xt7pk06wxs7v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pk06wxs7v/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19490311  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 11, 1949 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 11, 1949 1949 2013 true xt7pk06wxs7v section xt7pk06wxs7v The Kentucky ECernel

'Winterset'
Held Over

Weather
Partly Cloudy
Moderately Cold

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

VOLUME XXXIX

Z2

LEXINGTON,

KENTUCKY, FRIDAY, MARCH

11, 1949

Number 13

Basketeers To Leave
For Gotham Saturday

Job Conference

Cats Play Winner Of CCNY-LoyoGame
Monday In Second Round Of Invitational
Tm

By

Diskin, Sports

EdiuM-

.4.

.

,

'J

Fairings for the NIT were announced as follows:
Saturday Afternoon
Bradley U. vs. New York U.
6an Francisco vs. Manhattan
Saturday Night
Bowling Green vs. St. John's
Loyola Chicago) vs. CCNY
Monday Afternoon
winKentucky vs. CCNY-Loyola

On Alumni Board

n.

Fulbright Act
Enables Students
To Study Abroad

Espagnole."
Arranging one of the exhibits for the Job Conference "Express Agency" now on display in the SUB hallway, are (left to right) Martha Martin, Mary Sue McWhirter, exhibits chairman, and ody Broadus. Miss
McWhirter and Miss Broaddus are members of Mortar Board which is sponsoring the conference jointly
with Omicron Delia Kappa.

American students who wish to do
graduate work abroad may do so
under terms of the Fulbright Educational Exchange Program, Dr. A.
E. Bigge, head of the department of
German, announced today. Dr. Bigge
is serving as the local representative
of the Committee on International

Engineers Hear
Bikini Observer

'Winterset' To Be Held Over;
House Packed For Opening

Allis-Chalm- er

NYU-Bradl-

nt

John's-Bowlin-

G. B. Shaw Play

To Be Presented

......

.

:

I-A

London Educator

To Visit Campus

Group To Initiate
Religious Talk Scries

Y

depa;-tmrn-

A3 College Will Hold
Conference For REA
The College of Agriculture, in
oration with the Rural Electrification Administration, will hold an
educational conference for the stall
ro-- oj

members of Kentucky REA cooperatives, March IS and 17, at the Agriculture Building.
The purpose of the conference is
to instruct the staff members of
Kentucky REA. cooperatives on
the application and relation of
to Kentucky
rural electrification

agriculture.

Metalluraists To Hear
Ashland Firm Official
Robert S. Gruver, manager of the
American Rolling Mills Company
at Ashland, will speak to the UK
student affiliate of the Louisville
chapter of the American Society of
Metals Tuesday In the Football
room of the SUB at 6:30 p.m.
His subject will be "Management
Views Employee Rotations."

Exhibit Continued
The Founders Day exhibit in the
main foyer of the Margaret I. King
Library will be continued through
March 15, Library officials announced today.
The exhibit covers the history of
the University from its founding up
to the present.

The YWCA and the YMCA
fellowship will present a
series of three talks by college presidents beginning March 15. The
general topic will be "College Campus and Religion."
The speaker will be Dr. Paul4S.
Powell, president of ihe Kentucky
Wesleyan College, March 15; Dr.
Samuel Hill, president of Georgetown College, March 27; and Or.
W. F. O'Donnell, president of Eastern State Teachers College, March
uppe-

r-class

i

a.

...

...

Vhoto i
Bruce Otoeni
...
g
vtSM1 committee members map out plans for their
campaign which ends today. From
left to right: Sid N'cal, Bertha Florence Ward, Harold Fricdly, Shelby Darbishire, and Anne, Pardue.
fund-raisin-

