xt7vdn3ztf98 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vdn3ztf98/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19320513  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May 13, 1932 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 13, 1932 1932 2013 true xt7vdn3ztf98 section xt7vdn3ztf98 Best Copy Available

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
UNIVERSITY

FRIDAY EDITION
KERNEL

SEMI-WEEKL-

LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY.

ACTION, INTEREST
IS PROMISED

JOt'RNAMSM

Theta Sigma Phi announces
that the time for handing in
cnntribiilloris to its contest announced last work has been extended to May 23. The content
is for freshmen women taking
Journalism, and the prize is $r00.
They are to write an essay

FOR

GYM EXHIRITION
Roxing. Wresting, Fencing
Matches Will Add
to Thrills
CO-E-

TO

not exceeding 1.000 words on
of Women In
"Achievements
Journalism." Contributions are to
be handed In at the Journalism
office, or to members of Theta
Sterna Phi.

COSTUME DANCE

FEATURE PROGRAM

University Concert Rand Will

ALUMNI PROGRAM

Provide Music for

Affair
One of the many entertaining features of the Physical Education Exhibition, to be Riven in the Alumni
gymnasium May 20, Is the special
musical numbers and accompaniment furnished by the university
concert band. The concert band is
a select group of 40 musicians that
have been furnishing the enjoyable
twilight concerts on the university
campus.
Under the direction of
Elmer O. Sulzer, special musical arrangements that promise to add
color and Interest to the performance have been made for the coming exhibition.
The boring, wrestling, and fencing number assures the audience of
plenty of action. According to the
program there will be 90 participants in these three activities, with
a special feature of an individual
boxing bout, wrestling match, and
fencing match all going on at the
same time. The people taking part
In this number have been working
and practicing on the activities for
the past four weeks and will undoubtedly reach a point of high perfection by the time the event Is
staged.
For those members of the audience that like their entertainment a
little more refined than the boxing
and wrestling matches offer, a costume dance by 30 girls of the university promises to be one of the
most colorful and artistic parts of
the program. The dance, a pirate
dance, has been In the process of
development for the past six weeks,
and with the flashing costumes,
colored lighting effects, and spectacular dancing should be unusually
attractive, especially to the male
members of the audience.
In addition to the dancing, the
women students of the university
are participating in an act of pyramid building and acrobatics with
the men students. The pyramids are
varied and complicated in construction and some Include as many as
60 students, reaching almost to the
eHrrtnrs in the hasketball build
ing and stretching the entire length
of the gymnasium floor. Added to
these group activities are many ln- HI1U
SLUI1LS
letlbo wi onm.
OlVlUUai
Including Juggling, balancing and
acrobatics approaching the perfection of the professional perform- -

EIGHT MEMBERS

CONTEST

TO BE RADIOCAST
and While Orchestra,
Cardinals Quartette to Provide Music; Dean Anderson to Speak

Rliie

ALUMNI DATES ARE SET
An alumni
program
reunion
will be broadcast from the university studio at 10:30 a. m. Monday,
May 23. over station WHAS, Louisville.
The program will include
music by the Blue and White orchestra and the Kentucky Cardinal
quartetes. Dean F. Paul Anderson
of
the Engineering College will
give a short talk concerning class
reunions. There will be another
short talk, the speaker to be announced later.
Commencement week begins with
the senior ball Friday night, June
3. Alumni day will be observed Saturday, June 4, beginning with the
registration of the classes ending
In 2 and 7 for the class reunions. Mr.
W. C. Wilson is chairman of the
reunion
committee.
The
class
Including
a Stroller
luncheons
luncheon will be held at various
places. The visitors will make a
tour of the campus, visiting the
new buildings. After the tour the
visitors will be entertained with a
tea by Pres. and Mrs. F. L.
The Alumni banquet will be
at 6:30 p. m. at the Phoenix hotel.
The baccalaureate services will
be held at 3 p. m. Sunday, June
5, in Memorial hall. The sermon
will be delivered by the Rev. W. E.
Ellis, pastor of the First Christian
church, Paris. After the services
there will be a faculty tea in the
faculty club rooms of McVey hall.
There will be an alumni parade,
forming at 9:30 a. m. Monday to
walk in procession to the commencement exercises in the Alumni
gymnasium.
The commencement
address will be delivered by Pres.
F. L. McVey. After the commencement exercises there will be a
luncheon in the university Commons, after which the annual
Alumni association meeting will be
held.
Mc-Ve- y.

