Bureau
tudents," and
and Incoming
Robert K. Salyers, alumni secretary,
who will discuss "The Alumni Of-land Incoming Students."
ce

Meeting And
Reception

Planned For
August 17

FORMER 1,031 RECORD
IS TOPPED BY

Dr.

Herbert N. Wheeler, chief
lecturer of the United States fores
try service, will address the stu
dents of the Summer Session in
general convocation at 9 a. m. Fri
day, August 13, in Memorial hall.
Classes will be dismissed at 8:50
a. m. so that students may attend
the lecture. There will be no 9 o'clock classes.
This convocation will be the last
of the three during the second se
mester of the Session.
Doctor Wheeler's address will be
in the form of an Illustrated lecture
on "Forest Conservation". He will
use color slides to Illustrate his
talk.
An expert on the subject of for
ests. Doctor Wheeler Joined the
United States forestry service as a
ranger In Colorado In 1906. For the
past 10 years he has lectured on
forests and forest conservation.
Doctor Wheeler believes that for
ests play a great part in the control of floods. He urges greater cooperation between the states and
the federal government in tree
planting and other conservation
measures.
Doctor Wheeler's talk will bring
to a close a brilliant series of Summer Session convocations.
Last
Wednesday Franklin J. Meine, au
thor and lecturer, spoke to the stu
dents on the humor of Mark Twain.
The first convocation of the second
semester brought the Utlca Jubilee
singers, Utica normal and indus- tirial institute, to the University.
This quartet presented negro spir
ituals and Stephen Collins Foster
songs.
Four speakers were on the convo
cation programs for the first semester. They included Dr. Frank L. Mc-Vpresident of the University;
Albert B. Chandler, governor of
Kentucky; Dr. George Strayer, Columbia university educator, and Dr.
Harry Elmer Barnes, visiting lecturer In history.

e;

Hor-lach- er,

18

Record Establishing Expect
ed To Continue As Fall
Terms Opens

A meeting of all persons
who will receive degrees in
Augu.it will be held at 4 p. m.
Tuesday, August 17, in Room
111, McVey hall, for the purpose of receiving commencement Instructions,
The meeting will be followed
by a commencement reception
at 4:30 p. m. in the faculty
club rooms, McVey hall.

1052

That's the final complete enroll
ment for the second semester of the
1937
summer session as released
yesterday by the registrar's office
following registration of two spec
ial groups for Instruction at the

ANOTHER DANCE
BEING PLANNED
Final Summer Session Party
Scheduled For Saturday,
August 14, From 9 To 12
P. M. In Patterson Hall

University.
Being the greatest total ever to
be reached by the University for a
second semester summer registra
tion, the figure tops by 18 the
former record of 1034 set In 1935.
The 1052 enrollment is 124 greater
than the 928 figure of last sumer.
With the registration of Citizens
Conservation
Corp camp educational advisors and a federal nurses
school, the enrollment for the sec
ond semester was complete. Both of
these groups signed on Monday, Au
gust 9. The camp advisors will be
liere until August 21, while the
nurses school will continue for four
weeks.
A member of the Registrar's staff
said that office was well pleased
with the record enrollment.
The
staff member said that the summer
enrollment was no indication of the
prospects of a record enrollment for
the regular semester this fall.
When asked If she thought this
summer's enrollment forcast a record this fall, the staff member said
You can't predict the fall enroll