Contributions To WSSF Lag As DnVe Nears
Close; International Secretary Visits Campus
By Bctlye Lee Maslin
Contributions for the World Student Service Fund totaled $67452
early this week, according to Miss
Margaret Ann Wilson, YWCA sec-

retary.
While the reports from campus
organizations are not complete, one
sorority has averaged $5 per member on contributions made to date.
WSSF volunteers spoke during
the week to various classes on the
campus
and distributed pledge
cards to the students.
Miss Gretta Riddcll, one of the
three International secretaries of
WSSF, visited the campus Tuesday
in connection with the local drive.
Miss Riddcll has just returned
from three and a half years in
Great Britain and Europe. She is
a native of Canada and has been hi
this country for the past five
months visiting universities and
colleges to aid in drives for the
relief of students and teachers.
U.S. Drives Doing WeU
Most of the drives on campuses
in this country are doing fairly well,
she told a Kernel reporter.
"People should realize that WSSF

not just a charitable enterprise
it is a responsibility for us all. I
am more and more convinced that
our greatest assurance against dictatorship lies in the hands of those
who are trained in universities to
think critically and analytically.
Thinking people do not follow dictators."
Miss Riddcll said that the WSfeF
tries to aid students and professors to keep the universities open.
To do this, three great problems
is

Tuberculof-iovercome.
combatted,
books and
equipment must be obtained, and
refugees
and displaced persons
must be aided.
"The greatest of these problems,"
Miss Riddcll said, "is to fight tuberculosis. Housing is so poor that
students get little rest. The food is
so bad that they are sadly undernourished. The combination of the
two means tuberculosis, and tuberculosis usually means death."

must

be

must be

Six Girls In One Room
In Hamburg, Miss Riddell found
six girls living in one tiny room
with only enough fuel for cooking.

One of the girls had contracted
tuberculosis. She had no family
and there were no hospital facilities available. The rest of the girls
voted to let her stay on, although
they knew that it meant possible
contamination for all of them.
Miss Riddcll commenbec tne University of Kentucky's plan to send
books to Heidelberg. She said that
clothes were desperately needed as
well. It is important, she said, that
they be clean and in good condition.
Students have no thread or buttons
with which to repair garments, and
no soap with which to wash them.
Above all, funds are needed.
"Don't think of these studenU
and teachers as charity cases,'
Miss Riddcll pleaded. "They have
gathered together what they have
to share with others, and a largo
proportion of WSSF funds has beer,
given by them."
The international secretary spoke
Tuesday to
d
classes, "an engineering convocation, and at the
regular YMCA and YWCA meetings
on Tuesday night. In addition, a
movie, "This Is Their Story," was
shown.
pre-me-

Next to be heard will be Arnes-ky- 's
"Piano Trio, D. Minor, Cpus
32" and "Introduction and Polonaise Brilliante, Opus 3" by Chopin.
Featured as soloist on part five.
Mr. Gregor will play the "Prelude
in D major" by Rachmaninoff, and
"Suggestion Diabolique"
kofieff.
Concluded By Oa

Mr. Forrest Naglcr of the
Maxwell Anderson' "Wintcrsct," another solid success lor
Manufacturing Company,
of Guignol, will be licld over another week, and judging from audiMilwaukee, and
region six of the American So- ence reaction opening night, the little theater should be filled
Engineers, every night next week.
ciety of Mechanical
spoke to engineering students yesQuite up to Director Wallace Kriggs' usual standards, the
terday at Memorial Hall.
156th Guignol production was well acted and beautifully staged.
His topic was "The Human Side
(
a Its very outstanding set, depict
of Bikini."
ing a river and a New York skyMr. Naglcr is the inventor of the
line, was as fine as any that have
Nageler type high speed hydraulic
been seen at Guignol in recent
turbine runner. During the war,
years. It was worked out by Claude
he worked in production fields of
Jackson, art director, with the asheavy machinery used for manuBy Earl Conn
sistance of Bill O'Bannon, UK sen
facture of the atomic bomb.
He was an observer at the atomic
Barter Theater, only group of its ior, as electrician, and Steve Rauh,
underwater test at Bikini
kind in America,
will present a junior, as stage manager.
George Bernard Shaw's "Arms and
Serious Play Unusual
the Man," a satire on war, at the
"Wintcrset," Guignol's first seriPROFICIENCY EXAMS
Henry Clay High .School Auditorious play since "Watch On the
um tonight at 8 o'clock.
Rhine," seven years ago, was well
The Foreign Language Proficiency examinations will be given Tickets for the production may received by the audience, which
March 16, 17, and 18. Students be purchased at the Campus Bonk was often moved to tears. A polwho want to take the exams must Store, the SUB ticket booth, the ished cast carried off the suspense-fille- d
tragedy very capably.
sign up in Dean White's office, Y offices, Williams Drug Store, and
Leads in the play are held by
room 128, McVcy Hall, by March Graves cox.
15.
Proceeds from the production will Tom Perkins, a University oturient,
be given to the World Student Sci-vi- and his wife, Floye. They played
the roles of Mio and Miriamne, the
Fund".
lovers and principals in the plot.
Kenneth Scott as the old Esdras,
turned in a very fine performance.
J.
A
Another outstanding bit of acting
"was done by C. B. Stephenson, po'
.
litical science instructor.
Many Students Featured
Joe Dress, a senior, handled the
gangster role of Trock very well,
and another University student,
(Continued on Page Vhree)