j

Phi Beta Will Hold
Initiation Services
QUEEN TO REIGN
Kappa chapter of Phi Beta, honmusic
AT SENIOR BALL orarywill holdand dramatics fraterIts initiation service
nity
at

2 p. m..

Saturday in the parish

the Good
Announces Nomi- house of the Church of of the orShepherd.
The officers
Must Re Signed by ganization are Hazel Nolleau, presi.
nations
30 Students; Must Re in by dent; Lois Robinson,
Mary A. O'Brien, secretary; Mary
Friday, May 20
treasurer, and

Chairman

Laypham,

Presiding at the annual senior
ball to be held Friday, June 3, in
the Alumni gymnasium, will be the
first senior ball queen ever to reign
at the university. She will be
of the
chosen from among
senior class tor her outstanding-nes- s
in that class and for her general campus activities.
Cecil Bull, chairman of the senior ball committee arranging for
the dance, has announced that
nominations will be made through
petition by men students of the
senior class. Petitions must be
signed by 30 students and turned.
In at the office of the dean of men
or given to Walter Vest on or before Friday, May 20.
Coronation rites of the queen will
be held at the ball. After the ceremonies she will be presented an
award to be determined by members of the committee, and a dance
will be dedicated In her honor.
Final selection of the queen will
be made by the dance committee,
consisting of, Cecil Bell, chairman;
John Bagwell. Walter Vest, Clarence Yeager. Virginia Young, and
Lon Rogers, and by William Florence, class treasurer, and William
Humphreys, president.
co-e- ds

Kiological Croup
Initiates, Elects
Phi Sigma PI. honorary biological
fraternity, held a dinner meeting
Tuesday night. May 10 in the Iris
room of the Phoenix hotel for the

Ly-ki-

ALl'MNUS WILL APPEAR SOON

The Kentucky Alumnus magazine,
monthly publication of the Kentucky Alumni association, will appear
soon. The next edition will feature
the Alumni Reunion and will contain pictures of classes for the past
several years, featuring the classes
of 190T and 1910, it was announced
by James S. Shropshire, director of
all student publications on the university campus. Some of the pictures are relics, showing the tight
waisted, long dresses, and large
plumed hats worn several years
ago.

Cal-kin- s,

J

T

BLUE RIDGE CAMP
Summer Session of Y. M.,
Y. W. Camp Will Open

June

7

TWO SUMMER SCHOOL
SESSIONS TO RE HELD

Roys' Camp Will Open June
27, and Will Last for
10 Davs
Eight members of the Y ,M. and
Y. W. C. A. cabinets at the university have completed arrangements
for attending the annual summer
session of the organization at Blue
Ridge. North Carolina. Those who
are planning to make the trip from
the Y. M. cabinet are John Carter,
president of the cabinet: Robert
Gilmore, past director of freshman
work: Hugh Stewart, secretary: and
Elwood Aarand. The Y. W. will be
represented by Lois Neal. president
of the W. S. O. A.; Katherine Jones,
president of the Y. W.; Mariana
Lancaster,
vice president: Polly
Lee, publicity chairman; and Billie
Maddox, chairman of the freshman
cabinet.
The summer school will be divided into two sessions, the first for
the girls and the second for the
Y. M. C. A. The first session will
open June 7 and will continue until
June 27, at which time the boys'
camp will open and last for ten
days. Bart Peak, secretary of the
Y. M. C. A., probably
university
will attend, and Miss Augusta Roberts, secretary of the Y. W., will
go also.
The Blue Ridge camp has been
In operation since 1905. It first was
started at Ashville, and later was
moved to Black Mountain before
being changed to the present location. The fourth quarter of the
Y. M. C. A. graduate school at
Nashville is held here in the summer in connection with the regular
program of the college Y. cabinets.
A special school for training presidents of the organization is held
for six weeks during the summer.
The purpose of the training at
Blue Ridge is to bring together the
students of southern colleges and
universities to give them inspira-

tional training, and practical instruction which will be of benefit
to them in the work which they will
do in their respective schools.

