xt7xgx44rm7f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7xgx44rm7f/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19270617  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, June 17, 1927 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 17, 1927 1927 2012 true xt7xgx44rm7f section xt7xgx44rm7f 'WW

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

WELCOME!
MAY YOUR STAY ON THE

CAMPUS BE. PLEASANT

OF'

UNIVERSITY

VOLUME XVII

LEXINGTON,

KY..

jS

PATRONIZE
THE ADVERTISERS WHO
SUPPORT THE KERNEL

KENTUCKY

JUNE 17, 1927

.

NUMBER 32

FIRST TERM OPENS WITH 1,018 STUDENTS
PLANS FOR NEW
U. K. BUILDING

ARE APPROVED
Structure, Costing $190,000 Will
House Mathematics, English,
Journalism Departments
and Cafeteria

KERNEL

TO

HAVE

ROOM

Will Be Located Near Kastle
Hall; Work Is to Begin
Soon
Final drawings of the recitation
building to be constructed on the
campus as the key structure of the
university's building program were
approved the first of the week by
President McVey and M. J. Crutcher,
superintendent of buildings and
grounds.
According to official reports, the
exact amount to be spent on the build-'in- g
has not been determined but it
is expected to cost approximately
$190,000. Franz C. Warner, of the
Cleveland firm of Warner and
architects, who submitted
the drawings said that work probably
would be started on the building with-- ,
in a month.
The new building will be located in
front of Kastle Hall, the chemistry
building, and 81 feet west of Kastle
Hall and will occupy 800,000 cubic
feet of space. It will consist of a
and three
basement,
stories.
The first floor will be given over
to the mathematics department, including lecture rooms, offices and
other necessary room. The English
department will occupy the second
floor, consisting of five class rooms
of different sizes, offices and accessory rooms.
The third floor of the building will
contain the university cafeteria and
the faculty rooms. The kitchen also
will be on this floor. The main dining hall of the cafeteria will seat 400
persons and a private dining room,
seating approximately 30 persons,
will be included. A room 40x36 feet
for large gatherings of the faculty
will be in one part of the third floor.
The offices and lecture rooms of the
department of journalism and the offices and press room of The Kentucky
Kernel will be in the basement. One
wing of the basement will be given
over to the postoffice and the book
store of the university.
By taking advantage of the slope
in front of the site there will be space
for entrance to the
which will provide space for the boiler
room, elevator equipment and a room
for employees of the university.
Mr. Crutcher said that the entire
conbuilding would be of
struction with a steel frame and interior of tile and plaster. It will
The
be of colonial architecture.
present plans provide for its completion by the opening of school in the
fall of 1928.
fire-pro-

The Kernel Is Given
First Prize in Contest
Next Meeting of Intercollegiate
Press Association W,ill Be
Held

at University

o--

Now You Ask One

ft

The Kernel Will Be Ready for
You Each Friday
Your copy of The Kernel, which
you paid for when you matriculated at the university for the summer session, will be waiting for
you each Friday at the fourth hour
in the Campus Book Store.
The Kernel is published on the
campus, all the work being done by
students of the university. There
are positions open to those wish-

ing to get a practical experience
in newspaper work. Come over to
The Kernel office in the basement
of the Science building and give
your name to the editors.
Don't fail to get your Kernel
each week, and if you have some
news item which would be of interest to the student body, mail or
bring it to the office.

SCARBOROUGH
LEAVES

COLLEGE

0

Student "Milks " Sixteen Rattle Snakes for
Venom Every Morning In Science Building
PROF. B0YNT0N
BECOMES PH. D.

MADE RESEARCH AT U. K.
Prof. Paul L. Boynton, associate
professor in the department of psy
chology, University of Kentucky, received a degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the George Peabody College for Teachers of Nashville, Tenn.,
yesterday, according to a telegram re
ceived here. Professor Boynton successfully completed his examinations
Monday and his degree was conferred
at the annual commencement exer

has developed new courses. He re
cently offered for the first time a
graduate course in correlation
methods in connection with human
measurements and last year developed
his College Classification Test, which
was used as the intelligence test for
incoming students.
The dissertation on which Professor
Boynton obtained his degree was entitled "The Relation of Intelligence
and Moral Judgments of College' Stu
dents, and was based on the records
of more than 400 students of the Uni
versity of Kentucky.
Professor Boynton presented part
of his data in a paper before the re
cent meeting of the Southern Society
for Philosophy and Psychology and
the thesis will be published shortly
in a special monograph.
Before coming to the university,
Professor Boynton taught at Peabody
College and at several other institutions. He completed his college work
at Peabody and received his master's
degree there in 1923. He is a mem-- i
ber of the prefessional educational
fraternity, Phi Delta Kappa, and an
associate member of Sigma Xi.
new