Exchange of Persons.
Funds Set Aside
Western Ky. vs.
According to Dr. Bigge, the Fulwinner
bright Act authorized the Secretary
Monday Night
g
of State to set aside for educational
St. Louis vs. St.
exchange programs a portion of the
Green winner
. Utah vs. Manhattan-Sa- n
Francis- foreign currencies, resulting from
the sale of surplus government propco winner '
,,
According to NTT officilals. If erty abroad.
Dr. Bigge pointed out that the only
Loyola beats CCNY, the former
team will probably face UK Mon- funds made available bf the act
day nteht instead of Monday after- are in foreign currencies. Under the
present program grants will bear
noon.
"a reasonable relation" to the grantee's salary, any special allowances
a mark that is certain to stand for may be provided for housing and
many, many years. However, an up cost of living as well as for books,
set would unlea.se criticism in some equipment and local travel, he said.
Exchange Agreements Signed
parts that the Wildcats bit off more
Exchange agreements already have
than they could chew.
From their first game Monday been signed with ten countries, Belnight to their last, the Kentuckians gium, Luxembourg. Burma, China,
will be facing strong teams. The France, Greece, Italy, New Zealand,
famed felines of Lexington will itt the Philippines, and the (tailed
tested to the fullest and victories 'n Kingdom.'
The UK
the two meets would establish even agreements professor added that
are expected to be sign
more firmly the opinion of most
sports followers that the present ed between the United States and
Kentucky team is the greatest in Australia, Austria, Egypt, India, Iran,
tle history of collegiate basketball. The Netherlands East Indies, Nor
As was expected, the NTT officials way, Pakistan, Siam, and Turkey.
have seeded the Cats In the No. 1
position of the meet. St. Louis has
been seeded second; Utah third;
and Western Kentucky fourth.
Other teams that will be out to
skin tho Cats arc Bradley, and
(Continued from Page Seven)

i

FolloWln? a dlfTlTpnt nrnrnin
this year, a student may attend a
group meeting of any company at
which qualifications and objective?
of the company will be outlined.
A student may then male.; an appointment for a personal interview
with the company represenUUvv! if
he wishes. In preceding years a
student was interviewed by the
companies without preliminary instruction.
The first group meeting of each
versity Alumni Board. The new company will be held at J p.m.
member will be named at a lunch- Tuesday and repeated again at
4 p.m. Penonal Interviews, arranged
eon meeting of the board.
Nominees are William Stoll, Col- at the group meetings, will oe held
lege of Commerce; Sylvia Smiih, in the SUB Ballroom on WednesCollege of Agriculture and Home day and Thursday beginning ai 3
Economics; Fred Dougherty, Col- a.m.
Exhibits featuring the particilege of Law; John Crockett. College of Arts and Sciences; Roy Wal- pating companies are now on dislace. College of Engineering; and play in the main corridor of the
Cliff Barker. College of Education. SUB, Mary Sue McWhirter, exhibits
At a recent meeting the assembly chairman, has announced.
Schedules for the group meetings
passed a bill to appropriate $112
to help cover expenses already in- to be held at 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. on
Tuesday are as follows:
curred by the WSSF In its
campaign to aid foreign stu- Home Economics Building
dents.
Girl Scouts room 203
Kenneth Back was elected by YWCA room 303
SGA as a lowerclass representative
Bureau of Social Sciences, Child
or the Arts and Sciences College.
Welfare Division, room 1

SGA Nominates
Six For Place

-

Is

--

ner

Dr. Neville V. Scarfe, head of the
t
at the
of geography
University of Ixmdon, England, rill
be on campus Monday.
Dr. Scarfe will conduct special
seminars with the social science
sua at 10 a.m, noon, and 3 p.m.
A seminar with the College of
will be held at 4 p.m.
Dr. Scarfe will be guest lecturer
at the annual banquet of the Sigma
chapter of Gamma Theta Upsilon,
geography fraternity, at 6 pjn. in
room 205, Student Union Building.