Initiation, Banquet
Held by Honorary
Mathematics Group
Annual initiation and banquet for
the Kentucky chapter of Pi Mu
Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, was held at 6 p. m. Tuesday at the Teacup inn. Dr. H. H.
Downing, toastmaster, delivered the
welcoming address to new Initiates.
Responses were made by Prof. J.
M. Davis, H. M. Sullivan,
and
Elizabeth Ragland.
The new initiates are Allie Bright
McAlister, Elizabeth Ragland.
Mobley, Andrew Ferrille. H.
M. Sullivan, Norine Gordon. Pauline Gordon, and Norma Lambert.
Following the welcoming address
and the responses, talks were made
by Dr. L. W. Cohen and Dean Paul
P. Boyd. The initiation was conducted by Dr. Elora LeStourgeon
and Dr. H. H. Downing.
Pi Mu Epsilon, national mathematics fraternity, was founded at
Syracuse University, Syracuse. New1
York, in 1902 and at present has
approximately 30 chapters in colleges and universities throughout
the United States. It is one of the
outstanding scientific organizations.
The local charter was granted in
1926, and the University of Kentucky chapter now has an active
membership of 4J. Eligibility for
faculty and graduate students is
based on outstanding ability, while
requirements
for undergraduates
are a general stnding of 1.8 and
standing in mathematics of 1.8.
The officers of the local chapter
are Dr. H. H. Downing, president;
Prof. M. C. Brown,
Dr. Flora LeStourgeon, secretary;
Mr. W. W. Chambers, treasurer;
and Prof. E. J. Canaday, librarian.
Ger-aldi-

.

Blue Ridge Camp Located

In Beautiful Carolina Site

Strollers will meet t 5 p. m
today In room 111 McVey hall.
As important business will be
acted upon, all memliers are urged to attend.

JAC3 HO BY,
President

O.

I.

K. TO MKF.T

Active
members of Omirron
Delta Kappa will meet at 4 p. m.
today In White hall. All members are requested to be present.
HORACE MINER,

President

PEP GROUP HOLDS

university have taken advantage of
it. Karl Zerfoss took the opportunity in 1915, and was so enthusiastic about the work that he persuaded Bart Peak, present secretary
of the student Y. M. C. A. at the
university, to go to the conference
center for that purpose in 1916.
Others who have answered the
cull are Henry Cravens, Elise Bureau, and Tzvetan Nedelkoff. Elise
Bureau has spent three summers ut
Blue Ridge.
In the neighborhood of 50 girls
und 60 boys are given employment
ior the slimmer. Most of the boys
come from the Y. M. C. A. graduate
school at Nashville, Tenn. Those
employed enroll in the training
school ut Hue Ridge for at least
one class. Their work und classes
till the morning hours. In the afternoon they may attend the Y. W.
C. A. and Y. M. C. A. conferences
and activities, or engage in any
sport that suits their fancies, a wide
variety being offered for their

Nine Members Elected
To New Men's Council
By University Students
I--

M

TRACK MEET

TO BE SATURDAY

C ollege of Fngineerinit
Senior
Russell Gray
Sophomore
Oscar Renter
College of Arts and Sriemc
Senior
Thomas Lynch