A summer session party will be
held from 9 to 12 o'clock Saturday
night, August 14, in the recreation
room of Paterson hall, acordlng to
an anouncement yesterday from
the office of Mrs. Sarah Holmes,
dean of women.
The popularity of the last party
and requests of numerous students
that another be held is responsible
for the party being given Saturday
night, the announcement said.
Admission to the party will be 25
cents per person. An orchestra will
furnish music for dancing. Bridge ment from the number registering
tablees will be set up for those who this cimmer". However, she exdo not care to dance.
pressed a belief that there would be
no drop in enrollment figures this
fall.
Enrollment for the first term of
the sumemr session reached a rec
total of 1797, not in
Bids for the construction of the cluding the short courses. This enUniversity's new biological sciences rollment broke by 75 the record set
building will be opened and exam- in 1935 when 1722 students signed
ined by university construction en for the first term.
glneers Monday, August 30, Elgan
A record enrollment was set last
B. Farris, cWef eigineer announced September when 3422 students enMonday.
tered the University for the first
The bids were advertised Monday, term of the 1936-3- 7
school year.
August 9. The new building will This number surpassed by 190 the
cost approximately (120,000.
previous alltime high of 3232 set in
Besides advertising for bids on 1931.
A NEW COURSE
the general construction work, bids
course in were called for on plumbing and
A new "entrance-exit- "
matrimony has been added to the electrical work on the structure
Utah State Agricultural college cur- - and Indirect and direct lighting
riculum. "Marriage and Divorce" is fixtures for the new College of Law
which is now nearing completion.
the name of the study.

New Science Bids

Are Advertised

ey,

OLDEST UK PROF

CELEBRATES 83

Site As 1,000 Future
Selected As 1938
Of America Conclude Three Day Meeting In Lexington Last Friday

Woodward Austin, Calhoun, was?dents and ot
encouragement
elected president of the Kentucky given them by vocational agriculAssociation,
Future Farmers of tural pupils.
America, Friday afternoon at the
Other Winners Listed
concluding business session of the
Winners of six district compethree-daeighth titions received $10 each. They were
organization's
annual convention at the Univer- Thomas Herndon, Hazel High
sity, which with more than 1,100 School, Calloway County;
Louis
delegates, broke all previous attend- Thomas, Minerva High School, Ma
ance records.
son county; John Carr, College High
School, Bowling Green; Clyde Wor-le- y,
Other officers elected were:
McCreary county high school,
Frank Clark, Peak's Mill;
secretary, Billle Renaker, Conners-villWhitley City; Gerald Royster, Rob- treasurer, James McConathy, ards high school, Henderson counPicadome, and reporter, Ward W. ty, and Billy Meeks, New Castle
Boyd, Minerva.
high school, Henderson county.
Essays all were on an assigned
Members of the executive com
mittee elected were Homer Hag- - subject, "Economic Efficiency and
man, Hawesville, retiring president; the Standard of Life On the Farm."
E. R. Kelley, Jr., Lewisburg, and Papers were limited to 800 to 1,000
Owsley Rochester, Stanford.
words. Correct English and clear
Bowling Green was selected as the expression counted for 25 per cent
1938 convention site.
and information and sound thinking for 75 per cent. Winning essays
Marion Youth Wins
J. W. Croft, high school student in each school were submitted to
at Marion, Ky., was announced Fri district committee, each of which
day as winner of the annual State Included an English teacher, a
Essay Contest for vocational agri- farmer and a banker. Papers bore
cultural high school pupils, a com only number, no names.
petition sponsored annually by The
The State committee that Judged
Courier-Journ- al
and The Louisville the seven district essays included
with the vo- T. W. Bates, Federal Land Bank;
Times in
cational division of the State De Sam V. Noe, principal of Eastern
partment of Education.
Junior High School, both of LouisThe winners were announced at ville, and Horace S. Cleveland, seca banquet closing the eighth an- retary of the Kentucky State Fair.
nual convention of the associaition
Made Honorary Members
at the University of Kentucky.
Gov. Ji B. Chandler, who visited
State and district winners re the convention during the after
ceived a total of $110 in prizes, it noon with Mrs. Chandler and made
was announced by Donald McWain, a brief address; E. L. German,
promotion manager of the two president of the Bourbon Stock
newspapers. Mr. McWain expressed Yards, Louisville; Prof. L. J.
appreciation of the Interest shown
assistant dean of the Colby hundreds of participating stu- - lege of Agriculture; D. D. Stewart,