The Uivcrshy's fifth annual Job Conference will open
with group meetings held by the participating companies, according to Betty Sunley and Robert Wharton, conference iliair- -

A Columbia Concert Trio will be
heard in recital at Memorial Hall
Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock.
Members of the trio are Ariana
Bronn, violinist. Ardyth Walker,
violoncellist, and Richard Gregor,
pianist.
The program, consisting of six
parts, will range from Eighteenth
Century baroque music to AmerSix graduating seniors from each
ican folk tunes.
college on the campus have been
The concert will open with
nominated by the Student Governby Handel and Halvor-seto be followed by the first ment Association for representative
movement of Lalo's "Symphonic of the class of 1949 on the Uni-

ar

NIT Pairings

Group Meetings, Interviews To Highlight
Fifth Annual Student-Sponsore- d
Event

Columbia Trio
To Present
Sunday Concert

-

The Wildcats of Kentucky leave tomorrow afternoon for New York
City where they will participate in the National Invitational and Jie
NCAA tournaments.
Should the Cats return to Lexington with victories In both meets, it
would be the greatest feat ever accomplished by any collegiate basketball
team in the history of the same.
During the next two weeks, it will
be the University of Kentucky ver
sus the Nation. The 18 other teams
Pharmacy Applications
In the two tournaments, which inShould Be Filed Now
clude practically all of the country's
Application for admittance to
best aggiegations, will be pointing
the College of Pharmacy should
for Just one thing, that is, to unset
UK's Wildcats, ranked by every be made now for enrollment in
national cage poll as the No. 1 team September.
"
In the United States.
Forms may be obtained at the
next two weeks will perhaps Office of the Registrar.
The
be the most crucial in the
history of UK basketball. By winning both, Kentucky can establish

Open

For Three Day Session

V

la

To

29.

Water Safety Course
Enrollment To Close
Enrollment
in a life saving
and water safety courses to be conducted at the YWCA pool will close
March 15. An instructor's certificate in the American Red Cross will
be awarded to those successfully
completing the work.
Instruction will be conducted each
Tuesday and Thursday from 9
p.m. at the YWCA pool. Fifteen
hours are required for the certificate, and instruction costs 40c por
evening.
The course is directed by the department of physical education at
UK and is open to all men students
on campus.
Enrollment may be
made at the physical education office, Alumni Gym.
7--

by

Pro- -

the program the trio
will play "On Tour" by Dorothy
Cadzow, and seven well known
American folk tunes.
Violinist Ariana Bronn. a native
of New York City, began her study
of music at the age of 11. A year
later, with an opportunity awarded
her by the Society for the Advancement of Young Musicians, she made
her debut in Carnegie Halt She
has since appeared In three Town
Hall recitals, and has played as soloist with the Buffalo, St. Louis,
and Charleston Symphony Orches

fund-raisi-

White Hall
Mutual Life Insurance Company
of New York room 103
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company room 102
US Civil Service room 101