Events to Start at

2 O'clock
on St oil Field; Competi-

Junior

Kingsbury and Ewing Are HACKENSMITH IS HEAD;
Named President and
By Sl'NNY DAY
of
During the week of May 9. men
Vice-preside-

nt

Fraternity

FIFTEEN ARE INITIATED,
Kingsbury,
Covington.
Gilbert
Junior in the Collrge of Arts and
Sciences, will be president of SuKy
Circle for the next year. He was
elected at a meeting of the circle
held Tuesday afternoon in the
Alumni gymnasium.
John Ewing.
Louisville, Junior in the Agriculture
College was made
of
the group. This meeting was the
last of the current year.
Kingsbury is a member of Phi
Kappa Tau, social fraternity, president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, a pledge
of Lamp and Crass, honorary senior
order, editor of the SuKy May Day
book, circulation manager of the
Kampus Kat. news editor of the
Kernel and member of Strollers. He
is a major In the Journalism department, and will assume his office as
president of the fraternity in the
fall.
Ewing is a member of Pi Kappa
Alpha social fraternity, a pledge
of Omicron Delta Kappa, leadership
fraternity, is a member of Seaboard
and Blade, Alpha Zeta, agriculture
scholarship fraternity. Stroller member, representative on the student
council and will be business manager of the 1933 Kentuckian.
Other officers elated were. Martha Lowry, secretary, Nell Dishman.
treasurer, and Jane Dyer, assistant
secretary. The retiring officers are
Ted Cassady, president, Ben LeRoy,
Jane Dyer, secretary,
and Martha Lowry. treasurer.
Fifteen pledges were initiated at
the meeting. They were pledged to
the group last Friday night at the
annual Gingham dance given by the
circle as a part of the May day
program.
The new members are,
Ann Meyers Rose, Sara Bethel, Mary
Carolyn Terrell, Julia Catherine
Webb, Bettie Boyd, Dorothy Williams, Jack Faunce. George Wilson.
Mills Darnell, Jack Steele. John
Davis. Red Davis, A. H. Mahan, William Conley and Jack Tucker.
nt

have been qualifying for the intramural track and field events, the
finals of which will be held at 2
o'clock Saturday afternoon. May 14.
this
on Stoll field. Competition
year is extremely keen, and some
intramural records are due to fall.
The rules of the intramural track
and field meet are: fit a contestant may enter in only two events
and the relay, and 2 men attached to the varsity track squad or
who have earned a "K" in track
are ineligible.
Six men qualified in the 100 yard
dash and the best time was :10.6
seconds. The men qualifying were:
Harvey. A. T .O.; Blencoe. Delta
Chi; Nicholson, A. T. O : McGuire.
K. A.: Goebel, Alpha Gamma Rho.
and Congleton, Phi Kappa Tau.
The record is :10.2, set by Heiber,
Phi Kappa Tau, in 1930.
Several who qualified in the 100
also entered the 220 yard dash.
The best time was 25 seconds, and
the following six men qualified:
Nicholson, A. T. O.; Alven. Sigma
Chi; Blencoe. Delta Chi; Goebel.
Alpha Gamma Rho; Cassady. Pi
Kappa Alpha, and Cleary, Delta
Tau Delta. The record, set by
Wallace, independent,
in 1931, is
23 4 seconds.
Likewise six men qualified in the
440 yard dash with the best time
at 57 seconds. The following qualified: Liesenfelt, Phi Sigma Kappa; Martin, S. A. E. ; Cleary, Delta
Tau Delta: Cassady, Pi Kappa Alpha: Sproler, Alpha Sigma Phi,
and Eversole, Delta Tau Delta. The
record was set by Wallace in 1931
at 53.2 seconds.
Eight men qualified in the 880
yard run, and the best time was
2:15 minutes.
The following are

entered: Martin,
S. A. E.;