70

New High Mark Is Establish
ed As Last Numbers
Show 1,052 Students
Are Enrolled

Miss

Initiation services of the Alpha
A pictorial bulletin about the Un
Nu chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, national education fraternity, will be iversity of Kentucky High School,
held at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday, August stating location, registeration, cost
17, in Room 301 of the Education
and opportunities afforded, has
building.
Just come from the press.
The initiation will be followed by Information about the operation
a fish fry at the Lexington reser- of the school and Its physical
voir on the Richmond pike at 6:30 equipment, rules, faculty, admission,
Delta Pi,
p. m. Tuesday.
Initiates will be credits sports and athletics and a
guests of honor at the fish fry.
detailed list of typical elective
Education
H. L. Davis, president of the Al- courses together with scenes of the
pha Nu chapter and a member of students at work and at play, are
the faculty of Lexington's Henry contained in the publication.
Kappa Delta Pi, national honor Clay high school, will preside at the The University High will open
ary fraternity for men and women induction services.
for the fall term September 7.
In education, will hold Initiation
services and a dinner at the Lafay
ette hotel at 6 p. m. on Friday, AuGreen
Convention

Kappa

NEW SERIES NO.

FINAL FIGURES
Dr. Herbert N. Wheder Will
Speak At Final Convocation IN REGISTRATION
9 a. m. Friday In Memorial Hall SHOW RECORD

Parisienne

The letter, from a young Pari
sienne, states that a news dispatch
with a New York City date line,
has found its way into the columns
of a Paris newspaper, and tells the
story of the decision of University
of Kentucky men students against
"thin women" and their majority
vote in favor of a
ed
figure, chestnut hair, blue eyes and
fair skin as attributes of the ideal
woman.
The young Frenchwoman goes on
to say that she fulfills all of these
qualifications, and that she could
be persuaded to consider a proposal
of matrimony from any young Ken
tucklan who could offer her, in addition to his name, a position of
some security and above the ordinary in society.
"As it would be very agreeable
for me to dwell in distant lands"
states the young woman, "I have
thought that perhaps among your
students, I would be capable of
pleasing one of them as a wife,
naturally I would be due to have
a situation; especially one a bit
ordinary; although not having a
to
fortune, I have had the chr-ncbe able to live tranquilly In a famfly
upon occupying myself with certain
duties, after having received my
diploma of secondary studies."
The young aspirant after the
heart and hand of a young Kentucky student will be 19 the nineteenth
day of August, according to her
communication.

7:30 THURSDAY
MEMORIAL HALL

11, 1937

Corine Harmon, Noted
Chief Lecturer Of United
Pianist. To Appear On
States Forest Service
Program In Memorial
Desires UKy
Will Speak On "For-es- t
Hall Thursday
Conservation"
Husband
ORCHESTRA MAKES
HANQUET IS SLATED
FINAL APPEARANCE CONVO TO HE AT 9 A. M.;
Word of the fatal charm of "Ken
FOR NEXT WEDNESDAY tucky gentlemen" has travelled to
CLASSES OUT AT 8:50
the far corners of the earth, if a William Raker, Violinist, Also
Students Must Register For communication, recently received at
Illustrated Lecture Will He
To He Featured On
Annual Affair By 4
Nature Of Address
the University of Kentucky from
Concert
P. M. Tuesday
Paris, France, is any indication.
At Assembly
Those Receiving Degrees Can
Make Reservations In
Alumni or Doctor
Adams' Offices