MOVE IN AUGUST
Prof. H. J. Scarborough, of the College of Law at the university, has
accepted the professorship of law at
WILL

the New Jersey Law, School, Newark,
N. J., and will assume that position
in October, according to an announcement made during the past week.
Professor Scarborough has been a
member of the faculty of the College
of Law for five years and during this
time he has specialized in the teaching of torts, private and municipal
corporations and contracts. He will
continue to teach the summer term
of the university and will leave Lexington at the close of the summer
school.

Before coming to Lexington, Professor Scarborough was a member of
the law firm of Nicholson, Warnock
and Scarborough at Youngstown,
Ohio.

Professor and Mrs. Scarborough
and their daughters, Misses Ruth,
Martha and Dorothy, will leave Lexington the latter part of August for
their new home. Miss Ruth will enter Western College for Women at
Oxford, Ohio, in September.

CoacHing Is the Latest
Course Added' to U. K.

Governor Fields Names
Sunday Day for Fasting

Gamage and Ruby Are Holding
Daily Classes in Football
and Basketball

Dedicates Day to Sufferers
Eastern Kentucky Cloudburst and Flood

university is offering in its
curriculum this summer for the first
time, a course in the technique of
coaching football and basketball, under the direction of Coach Harry G.
Gamage, head fooball coach of the
university, and J. Craig Ruby, head
basketball coach of the University of
Illinois.
Football ar.d basketball are the two
great high school and collegiate
sports. They are becoming increasingly popular each year because of
their splendid influences on young
men and because they build school
Clean games, well played,
spirit.
bring recognition to a school and to
a community that is worth while.
The classes in football theory and
practice are meeting daily from 8 a.
to 10 a.m. and from 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. rne classes in basKetDau theory
and practice will meet daily from 10
a.m. to 12 a.m. and from 3 p.m. to
Coach Gamage and Coach
p.m.
Ruby will each give special demon
stration work in addition to regular
classroom work.

Sunday has been
Governor-Wfillia-

of

proclaimed by

J. Fields as a day

of fasting and prayer for sufferers
of the disastrous cloudburst and flood
in eastern Kentucky May 29.
The chief executive requested residents of the state "to assemble in
their respective places of worship and
I feel sure they will desire to share
their abundance in contributions to
the Red Cross, that it may be enabled
to help our friends in the flood area
realize that what affects one
must be shared by all of us;
that, really, 'united we stand',"
Governor Fields pointed out in the
proclamation that the state board of
health has used its entire personnel
in relief work in the flooded area.
DR. W,. D. NICHOLLS HONORED
BY SIGMA XI FRATERNITY

The

Dr. W. D. Nichols, head of the department of farm economics at the
College of Agriculture, University of TWO U. K. PROFS CARRY
Kentucky, has received notice of his
OFF HONORS IN TOURNEY
election to membership in the Cornell
University chapter of Sigma Xi, na- Prof. J. C. Jones carried off first
tional honorary scientific society, whonors in the golf ball sweepstakes
'
Dr. Nichols took his Ph. D. degree at 7 tourney, held at the Ashland Golf club
Cornell University last year. Sigma yesterday afternoon. He had a 69
Xi has in its membership the leading for the 18 holes.
,T. B. McCoun was second with a
scientists of the world. It was founded at Cornell University for the pur- 70, while Alex Dunlap, Prof. Carl
pose of giving recognition to men and Lampert and Howard Levick tied for
women who make contributions to third place with 71. About 30 golfers
scientific data.
eetered.