S. A. E.; Shank-Ii- n,
S. A. E.;

Campbell,

Gatewood, Phi Delta Theta: Daugh-ertSigma Chi: Goodman. Alpha
Sigma Phi; George. Sigma Chi;
and Alven, Sigma Chi. Goodman
set the record in 1931 with 2:07
minutes.
There will not be a mile run or
high hurdles this year. Trials for
the 120 yard low hurdles, the pole
vault, and shot put were held yesterday afternoon, but results were
not available. Trials for the medley race, the javelin, and discus
will be held this afternoon.
Six men qualified in the high
Jump with the height at five feet
three inches. The men qualifying
Thirtv Members of Kentucky were: Brawner, Phi Kappa Tau;
Taylor. Phi Delta Theta; Turnip-seeCollege Math DepartPhi Delta Theta: Crosley.
will Convene
ments
Sicma Chi; Burns, Alpha Sigma
Phi, and Baughman. K. A. ' Sea-leApproximately 30 representatives
Roberts set the record for this
Kentucky colleges and event in 1929 with five
from other
feet 6 inuniversities will assemble here Sat- dies.
sesurday for the annual one-da- y
Hillen. Sigma Chi. achieved 21
sion of the Kentucky section of feet, one and one-ha- lf
the Mathematical Association of the broad jump. This is inches in
just
America. Speakers for the meetof an inch less than the
ing will include five members of record set by George Yates,
A.
the faculty of the mathematics de- E.. in 1931. The other men S.who
partment of the university.
qualified were: Burns. Alpha Sig,
Dean Paul P. Boyd will preside ma Phi; Taylor. Phi Delta
A. T. O.;
in place of Prof. Smith Park, EasBrowner. Phi
tern State Teachers' College, who Kappa Tau; and Thomas, Sigma
was elected president but will be Chi.
unable to fill his place because of
illness. Prof. Arthur R. Fehn, Centre College, is secretary for the
Kentucky section of the association this year.
The program for the day inculdes
addresses, "The Triangles In and
Circumscribed to the Bifiecondal
The publication of The Kampus
Rational Quartic," by Sister Charles Kat. university funny magazine,
Mary, Nazareth college; "A Group sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and
of Transformations, by Prof. C. G. edited by William Shafer, will not
Latimer. University of Kentucky; be discontinued, members of the
"A Simple Problem in Mapping," sponsoring group decided yesterday
Prof. Guy Stevenson, University of at a meeting held In the Journalism
Louisville: "A Theorem Concerning department.
Perfect Points in Alegbralc Geom-ery,- "
Numerous changes were decided
R. Hutcherson,
upon by the group and the book will
Prof. W
Berea College; "The Problem of be issued Friday, May 20 and will
Coloring Maps," Prof. L. W. Cohen. be the last issue of the current
University of Kentucky.
school year. Work on the final edi"Report on Affiliations with the tion is being completed and the copy
National Council of Teachers of will be in the hands of the printer,
Mathematics,"
Prof. Arthur B. Monday. Stiafer announced.
Fehn. Centre College; "Problems
Decision to continue the work was
Involving Linkages." Miss Sullie decided ujxm after the members had
Kentucky; protested to the faculty because of
of
University
Hence.
"Experiments In Laboratory Mathe- too vigorous censorship.
Members
matics," Prof Wajter L. Moore. Uni- of the fraternity desired to publish
versity of Louisville; "The Analytic the magazine with the same scope
vs.
the Svnthetic Approach In of content as could be found in othProblem Solving," Prof. T. P. Scott, er collegiate magazines.
Kentucky Wesleyan: "How to ReThe Kampus K:it is the only collegiate humor book published in the
duce Failures in Freshman Mathematics." Prof. M C Brown. Uni- state anil the desire to have the
versity of Kentucky.
state represented in that field moved
the members to decide to continue
psychology joi
ci.vb tiie publication. The editor of next
year's Kat will be Marvin Waclis.
The Psychology Journal club will
meet Thursday night at 7 o'clock in I'. K. CKAIH WIF. AI'POIMFD
James K. Dorman. Jr.. Lexington,
room 205 Neville hall The subject
will be "Dream Interpretation." At a university graduate, has been apthe close of the meeting there will pointed to take charge of liquidabe an annual election of officers and tion of two Kentucky batiks that
were recently forced to close.
new members will be elected.
y,

Math Association
Will Meet at U. K.

d,

one-four- th

Theta-Harvey-

Humor Magazine
Will Re Continued,
Fraternity Decides

rnal

TWO ADDITIONAL
TO BE SELECTED

Council Victors

tion Expected to
Re Keen

.