FINAL SYMPHONY

KENTUCKY

LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST

Graduates to Be Guests
Of Alumni Association At
Commencement Dinner

i

Best Copy Available

Louisville, member of the State Fair
Board and University of Kentucky
trustee; Virgil Steed, Lexington,
member of the Lexington Livestock
Association's board of
Producers'
directors, and Jack Truitt, teacher
of agriculture at Hardlnsburg high
school, Friday had honorary membership degrees of the State F. F. A,
conferred on them.
The four youths named for the
American Farmer honor for 1937
today were Harold Edds, Beech
Grove; Robert Davis, Bryan Station; James McConathy, Picadome,
and John Meff ord. Stamping
Ground.
51 Get Degrees
Fifty-fo- ur
youths received State
Farmer Degrees. They were: Robert M. Crenshaw, Smith Mills;
Hewitt B. Butler and Merle Johnson, Hebbardsville; Drexel South-wort- h,
Picadome; Donald M. Roser
and Thomas Peek. Bryan Station;
Lemuel Wright, William Basham,
and Scott Smart, Brechlnrldge;
Frank Clark, Peak's Mills; Billle
Renaker, Connersville; Jack Rankin and Billy Smart, Carlisle; Owsley Rochester, Stanford.
Howard Jolly, Hawesville; Thomas Hall, Spottsvllle; Dennis Hay-de- n,
Beech Grove: Leroy Bottoms,
Beech Grove; Woodward Austin,
Calhoun; E. R. Kelley, Jr.. Lewisburg; Ward W. Boyd. Ana; David
Weaver, Minerva; WUbur McNally
and H. Wallis Morris, Macon: Billy
Lockrldge and Elgin Smith, Mt.
Sterling; William Earl Netherlands
Campbellsville;
Virgil Marcum,
Owsley county high; W. H. Alexander, Jr. Fleming&burg.

Is Also Second Oldest University Graduate Now Living
In The United States, He
Declares

John Hampton, Liberty; James The oldest living University
Hartford; Willie Cooper graduate In Kentucky and the seccountry, M. L.
ond oldest In
Coleman, Evan Russell, Carl H. Phil- - Pence, professor the
emritus of mathepot and C. W. Dawson Whltesville; matics at the University, celebrated
Roger Allgood, Joseph P. Warren, his eighty-thi- rd
birthday Sunday.
J. T. O'Bryan and Herman 0"Bryan,
Besides Mrs. Pence, three children, three grandchildren and two
West Louisville.
C. A. Perry, Jr., Paul J. Jones,
numerous relaSamuel R. Sauer, Jr., E. B. Wilson, tives and friends visited the Pence
Jr., James B. Bosley, Joseph W. home, 635 Maxwelton Court during
Bartlett, George C. Brooks, Arthur the day.
B. Ayers, Jr., and Carl W. Schenk,
Professori Pence would not allow
Jr., all of Daviess county high; Ed- the Impression that he was the old
win Proctor, Owenton, and E. T. est living graduate of the university
Murphy, Stamping Ground.
persist.
Llnke Is Speaker
Cites Topeka Man
J. A. Llnke, Washington, chief
'I'm not the oldest living grad
of the agricultural education serv- uate. I know of one man older
ice and national advisor of the F. F. than I am," he declared.
"He is
A., was principal speaker at Friday's Charles Graham Blakely, Topeka,
Kan., who graduated in 1879. He
session.
Miss Lucy Furtnan, Henderson, not only Is older in years, but he
who is in charge of the Hlndman graduated before I did."
Professor
Pence graduated in
Settlement School, and is secretary
of the Anti-SteTrap League, 1881.
When he began teaching at U.
asked the convention for support
of the league's program, and Dr. K. there were four buildings at the
Ralph Woods, State Director of Vo- university,
PresiAdministration,
cational Education and State Advis- dent James K. Patterson's resier for the Kentucky Association of dence, a dormitory and a small cotF. F. A., spoke briefly before re- tage occupied by the military comtiring President Hagman made con- mandant, Professor Pence said tocluding remarks of the business ses- day.
He thinks the new building pro
sion.
Hobart Whitman, Mimfordsvllle, gram, which will entail an expendi
Friday won the Dairy Products ture of approximately $1,200,000, is
W. Daniel

el

Association of Kentucky essay contest. Winners of district awards
were J. S. Robertson, New Castle;
Carl H. Phllpot, Whltesville; Thomas Graham, Madison ville; Byram
Farris, May's Lick; Robert Hendon,
Hazel, and Edward Webb, Science
Hill. The Couner-JounuU.

a splendid thing.
The Civil Engineering and Physics
building will receive a new name
this fall. The board of trustees at
the university ordered its name be
changed to Pence hall recenttly.
This pleased Professor Pence, he
said today.