U. of K. Graduate Is Killed When
Airplane Falls at Langley Field

Here is the first series of questions
about the university which the editors
of The Kernel have compiled. The
answers will be found elsewhere in
the paper each week.
Word was received in Lexington
1. What dean of a college of the
University was recently elected presi- Monday of the death at Norfolk, Va.,
n
Kentucky Co- of Second Lieut. Cornelius Anderson,
dent of a
graduate of the university, when a
llege?
plane in which he was
2. What university instructor is Dehaviland
rated as one of the best referees in riding with another flyer, crashed at
His companion also
Langley field.
the state?
3. How many volumes are there in died instantly.
Lieutenant Anderson entered the
the University library?
4. WJiat is the elevation of the Unversity of Kentucky in September,
1920, and was graduated with honors
university campus?
5. Where is the bench mark located in 1D24 with a degree of bachelor of
on the campus on which this elevation arts. He majored in chemistry and
During
course.
is indicated?
took the
6. How many colleges are there in one semester he made all A's.
the university organization?
For four years while at the univer7. What was the cost of the uni sity Lieutenant Anderson was a memversity football stadium?
ber of the University of Kentucky
8. Who is director of university football squad and several campus
organizations. He was at one time a
athletics?
9. Where is a restoration of a part student member of the athletic counof the first railroad in Kentucky cil.
found on the campus?
After being graduated from the un10. What university professor was iversity he entered the Vanderbilt
recently elected president of the Ken University medical school where he
tucky Academy of Science?
stayed two years. He was a member

CO-ED-

ARE

S

BEST STUDENTS

-

Dr. Boynton's special field has been

Accepts New Position
in New Jersey

U. K.

University of Kentucky InstrucScholarship
Report Recently
Ordinarily there isn't anything extor Awarded Degree by
Compiled Places Them Far
citing about the word "milking," other
Peabody College for
Ahead of Men With a
than procuring a tin bucket and get
Standing of 1.615
Teachers

Finish Instruction in Law that of the learning process and
child psychology, in both of which he
School During Summer;

Will

Roy Stadleman Performs Oper
ation to Collect Poison for
Experimental Purposes in
University Laboratories
C&CAR HAS HAPPY FAMILY

cises.

Ken-tucki-

Since the publication of the last
issue of The Kernel during the regular school session, The Kernel has
been selected as the best college paper
in the state.
The university paper
was awarded this honor at the first
Kentucky Intercollegiate Press Association meeting which was held at
Centre College, Danville the latter
part of May.
Charles Walker of Centre College,
president of the Centre College Press
club which sponsored the meeting,
was elected president of the new asJohn R. Bullock, of the
sociation.
University of Kentucky, was chosen
vice president of the organization.
The next meeting of the press association will be held at the University of Kentucky early in 1928.

O

Get Yours!

of the Beta Theta Pi social fraternity
there and was an excellent student.
Upon leaving Vanderbilt he enrolled
as a flying cadet in the army air
service and for a year was stationed
at Brooks field in Texas and at Nashville. He received his commission as
second lieutenant on March 1G of this
year.
On June 5 Lieutenant Anderson
came through Lexington en route to
Langley field at Hampton, Va. His
brother, W. A. Anderson, Jr., of 152
North Mill street, a member of the
Kentucky Agricultural" Experiment
Station, saw him at that time for a
few minutes It was the first time
the brothers had met for two years.
Lieutenant Anderson was born at
Wickliffe, Ballard county, Ky. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Anderson, Sr., who are now living at
Ballard county. He was a
graduate of Wickliffe High school.
Funeral services will be held in
Arlington cemetery, near Washington,