is called the
North Carolina
Land of the Sky," and those who
have been there claim that the
particular part of North Carolina
in which Blue Ridge is situated Is
worthy of that appellation and the
the name of
other superlatives
Blue Ridge seems to cull forth than
any other part of the stute. Vacationers become ecstatically enthusiastic when questioned about Blue
Kidge as a vacation land. The
same is true when those who have
been employed there are asked
about it as a place of employment.
Since Blue Ridge began implying exclusively men and women
in
from colleges and universities
1910. it has been ottering to stu-

purpose of selecting new Initiates
and electing olticers for the ensuing
'
year.
Students who were initiated are
as follows: HolM'rt Wise, Eldred
Myra Dickerson, Andrew
Wilbur P. Wortmun, and
Russell Foster.
Olnews elected for the coming
year are: Donald Autrn, president:
Elizabeth Van Meter,
Russell Foster, secretury; Mrs.
Qtieenie tirable. treasurer.
Dr. W. R. Allen of the Zoology dents a pleasant, instructive and
use! ul way to upend the hummer.
department Is faculty advisor.
Among those who go there to work
preference is given to seniors and
Women students at the University of Florida change their mode of graduate students.
In the 2a yeurs during which
wearing the hulr about four times
has maintained
a year, says the Flambeau, student Blue Ridge five students from this
the
principle,
publication.
Mid-dleto- n.

,

Hopper
Elizabeth Hardin, historian.
The following girls will be initiated: Lofiise Johnson, Jean Foxworth,
Willie Hughes Smith. Dorothy
Lexington, and Barbara Bowman Connecticut.
Following the initiation exercises
there will be a banquet at 6 o'clock
at the Teacup inn. Hazel Nolleau
will preside.

OF

TO ATTEND

SIMMER ('AMI

NEW SERIES NI'MRER 57

FRIDAY, MAY 11. 1012
TO MF.KT

STROM.FRS

N. C.

KENTUCKY

OF

VOLUME XXII

nun: riihjk edition
FOR Y.M.C.A. AND Y.W.C.A.

James

BY

Bocldie

AG.JMLEGE

Freshman Voting In Arts and
Sciences College Disputed;
Will Vote Tuesday

Sophomore
Disputed
College of Commerce
Harry Lair
Senior
George Peak
Junior
Sophomore
James Curtis
College of Fducatinn
Senior
Tie Vote
Sophomore
R. G. Edwards
College of Law
Junior
Garnet R. Burks
College of Agriculture
To elect today.

HOWARD TIES RAKER
IN EDUCATION COLLEGE
Elections in Agriculture College Will Re Held at Convocation Saturday

Delta Delta Delta
Will Be Sponsor
of Theater Party
Sorority Will Manage Kentucky to Acquire Funds for
New House
Delta Delta Delta sorority will
take over the management of the
Kentucky theater today and will be
in charge of the advance sale of
tickets for the performances. The
proceeds of the entire day will go
to a building fund for a new chapter house.
Lullaby.'- "Broken
featuring
Nancy Carroll and Lionel Barry-morpicture which will be
is the
shown. The story is based on Maurice Rostand's play, "The Man I
Killed."
Although organizations have had
charge of advance sale of tickets
for the various theaters, this is the
first time this year that any
has had charge of the
The theater
entire management.
will be decorated with the crescent
and stars, the sorority shield, and
with the sorority colors, silver, gold,
and blue.
For the night performance members of the sorority will be attired in formal evening wear and will
usher. The committee which is in
charge of arrangements and who
will serve as ushers are:
Kittie Mercer, Virginia Moody.
Mary Lyter
Mary Jo Armstrong.
Robertson. Peggy Haskins, Hazel
Nelson, Mary Lylin, Ruth Rogers.
Rose Mary Balch. Virginia Martin
Lee, Betty Cunningham, and Helen
Morrison.
e,