* Best

I

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Tagc Two

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
BTUDEWTB OF
OFFICIAL NFWRPAPKR OF TH
THK UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

by Dr. E. N. Fergus,

Summer School Calendar
Thursday,

En(frfd t the Pout Offlrf at Li1nton, Kentucky, M
ond clasi mttrr under th Ac o Mrch I, 187.

7:30 p. m.

- Final

Little Symphony concert of

the Summer
MEMBER

rprnintd

b?
PublimHon,
Nrw York City: IS B.
Hil' Co., 415 Illusion
4I WMt-oc- d
Call Bulldlni. Ban rranrluro;
Wurk.r Drlvn.
Blvd., Loa Angeln; 1004 Second Avt., Baattla.
A

mrniher of the Major Collr

J Norm

Chlro;

A.,

9:00 a. m.

-

COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE
Ross J. Cm

Ike

M.

ii

1

1

i

f

Moore

What Did You
Get Out Of

Editor-in-Chie-

f

Business Manager

another week

The

Shows

-

.Summer Session will
be terminated. What
School?
did you get out of
five or ten weeks in Summer school? It is
oiir
iin interesting question both to students and to
the administration. It has been the purpose of
the administration to make the Summer Sessions
as complete as twssiblc in this limited time.
Whether they have succeeded depends on the
reaction of the student body.
With this in view, it is the desire of The Ker-tt to publish the frank views of the present
students. The Kernel is requesting all students
to write between 50 and 100 words on the subject "What I got out of Summer School." It will
publish as many of these letters as possible in
the final issue of the paper next week.
There are a number of angles to consider
when jxmdering on a subject of this nature.
First, and most important, naturally, is whether
oiie"s mind has in any way been alTecled by what
they have listened to in class. Has it broadened
the mind? Has it increased the ability to think
and reason? Has it added to the general culture?
From the social and recreational angle one
may ponder whether the Session has given them
the opportunity to relax physically; whether it
has in any way changed one's outlook on the environment; whether it has served as a medium
to make beneficial contacts?
If the Summer Session has added any one of
the mentioned possibilities to one's general
make-up- ,
it has been a successful one.
What did you get out of Summer school?

5:30 p. m.

- Phi

u

Delta Kappa

Tuesday, August

4:00 p. m.

1:30 p. in.

fish-fr-

17

- Meeting

of all persons receiving degrees in Room 111, McVey hall, Dr
Jesse Adams presiding.
reception for all
Commencement
students receiving degrees in August
in the Faculty club Rooms in McVey hall.
Wednesday, August 18

6:30 p. m.

Commencement dinner in the Gold
Room of the Lafayette hotel. More
definite information about this will
be found elsewhere in today's paper.