ting on the correct side of a gentle
bossy and getting to work. But when U. OF K. AVERAGE IS 1.384
some enterprising soul takes up milk
ing rattle snakes in an institution of
The women students of the univerhigher learning, right then and there sity during the regular semester are
he has to break into print.
by far the best scholars, if the report
Roy Stadleman, university student, of the relative scholarship standings
has taken on himself this pleasant of the campus groups 'for the first
task this summer in the Science semester, recently compiled by Prof.
building, coming daily to milk his C, R. Melcher, dean of men, really
"herd" of 16 rattlers which are means what its figures indicate. The
standing was given as 1.615,
roaming about, along" with about 20
other reptilian relatives, in a cage with the men far back with 1.373,
The report which follows was com.
in the hall of the Science building.
Stadleman, needless to say, isn't piled in accordance with the method
bothered by city investigators who adopted by the 1925 conference of
want to test the products of his deans and advisors of men- - A grade
everyone seems of "A" is signified by 3; 'B" is dealg.
morning labors,
satisfied that venom, taken from a nated by 2, and "C," the lowest pass- rattle snake with force sufficient to mg grade, is shown by I.
be called assault and battery, is poison, pure and simple. And there the
matter stands.
All women
1.615
1.273
The venom which Stadleman is col All men
1.246
lecting, will be used for experimental Fraternity men
men
1.284
purposes at the university, His herd
L64.0
may be viewed at any time during the Fraternity wpmen,
wpmen
LfilQ
day in its cage. There is no danger
J.208
of missing it as long as "Oscar," who All freshmen
1.545
has enough rattles to keep a first1 Specials
1.314
class orphan asylum in good running All sophomores
,
1.435
order, is the high mogul of the bunch, AH juniors
1.562
"Oscar," in the modern vernacular, All seniors
1.424
can sure shake a mean rattle when All freshman women
All freshman men
1.110
the occasion calls and he doesn't mind
1.585
strutting his stuff at all. And why All sophomore women
All sophomore men
1.183
should a rattler with a nice coffin
1.560
shaped head be backward when duty All junior women
junior men
ah
calls him to guard his family.
All senior women
l.Qlfl
Besides the 15 rattlers in Oscar's All
senior men
1.423
happy family, there are a number of A. & S. College
1.436
coach whip snakes from the wild and
Agriculture College
1.535
wooly west and plenty of blapjf snakes
Educational College
1.598
who hail from the briar patches qf Commerce College
1.091
old Kentucky. Oscar seems to hold Law Gpjjegp
1.405
no ill feeling against the black snakes
CpHege
4.24Q
at all, which is quite a disappoint- Engaging
ment to those who have always
Off"!
thought that black snakes and rattlers were anything but bosom
friends.
U, K, Classmates Enter Race for
Same Office
co-e- d

S

?L.

'.

They're

NAME

SPEAKERS

Two graduates of the university,
both
member
of the class of
1925, and, incidentally both lawyers,
have announced their candidacy for
the office of city representative in
the next legislature. They are R. P.
Prominent Educators From Oth- Moloney, Jr., and John Y. Brown.
Universities Will Deliver
er
Mr. Moloney is a member of the
Lexington Bar Association and a
Lectures ; Entertainments
practicing attorney. He is a member
Planned for Students
of the lega) saff of the Consolidated
During the
INVITED Coach Corporation,
VISITORS ARE
World War he served in the Navy,
in also
prominent
Mr.
Summer school students will bear young Brown who attorney a In
practicing
the city,
a number of interesting lecutres and is at present out of
the city in chauspeakers this summer and will have tauqua
will return soon to
work
classes under many visiting instruc- devote time tobut campaign.
his
throughout the

FOR SUMMER

tors from universities
United States, according to an announcement from the office of Dean
William S, Taylor, director of the
summer Hessian,
Three noted educators from Cornell
University, Dr. Clyde V, Moore, J)r.
Theodore H. Eaton, and Dr. R.
arrived in Lexington last
Sunday and have been conducting lectures at the university this week.
They will remain at the university
for two more weeks. Dr. Moore has
been lecturing before the class in
modern educational problems at 11
o'clock daily and Dr. Stewart and
Dr. Eaton have been teaching classes
in vocational agriculture.'
Miss Ruth Binzel, 'a national authority on mental hygiene for children,
will lecture before the class in modern
educational problems during the third
week of the summer term. The memAssociabers of the
tions and others interested in child
hygiene are invited to attend.
"Trends in Rural Education in
America" will be the subject of a
series of lectures to be delivered during the fourth week of the term by
Prof. H. G, Parkinson, of Pennsylvania State College. The same theme
will be continued during the last week
of the term by J. W. Blackburn, diIn
rector of vocational education
Maryland.
The entertainment for the summer
school students will include several
plays and trips to various points of
interest in the Blue Grass region.
players will return
The
to the campus for their fifth consecutive year for an afternoon and evening engagement July 1.
The Redpath chautauqua sponsored
by the Kiwanis club will begin on July
2 for a seven day program. Summer
school students purchased tickets for
the chautauqua at the time they paid
their regular registration fees.
Parent-Teache-

rs

Coffer-Mill-

RETURNS FOR VISIT
James G. Scrugham, former governor of Nevada and a graduate of
the University of Kentucky, visited
relatives in Lexington last week, leaving Lexington for Washington on
Tuesday to attend a conference of
the Colorado river commission with
the secretary of interior.