Students Organize
Eight Law Clubs
Eight law

clubs have been formed
tras.
from the student body of the ColArdyth Walker, violoncellist, was lege of Law. each club having been Frazee Hall
Equitable Life Assurance Com(Continued on Page Three)
named after a native Kentuckian
panyroom 106
who has served as a justice of the
B. Y. Goodrich Company
room
United States Supreme Court
201
Movies To Be Shown
The four outstanding students of
Central Soya Company room 304
"Ovclanders,',' starring Chips the clubs will be selected to arru
Kentucky Rural Electrification
a case before the Court of Appeals
RafTcrty, John Nugent Hayward,
room 205
Campbell, will be of Kentucky in Frankfort.
and Daphne
The students will have the ma tor S. H. Kress Company room 31
shown at Memorial Hall today and
Proctor and Gamble room 302
tomorrow . The German film, responsibility of operating the cluhs.
Kentucky
Utilities Company
Each club will have a faculty spon"Murderers Among Us," will be
room 103
sor.
shown Tuesday and Wednesday.
Presidents of the eight clubs are McVey HU
Both films are scheduled to start
Soil Conservation
Service roo' r
at 7 pjn. with the second show- Hugh Campbell. Raymond Vin
cent. Virgil Pryor, Michael J. Clare.
100
ing at 8:34 p.m.
J. J. O'Hara. Earl Osborne. M. S.
Swift and Company room 1'Ki
Mahuran, and William Kilbery.
County Agents room 105
Southern States Cooperative
room 107
U.S. Navy room 109

Relations

American-Germa- n

Reynolds

By Ingeborg Dcdrring
If you see a girl and a soldier
walking along the streets of a city
or village in occupied Germany, she
carrying a dictionary as a precious
means of communication, he talking In a tongue which makes it
hard even to guess you know that
war must be over.
The first one to believe in fraternization was the young GI who
came overseas with the occupation
force of his country.
He put his gun away, brushed his
hair, and decided that enmity was
a thing that well suited the past
Though many American boys
found it hard to resist the typical
blue eyes and the typical fair pigtails of the German Gretchen, for
a while military government regulations nastily interfered with the
harmless intentions of taking mutual walks or drinking a cup of
substitute coffee at the drug store.
Visits Forbidden At First
For a couple of months the American soldier was forbidden to visit
German homes, restaurants, or
theaters; whenever he happened to
be seen with a fraulein he had to
anticipate a more or less unpleasant
conversation with
his company commander.
However, soon the announcements
oil the military bulletin board concerning the attitude toward the
German population became less
person-to-pcrs-

strict.

Many American boys sought and
found access to German homes.
to those
giving their preference
where a pretty young daughter welcomed the stranger with a winning
smile.
Language was no handicap at all.
Joint-effor-

School-Englis-

h,

Metal

U S. Army

Agricultural

room 129
Educatiou

YMCAwoora
slightly

resembled

Pennsylvania-Dutc- h

and which covered all the
conversa
terms from common-da- y
tions to philosophical meditations.
Help Around House
Very soon many a GI became of
indispensible help to the German
as he
household.
was, he assisted the head of the
family in repairing the damaged
roof of the house, he carried heavy
water-paifor mother when the
pipes were broken in winter time,
he helped in filling out American
questionnaires, issued by Military
Government for the purpose of statistics, and he even stood in line
to receive the family's monthly bread
Good-natur-

Company

room

111

Improved After Bans Lifted

ed

Boy Scouts

room 203

210

room 230

The conference is sponsored b
Omicron Delta Kappa and MorUr
Board, men's and women's senior
leadership honorarics.