travel. Others will revel in the luxury of voyage
by steamer. Airplanes will claim their share of
the passengers those whose only motive is to
arrive at a destination fast.
That leaves the lowly bus, and I, for one, hope
that is just what happens. The other day I mentioned that in my opinion the buses ought to be
legislated olf of the roads. The answer I goi was
that the buses have given the people something
they want and as a result have every reason to
exist.
I can't help but realize that if it had not been
for the bus the railroads might never have added
and streamlining, might never
have reduced fares to two cents. Yet, now that
they have learned their lessons, they should be
protected. Billions of dollars are invested in
right of ways, tracks, rolling stock, etc. They
represent a tremendous and vital industry.
While buses pay high taxes for the use of the
roads they do not have to maintain these highways. Over these they run in competition to
railroads, and at the same time they use the same
roads that pleasure traffic uses. That creates a
dangerous situation. Roads are too often more
and
narrow that safety would permit. Curves are
not banked for high speeds. Private autos are
By Ralph E. Johnson
manned by poorly trained drivers, often under
the inlluence of something or other small talk
one of the more interesting things for from the back seat, radio programs that demand
Perhaps
generation to look forward to is attention, liquors, fatigue. Each of these prothe increasing leisure time that is promised just jectiles is a potential danger to a bus load of
as surely as the CIO boys keep on raising a stink people.
on the industrial front. There is only one anIn order for the bus to run in competition to
swer to the machine age problem and that is the railroads they must maintain high speed
shorter hours. Shorter hours means leisure time. schedules. They cannot know how many times
Leisure time will present problems, for time is they may have lo stop. No elaborate signal sysoften heavy on the hands of the idle, and idle tem warns them of danger around a blind curve.
hands are pawns of devils.
No watchman slands guard at very crossing for
find iheni. Yet they roar along like angry bulls at 65
Hence a legion of men and women will
ample opportunity to work for a living at find- and 70 miles an hour a flagrant flaunting with
ing pleasureable occupation for the leisure death, a heinous offense against the law. Cops
hours of the millions who will be working five pass them by unmolested. And all of this is
days weeks. 30 hour weeks, and less than that planned.
More or less, the bus companies are luiky. Yel
before we die.
(hey ilo pull a bad one out of the hat now and
Organized sports will enter into a new heyday, liascball will enjoy gieater favor. So will then.
But of all the ways to travel, by bus is decidc-lpro football and college football. Amusement
the most miserable way. There are no sanitary
paiks will spring up over the country and smaller slates will emulate the example of New York lonveniaiues on the average bus. They are not
They are noisy, slow, nerve
State's Park Commissioner Moses by copying
his plans. He is lesponsible for Jones Beach on raiking (with the contant horn),
jolting,
Long Island, for the many miles of parkways cramped. All of this for the advantage of one-hal- f
a cent kt mile.
entering into New York City and his hand will
It may be that railroads are still charging too
show on every side when the 1939 World's Fair
nituh money for transportation. But at any rate
opens in what was the Flushing meadows.
that is subject to debate and if they are it will
It is not improbable to suppose that the Olympic games will be staged annually instead of be remedied in time.
Something will have to be done about the
every four. The world will become sports-mindeLiteiature will take on an added zest, as buses that run in coni)eiition. In my opinion
the industries practically run themselves. But the bus s)stems will never be entirely done away
along with it all there will come problems. One with, but instead the buses will be run in
with the train lines. Railroads will
of them is a problem now travel!
Naturally travel will increase. It has been run over the longer distances to terminal points
hinted by some that within a very few years half such as Lexington is to the Blue Grass. From
of the )eople will live in trailers. Somehow I this Blue Grass terminal the buses will meet and
s
doubt that. They are in some ways loo misera- transport passengers to the
nearby.
Motor triuks will do the same with freight.
bly uamjed for solid comfort. Altho they are
fascinating. But at any rale this country of ours
Bus lines will have to merge with the railwill be made up of a nomadic people who will roads. It may be a monopoly in some sense of
see America thoroughly.
the word, but the jxjstal system is just that and
Not all of them will see America from the it certainly is most efficient today. Critics
window of a swaying trailer. There will be many couldn't see how it could be when the governnioie who will preler the solid comfort of train ment first took it out of the hands of private

asociate pro-

"Piano Fantasies".
to 1.45 p. m.

1:30

ANDREW F.CRDAHL- -

Session, in Memorial

1937

fessor of Farm Crops.
1:15 to 1:30 p. m.

Doin' The
Dials

Allce Faye, Don Amechr and the
rollicking Ritz brothers decide that
"You Can't Have Everything" for
Friday, Au(tut IS
the last time at the eKntucky toFinal Convocation of the Summer day. Thursday, Friday, and SaturSession, to be held in Memorial hall. day It's a double bill: 'Easy Living"
Dr. Herbert N. Wheeler, chief lec- with Edward Arnold and Jean- - Arturer of the United Stales Forest thur, and "Emperor's Candlesticks"
Service will speak. Classes will be with William Powell and Louise
Ralner. Louise Ralner In Pearl
dismissed at 8:50 a. m.
Buck's "Oood Earth" starts SunMonday, Auguat 18
Phi Delta Kappa initiation services day and continues through Wednesday.
to be held in the Training school.
a