Begins New Book
Professor Knight, of U. K, Is
writing on J. L. Allen
C. Knight, of the
brant
English department of the
University of Kentucky, is at work
on a new book on the life and
works of James Lane Allen, noted
Kentucky novelist, according to a
letter received by Dean Paul P.
Boyd from Professor Knight, who
is working on his doctorate at Columbia University.
Professor Knight stated in his
letter that he was hard at work on
the new book, but that he expected
to spend years on it in order to
coyer the field adequately.
He
said that he had undertaken the
work under the authorization of
Mr. Granberry, literary executor
of the Allen estate, and had access to all the private papers, letters and other personal data left
by James Lane Allen.
Professor Knight, while in the
university,
published
"Superlatives" and another volume entitled,
"Readings From the American
Mercury."

DOCTOR

M'VEY

MAKES ADDRESS
President Speaks at First Con
vocation of Session ; Stresses
Mission of Education in
Modern Life

PHILOSOPHY

IS

NEEDED

Enrollment Is the Largest in
History of Session; Graduate
School Shows Increase With
190 Matriculated
CLASSES

START ON TTME

President McVey Delivers Welcome Address at First Convocation in Men's Gym
The largest summer school in th
history of the universitv starts!
Tuesday with a total of 1,018 studentsregistered and nearly 100 others expected to matriculate by today.
Registration for the summer term
began Monday and the first classes
met at 7:30 o'clock Tuesdav morning
All classes were dismissed at 10:30
Tuesday to attend the first convoca
tion of the session which was held
in the men's gymnasium with Presi
dent McVey as the principal speaker.
ine graduate school of the university has enrolled 190 students for the
summer session, the largest number
recorded in that school. Four years
ago, only 25 students were members
of the graduate schooL
Monday marked the opening dav of
a conference for teachers of vocation
al education, which is conducted in
connection with the summer schooL
One hundred men are in attendance
at the conference which will last two
weeks. Dr. Theodore H. Eaton and
Dr R. M. Stewart, of Cornell Uni
versity, are the special instructors
conducting this work.
Registration was conducted in a
regular and systematic manner and
by 5 o'clock Monday afternoon 936
had placed their names on the university roster. The greater part of the
registration work was carried fon in
the Administration building where as
sistants, employed by the registrar's
office, conducted the students to the
various stations. Classification was
made in the men's gym on Euclid ave- -

Stressing the need of a philosophy
to collect into one complete whole the diverse and complex
parts of modern life, Dr. Frank L.
McVey told summer school students
at the first convocation of th$ summer
school session held Tuesday morning
in the men's gym, that the supplying
of this philosophy was the real mission of education today.
An unusually large number of students and faculty members attended
the convocation, the number being esie.
timated at one thousand. Dean W. S.
Officers of the summer session are
Taylor, director of the summer pleased with nrosDects and nredict one
school, presided and made several an of the beat summer schools
in the
nouncements pertaining to the sum- history of the university.
mer session. The Rev. Roy Parkins
pronounced the invocation and bene
diction. Prof. C. A. Lampert, head
of the music department, entertained
Rating"
Achieves
the assembly with several violin
Dig enough

Military Department
High

solos.
s
In the course
speech, Presi
dent McVey enumerated many recent
developments
along scientific lines.
The province of education, according
to Doctor McVey, is to reconstruct and
clarify the
flood of
new knowledge fast enough to allow
persons to assimilate and use It in
solving the varied problems of modern
life,

Healthiest Boy and
Girl Have High Scores
Junior Week Winners Will Rep
resent Kentucky at Chicago
in December