Men's Honoraries
Conduct Initiations
Lamp and Cross, senior men's
honorary fraternity, will hold initiation exercises at 6 p. m. tonight
at the Lafayette hotel. After the
ceremonies the election of new officers will be held. Following the
initiation and election of officers,
a dinner dance will be held in honor
of the new initiates, in the ball
room. Kentucky's Sunset Snycopa-tor- s
will furnish the music during
the evening.
The new initiates will be Harry
Lair, Cynthiana; Jack Strother,
Grayson; Charles Maxon, Lexington; Jess Herndon. Irvington: Howard Baker, Shanghi. China; Russell
Gray. Schnectady, N. Y.; John Fry.
Louisville; Thornton Helm, Lexington; George Stewart, Cynthiana;
Gilbert Kingsbury, Covington: Harold Bredwell, Bellevue; I. C. Evans.
Winchester .
The members of the active chapter and present officers are: William Hubble, president: John Noo-navice president; Robert Porter,
secretary; and Robert Reynolds,
treasurer: Duke Johnson. Robert
Tucker. Chester Jolly. Ben LeRoy
and Glen Weiman. Ben LeRoy and
John Noonan are in charge of the
dance committee.
Following the initiation of 15
sophomores
into Lances, Junior
men's honorary fraternity, Tuesday
night. Harvey Mattingly and Hugh
Van Aantwerp were elected president, and secretary and treasurer
respectively for next year.
Mattingly is a member of the
varsity
football and basketball
squads and of Kappa Sigma, social
fraternity. His home is in Bards-towKentucky.
Antwerp,
whose home Is in
Frankfort. Is a member of Keys,
honorary sophomore fraternity, and
of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, social fran.

Nine men students vere elected
their class representatives on the

Men's Student council for the coming school year as men stud 'nts of
the various classes voted Wednesday and Thursday.
Elections were
held by the colleges of Arts and
Sciences. Law. Commerce, Education, and Engineering.
The following men were elected
Wednesday by the freshman and
junior engineers: Oscar Rueter, Alpha Sigma Phi, and Russell Gray,
Triangle. Reuter will be the sophnext year
omore representative
while Gray will be the senior engineer on the council.
On Thursday the following nine
men were elected to represent their
classes: Arts and Sciences college,
next year's sophomore representative was disputed; next year's junior
representative, James Boddie; next
year's senior representative, Thomas Lynch. In the College of Commerce, the next year's sophomore
council member will be James W.
Curtis; the junior member will be
George Peak; and the senior representative will be Harry Lair.
College the
In the Education
junior race ended in a tie between
candidates,
the two
Buitin W.
Howard and Howard Baker. The
run off will take place Monday, according to Benny Martin, member
of the student council who presided over the election. The sophomore representative will be R. G.
Edwards.
The College of Law elected Gar-ne- tt
R. Burkes to serve as their
representative for the coming year.
The election ol the sophomore
representative for the Arts and
Sciences College was disputed between William Babbs, and Alfred
was
R. Caldwell. Dean Melcher
advised of the situation and at his
suggestion another election will be
held next Tuesday afternoon at 4
oclock in 111 McVey hall.
The Men's Student council is the
student organization which has control of student government and the
control of student conduct on the
campus. It is composed of a representative from the senior class
for each of the six colleges; of four
representatives of the junior classes,
the colleges represented being an
alternating group of four of the six;
and two sophomore members selected by the council from six nominations elected by the members of
the present freshman class of each
college.

MEN'S GLEE CLUB
ELECTS OFFICERS
Kenneth Keys Is Elected to
Presidency; Charles Lov- of
ell Named
Music Group
Vice-preside-

Officers for the coming year were
elected by members of the university
Men's Glee club at their meeting
held Monday in the art center. Kenneth Keys. Lexington was selected
president of the group, and Charles
Lovell, Lexington, was named

Keys is a junior in the College of
Engineering and has been a member
of the Glee club for three years. Lovell is a sophomore in the engineering college and has been a member
of the group for the past two years.
He is a member of the Phi Kappa
Tau social fraternity.
Frank Adams and Burnam Peaii-ma- n
were appointed to act as publicity agents of the group for the
coming year.
The final meeting of the university songsters will take place Monday night and will be in the form
of a party. Refreshments will be
served and the Women's Glee club.
I'll i Mu Alpha, honorary music fraternity for men and Phi Beta, honorary music fraternity lor women,
Lances have been invited to attend the
n.

ternity.