2:30 p. m.

an-

other )ear of the

This Campus
That World

Seem1

hall under the direction of Prof.
Carl Lampert.

t.lntnn Pnrd of Oommrrr
Kentucky InlfrcollnlU PrM Aocltlon
A

Aujrnftt 12

II,

Wednesday, August

"The Value of Play in This Mod
em Age" will be the eleventh in a
series of radio talks on Parent-Chil- d
Relationships which will be
delivered Monday, August 18, from
the University studios of station
Whfls, Louisville, by M. E. Potter
and B. A. Shlvcly of the department
of physical education.
This series
of talks has created considerable
Interest throughout the state.

"Answer Me This", No. 3, Chicago.
Friday, Aufpint 13
12.15 to 12:30 p. m.
"What farm folk are asking", by
L. C. Brewer, College of Agriculture.
1:15 to 1:45 p. m.
Bill Cross' orchestra.
Monday, August 18
12:15 to 12.30 p. m.
Agricultural Market Review," by
E. A. Johnson, field agent In Markets.
1:15 to 1:30 p. m.
Organ Melodies.
1:30 to 1:45 p. m.

At 1:15 p. m. today John Jacob
Nllcs, well known Interpreter of
"Parent-Chil- d
ReJatlonshlp,"No.
mountain ballads, will again pre11. "Value of Play in This Modern
sent his popular and informative Age,"
by E. M. Potter and B. A.
"Salute to the Hills".
Closing today at the Strand we
Shively, department of Physical Ed.
have Jack Haley and Rochelle HudTuesday, August 17
Chicago will be the city under
son in "She Had to Eat" and "The discussion at 1:30 p. m. Thursday 12:15 to 12:30 p. m.
Wild Catter", a story of the oil when Sondra Rogers and Bill Cross
Agricultural Program.
fields. Laurel and Hardy in "Way present their third "Answer Me 1:15 to 1:30 p. m.
program.
Bill Cross' Orchestra.
Out West" and Budyard KlpUng's This" are New Cities already dis
cussed
York and Washing
1:30 to 1:45 p. m.
Elephant Boy" is slated for Thurs- ton.
"Looking Forward to College, No.
day and Friday. "Reckless" with
2, by Dr. T. T. Jones, dean of men;
Harlow, William Powell and
E. N. Fergus, associate profes
Jean
Dr
and others.
Franchot Tone is half of a double sor of farm crops, will speak on
Wednesday, August 18
Liming and fertilizing pastures,"
bill on Saturday, Sunday, and Monat 12:15 p. m. Thursday. This pro- 12:15 to 12:30 p. m.
day. The other half is George O'- gram should prove
of Interest to "Doings of Kentucky Farm Folk,"
by C. A. Lewis assistant editor, AgBrien In Hollywood Cowboy". Tues- the fanner listeners of the Univerricultural Extension Division.
day and Wednesday it's Spencer sity studios.
1:15 tl 1:45 p. m.
Tracy in "They Gave Him a Gun"
John Jacob Nlles' "Salute to the
Wednesday, August 11
and an unknown picture.
Hills."
12:15 to 12:30 p. m.
"Rembrant" with Charles Laugh-to- n, "Doings of Kentucky Farm Folk",
and "Family Affairs", with by C. A. Lewis, assistant editor,
Lionel Barrymore, closes today at Agricultural Extension Division.
the State theatre. Thursday and 1:15 to 1:45 p. m.
Friday we have "Navy Blues" and
John Jacob Nlles' "Salute to the
miu;'f.M'iiwta-.i
the wierd "Night Must Fall", star- Hills".
THURSDAY-FRIDAring Robert Montgomery and RosaThursday, August 12
lind Russell. "Smoke Tree Range", 12:15 to 12:30 p. m.
LAUREL and HARDY
with Buch Jones, and "One Man
"Liming and fertilizi