Oak Ridge Scientist
To Address ASME

Dr. Alvin M. Weinberg, associat;
Ridse National
Laboratory, will speak at the weekly
assembly of the student brunch of
the American Society of Me. hancal
Engineers at 10 a.m. Thursday in
Memorial Hall.
His subject will be "Research at
ration.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory'
Dr. Weinberg has been at Otfe
On Saturdays he took his fraulein out to eat
and Ridge since 1945, and has served
as director of the physics division
doughnuts at some German-Americparty. Those who were ad- there.
The meeting is open fc the public.
vanced In the language went to see
a German play or show, heading for
a brush-u- p
of their high school
CATS MAKE
German.
TEAM
deMany valuable friendships
veloped, sponsored by German faAlex Groza and Ralph Beard wrre
thers and mothers, for not every named on Associated Frew'
fraulein was a Marlene Deitrich in
team yesterday along with
"Foreign Affair" who Ed Marsnley (St Louis), Vir.rc
search of
sold her smile for a candy-bu- r.
Denver) and Tony Ltvelli
(Yale).
Result In Marriage
Sometimes It would result in mar-rtuWallace (Wh W ah Jones HjdrJ
when a German - American the voting for the AF's second team,
couple discovered true love for each which was composed also of Vera
other. The fraulein would pack Gardner IVtah). Dike Eddlrman
ncr suitcase and, after long red-ta(Illinois). Bob Harris (Oklahoma A
procedures, kiss father and mother It M) and Bob lousy (Holy tToss).
good-by- e
fly across the ocean.
and
In addition to this honor, the
Sometimes, the happy ending
could not be waited for when one United Press has named Gruu,
party would run off with somebody Beard and Jones on its
else, as it happens throughout the quintet This marks the first lime
In history that three players from a
world.
single team has ever been nominatri
Which of the two solutions was for
by a national
the more successful one cannot deress association.
cide, since each is an individual
Others on I P's team, selected by a
matter.
poll of over 200 sports editors, writers
I saw a married couple at tha
ramiomcn, were Ed Macauley
American consulate in Munich that and Louis)
and Tony Lavelll (Yale).
were happy as larks although the (St
has aeraged 23 points per
German wife had to act as Inter- Lavelli Gross 20.1: Macauley 15.7;
preter when her Ameaican hus- game: 11.4;
and Jones 10.1
band wanted to talk to their little Beard

Father, mother, daughter, and GI
t.
mastered the obstacle in
though not
sufficient was at least a relieving
remedy in making the foreign guest
Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, head of understand where he could hang his
the political science department, will coat and wash his hands. In doubtaddress the first formal meeting of ful cases, one could always rely upGuide for
the International Relations Club on the "German-Englis- h
Tuesday at 4 p.m. in room 128 of the a Foreigner."
language
SUB.
A kind of
Dr. Vandenbosch will discuss the was founded which evil tongues
North Atlantic Pact.
called
"Fraulein - English"
that by- -

IR Group To Hear
Dr. Vandenbosch

ng

ls

m

an

ge

a:

director of Oak

* Dti

py

THE

Paae Two

AVclMclUIti

v-ru-

ifAE3

OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Dear Editor:

What's the deal about the
teria in the SUB?
I asked a fellow behind the

All rtrnt artfefcw
! eoitwas
KsntocKy IntreoUe !
Press Association
Lxlnton Boara of Cammcrca
necirtpriltr reflect
lft?miirea. ana 4o
Kentucky Press Association
Ihe t pinhn tit The Kernel.
National Editorial Association
MMHHTId POM (MTIOHAi OVS.TiaM T
PrEt lSHED WEF1CIY T "UrNO TTTB
VBAR EXOFPT
HOLIDAYS
ecHOOf.
Nsrtkmal Advertising Smice, lw.
OR EXAMINATION
PK,;18
CeliU AaMaaan JMSrmMahM
at the Pott Offlrt at tx1njon,
Ni Yona. N. Y.
Kentucky, as second class matter under 410 Maoison An.
. snm us issues
ratatisca
tt.e Art of March J, 1171.
eOBaCRTPTlON
RATKS
II 00 per semester

no
nf ooo. H
servine and he replied, "hen eggs."
Then he proceeded to give me a
piece of meat no larger than a
quarter. The fellow behind me got
mMt. tn rhnVA
hnr
'
'
ran't Kompthinir he rlnni" nhnut
this so that a person can get at
least something for the morey he
puts out around this place ' All
I ask Is equality.
DISGUSTED

ts

,,

Helen Deiss

fuiar

Joan Cook, Monte R. Tussey. ana
jQhn R Cox

Associate Editors

Managing Editor Jerry Finch
RffTfs
Feature Editor
Sue Warren
News Editor Kent Hollingsworth and Dudley
Saunders Associate Sports Editors
Tom Diikin
Snorts .'"ditor
Peporters: Jobie Anderson, Roberta
Rubvs Grarom
Cole, Joanne
Cl.Tick, Temple
C rtoonist
Herbert A. Moore
Davis, Earl Conn, Yolande Coulter,
WilXrS I.(t
Euicss Mgr. Bea Freedman, Nancy Gaskia,
FrancLs Hellard, Rosemary Hilling,
Prank Cnssidy
Adv. Mgr.
Leonard Kernen, Marilyn Kilgus,
Charles Brecfcel and Jpin Cook
Henry Maloney, Bill Mansfield,
Ef--

Dear Miss Dciss:

It ' seems that inefficiency is the
byword of this University and its
organizations. Why aren't the
ready yet. Here it it the
last of February almost March.
What excuse could there it?
It seems a simple thing to compile an ordinary school annual, send
it to the printers, and then circulate it amoung an appreciative student body. It is a job that any
capable person could handle almost

.