The men initiated
into
indepenare Bruce Cunningham,
dent: Hugh Van Antwerp. Si"tnu
Alpha Epsilon: Miles Davis. Phi
Helta Theta: Tom Faber. Sigma
Chi; Harvey Mattingly. Kappa Sig.
ma: Ira Lyre. Alpha Sigma Phi:
Turner Howard, Delta Tau Delta;
Alpha:
Wilfred Graves. Pi Kappa
Tom Rowlett. Sigma Nu; Robert
Scott, Kappa Alpha: J. B Croft
Lambda Chi Alpha; William Mellor
Pill Sigma Kappa: Lucien Congle
ton, Phi Kappa Tau: and O. B.
Marphy, Alpha Tau Omega.

aitair

Music for the party will be prepared by John Clnity, Frank Adams,
Nevill Goebel. anil Burnam Pearl-maThey were appointed by tne
new ly elected president.
The Glee club which is comised
of 40 members, this year besides presenting programs at the various university functions made trips to
Midway, and Puris where
TryouU
programs were presented.
for the club will be conducted at
the beginning of the next semester
n.

Ixni-isvill- c.

* Best Co
The Kentucky Kernel

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of women, is d.l

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should present a challenge to colli ire wonvn to make themselves felt
ismore positively i'l prcent-dn- y

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Wlu.tevrr the conclusions reached
from the results, the value of the
survey in i'self is unquestionable
LAWIitNCE HFUHUN
f t,l,
Win her the niies; ions were answerMdTUHVUo Fiii.ir
MARVIN C. WACIIS
ed, whether the answers were widely
VIARY
ALICE PAI.VFHS. AHocinlr Editor
difTeiTnt. it may he asserted safely
that tliouulit has been stimulated
III 1! R1IH.I.
on the questions treated by the
Tixlny's issiw of The Kernel ha. publication of such a questionnaire
been dtsivn:itr:I ns (lie Blur Rukr
edition. frntiirinp the annual Y. M
C. A. palheritiK held at Blue Ridco.
North Carolina. The Kernel dx s
this because it feels that recognition should be piven to so important and influential an institution
WISHES
as tins annual event.
I am watching one single leaf
The Catherine at Blue Hidpe amis Shining in the night.
toward the thorouch development It is a part of a great tree:
of youth. Classes are held in which But this one iittle leaf
hoys are instructed in leadership Holc'u me as if by manic.
Boys from I; is still and cool and holds itself
and pood citizenship.
all over the country, most of them Po steadily there on the branch.
leaders In their local Y. M. C. A. A light shines on it
organizations, attend the conference And flickers eerily.
and take back with them new ideas Now it moves in a slight bietve
as well as a new inspiration for And suddenly comes to life.
work in their own communities. It quivers and trembles.
Along with the classes is piven a And makes me wish
varied program of recreational ac- That I. too. might be a leaf.
tivities, designed to furnish the boys There it stays for five Ioiir months
with the highest type of fun as well With nothing to do but drift in the
as with healthful exercise. A youth
breeze
seldom returns from Blue Ridge As fate shall decree.
without, bringing; back glowing ac- The sun shines on it, and the moon.
counts of the pood times, the natur- A breeze floats lazily over it.
al beauty of the place, the wealth But most of all I wish to be
of pood fellowship, and all the other A leaf in a howling thunderstorm.
adjuncts of camp life.
To be tossed and jerked by the
wind.
Too much cannot be said of the
work of the Y. M. C. A. Its activi- To feel the rain sinking.
ties fill a place in the life of the Cooling and soothing.
boys of this country that no other And
similar organization even endeavors But why spend time in nonsensical
thoughts?
t:5 reach.
In cities, in the small
towns, wherever organized, it fills There are people to greet.
the universal need of boys for fel- And clothes to be worn
lowship and guidance. The gather- Since I must do as custom dictates.
ing at Blue Ridge is perhaps its best But I heartedly wish I might be
a leaf.
known and most representative
To drift and float and dream.
N. TAYLOR
HFlii; WIM.l THE KFHNU, I'UISSt AIX
Pit';ir:NT noins main r aim
.

Literary

REMINISCENCE
When stars are out.
That university students really are
And day has faded away.
thinking about outstanding issues of I d:eam about
the day and giving seri