Adv.

..

News Desk: Neil

Melvin Mitchell, Dorothy Neal,
Kermv Wood, Bob Smith, Otis
kinA'
Tackett, Ann Tracy, Barvler
bara Ann Warren, Jane Webb,
Tom Wilburn.
Per-Prori-

E!:1

r.

"I didn't mind walking to Louisville, but New York's just out of the
question. "

Job Meet Needs Overhauling
Matin- - you.
crates on packing '

ticcu the eople vlio have been socking
es t'lis wick in the SUB hallway.
ThcVe hex wotling long ami hard to create interest hip;
ruV: is often pretty dry in itself. Whai
oui of lvnti.i.ii
thev're tniit;, to do : 10 auuit your attention to the Job Con-I- t
()I)k and Moi.;ai Jloard are holding next week.
I lie annual
ob Conference is a very fine thing, as far as it
goes. It gives students tl.t I. .nice to meet representatives of several
companies, and the jobs iVh 'fill lc offered will le good" jobs.
1 he trouble is
thai ill" 'onference just doesn't go far cnottgl
' If you're not inte, 'ed
ho few fields represented ihe t oilier- ence offers nothing u,
i,.
oo many .m.Vnts. know ing that the conference is limited
in scox lail ! lnoi.
its possibilities. Perhaps more inierest
could be amused i.v
the Career Conference, scheduled
;
.
maiulv for lower iasi.v.i in April, and the Job Conference,
siheduled for nppeitl.i tn;n next week, into closer relationship.
It seems sensible to have .lie Career Conference first, followed
the next week by the job Conference. In this way the Job Con- fei cute could lake advantage of exhibits, publicity, and interest
aheadv dcvclocd bv the laioei Conference.
'
program, very good within its limits,
The lob Confer'-ni'
should Ik- - broadened and freshened up before next year, if more
students are to benefit bv it.

single-hande-

d.

Obviously the editors and staff
of the Kentuckian must be
ing under some envolved and high- ly inefficient set-uPatiently I have waited and
waited. I have not criticized orj
complained before. But now I ask
when will the 1948 Kentuckian be
out? It was promised lor last June.
Why have I not yet received my
copy? Where is it? .
JBRUNO HALIFAX

even sometimes need a shave, and
those who smoke cigars and sport
mustaches.
Bad manners In a date, table or
otherwise, are the most strongly
condemned of all.
(I don't want to Txs partial to
the girls. If any male, or prefer- ably a group of males, will get to- n;;;M?:tttrnntnr
Michigan State College is carry- - tether and formulate some hints
.
tne women and send them in. Sir:
ing through with their annual
.
t UK.S
Dean's Milking Contest, . the prize they will be gladly welcomed-a- nd
th f
for which is tne coveted Farmers
own radio studio WBKY?
Frolic Milk Jug.
What is it, and why have there
TVip nnntpstants
have heen huRV
Ads! been articles on it in different places,
Try Kernel
the last week training for the meet.
The reporter for the Michigan State
News interrupted their practice to
get a few statements from the hope- fUl entries for the contest.
JEWELERS
Last year's winner, dean of stu-- 1
dents, says he developed his skill,
105 Eost Moin. Street
as a boy.
Krelsler Bands
mak.j
Elgin
Waltham
Qne dean ,.ho had
9
Speidell Bands
Longines
Hamilton
ing the cow be still last year said,!
Lohengrin Rings
Benrus
Wittnauer
"M 1 can catch tne cow- - 1 intend
Kramer Jewelry
Gruen
Bulova
to milk her."
The dean of the agriculture school
Student Charge Accounts
commented, "I'll be there pulling
Always Welcome :
for the school or agriculture."
-- -" -- """
"I'll make every effort to grasp'
the situation with a firm hand,"
remark! the dean of the school of,
veterinary medicine.
The graduate school dean refused
Some very cxtellcnt movies have been brought here this
w wer ine contest uus year, ms
'
semester bv the , '.'TKion departnient.
priae was nun, in lasi years con- There are Ion i mi hi. .wis. very good
and other pro- - test. He commented ruefully, "She
diKtions thfu UK r""iieies might otherwise miss, presented at wouldn't give it and I couldn't
take il from
ih1 Saturday
low
'.
dis-pla-

p.

Codrin' With

-

fr

,,Mc-Y,x-

...

Want

I

ROBERT'S

To

Go

ihe Wildrai t' V off for New York to meet their hardest
test vet, mmicioiis tIiouv:u.i of students are hoping that the
Southeastern 0nf:'itn champions will be up to par and bring
home those two hard
Ly trophies.
At any rate, there'll be many a radio tuned in for the games
nev.t week. The
couldn't have a bigger Hooper, rating
aiound Ixxinuion if tlu-- were giving awav free cars, houses, and
dug lood to cvrjv 1: 'ener.
As

to-o.i- .e

f!s

'

y

f

J

'

.

'

It rioni are whiskerins about you, better check upon your
hair tonic,
hair. Before J.P. twitched to Wddroot Cream-Oi- l
he was wide open for all kind of catty remarks about his ratty
appearance. Not so today! Now that he's using Wildroot
Cream Oil regularly, annoying dryness and loose, ugly dandruff are gone. His hair stays put all day. He can pass the
Wildroot Finger Nail Test without batting an rye.
J.P.'s experience leads us to suggest that you try
containing Lanolin, too. Get yourself a
Wildroot Cream-Oi- l
bottle or tube today at your drug or toilet goods counter.
And. have vour barber give you professional applications.
hair Wildroot Cream Oil
YouH agree that for

Have Your
Portrait
Made For
EASTER

LAFAYETTE
STUDIO
141 N. Lima

'

irnn-r"'-

is

purr-fee-

t!

a327

Ph. 6271

Burnughi Dr., SnjJtr,

K

Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo

Y.

1

1, N. Y.

KA's
OLLIE McCORMICK

WARREN "JOLLY" ROGERS

&

Select
INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED SUITS

"""

Here it. is men. This is your
chance to become "The man all the
you nave
eirIs want to date"
is lolIow the advice of the
coeds interviewed by the Miami

ijh;";i, pro
Miss Marguerite x
fessor of journal
unil chprter
n Clu::. viU
member of the Ne
be guest speaker it liie monUly
mass and cornu.. on
meeting of the Ntnain Club, Sunday.
,The meet:; will b hrld at St.
ass " ill beCatherine's
gin at 9:30 a m.
Miss McLaughlin's topic will be
"The Passion Play of

Dr. M. E. Ligon, director of the
The first taboos are on dirty.
Bureau of Placement Service in bitten-dow- n
fincernails. and malp
the College of Education, will be superiority complexes coupled with
the speaker at a meeting of the conceit.
Next on the list of those who are
Graduate Education Club, March
hrartily condemned are the college
17.
joes who "can't stop talking about
Dr. Ligon will discuss opportunihow much money they spend, cars
in the field of education.
ties
go,
fast
graduate stu- and how to they life and who alWilliam E. Ralph,
ways try
of the party."
be the
dent, will preside.
On the "strictly repulsive" list
are the men who use vulgar language,

dress

sloppily,

always

(or

J

r

J'fv-vv:-

Committee:
Helen Delss,

Warren

chairman.-Su- e

..Delta Delta Delta

....Independent

Serving Daily Except Sat. Noon
SERVING HOURS
DAILY
11 :3C to 1 :30
5 :30 to 8 :00
SUNDAY
11:30 to 2:00
5:00 to 8:00

"

Lk

:

V'r;;.-Colonel of the Week for this week is Gene Desk ins, t
senior math major from Akron, Ohio.
Gene Is vice president of the YMCA and a member
of its student advisory board, a Student Oovernment
Association representative, a member of Phalanx, Pitkin Club, Suky, Lambda Chi Alpha soci