Is Made Editor

Miss Katherine Whitmer, of South
Carrollton, and John Cook Wilson, of
E. T. Higgins, U. K. Graduate, Princeton, wpp the junior club health
to Edit Richmond Paper
contest at junior week, June 11, and
the Tight to represent Kentucky at
Edgar T: fiiggn, who was gradu? the national health contest in Chicago
ated from the "university, jn. the class next December.
of 1927 at; the Jast cpmm.en,cpinent,
Both champions scored 96. Both
has been made editor of the student lost two points for never having been
publication at the Eastern State treated with
while
Teachers College, Richmond,
Miss Whitmer suffered the loss of two
Since his graduation from the uni- more points by being slightly under-- ,
versity and for the past yean
weight, Mr, Wilson showed a slight
has been a reporter on the nasal defect, which cost him two
staff of the Lexington Herald, He points.
left Tuesday for his home In RichBoth winners look the picture of
mond to assume his duties there,
health, having fair skins, clear eyes,
Mr. Higgins has been engaged In and correct postures.
's
Miss
newspaper work for a number of
n
eyes would add to
years. He Is a member of the local the charm of any movie actress. She
chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon is 12 years old and Wilson is 13.
fraternity.
Johns Hopkins University recently
Football paid the University
refused to accept extension course apPennsylvania in profits a total
plications from a group of persons
$214,956.
they were negroes.
Whit-mer-

--

MORE EXPECTED
TO REGISTER FOR
SUMMER WORK

dark-brow-

Is One of Thirty-Si- x
R. O. T. C.
Units Honored by War

Department

For the second consecutive year,
the military department of the uni
versity has been awarded "distinguished rating" by the war depart
ment of the federal government. Officials of the military department of
the university say that this is the
highest honor that can be conferred
on a Reserved Officers'
Training
Corps.
The University of Kentucky is one
of thirty-si- x
colleges and institutions
to receive this honor. Only fifty per
cent of those colleges having R. O.
T. C. units may be recommended, and

of this number not more that fifty
per cent may be given the rating
Colleges winning the distinguished
rating are entitled to have five per
cent of their advanced course men
designated as honor graduates. The
basis for rating a college is, the support of the R. O. T. C. by the institution and the student body, the efficiency of theoretical instruction and
the efficiency of practical instruction,
ATTENTION, FACULTY
Since the publishing of The Kernel
during the summer session is a new
experiment, it is requested that all
faculty members of the university
who wish to get copies of the paper,
place their subscription with Miss
Carrie Bean at the Campus Book
Store.
The subscription fee is 25
cents for each term. Enough papers
will be placed in the book store for
every one each Friday.
o- -

Yale Seniors Designate Psychology
As Least Useful Subject in College
That psychology is the least useful
college subject and that Mussolini is
the biggest world figure were among

the many interesting facts brought
forth from the seniors at Yale University in an investigation recently
conducted at that institution.
When the Yale seniors, in their recent balloting stopped paying pretty
compliments to each other and began
to express their preferences about
things in general, the results, were
surprising. The most useful subject
which the academic seniors had studied was English; the least, psychology. This will be a blow to certain
pedagogues at universities who have
spent hours and years trying to per- suade the public that psychology is
really important, especially in selling
The Yale seniors were
insurance.
exposed to it and their opinion is
certainly worth something.
Again, the vote was 240-5against
prohibition, which is oddly at variance
5

Answers
o--

If you have some questions which
you think would be of interest to the
student body, mail or bring them to
with Prof. Irving Fisher's statements The Kernel office in the basement of
that students, and especially Yale stu- the Science building.
dents, are overwhelmingly dry.
1. Charles J. Turck, dean of the
Again, as to the biggest world figure College of Law of the university, who
today, the vote was almost unanimous was recently elected president of
for Mussolini. Mr. Coolidge received Centre College. He takes office Seponly 21 votes, barely nosing out H. tember 1.
G. Wells, the historian, who was in
2. William H. Hansen, instructor in
third place with 17.
the department of physical education.
Things equally surprising are to be
3. There are approximately 75,000
found in the vote of the Sheffield sci- volumes in the university library.
entific school seniors.
4. 981 feet.
Here again
Mussolini leads as the biggest world
5. In the corner of the Science
figure. Mr. Coolidge coming in as a building nearest the university librabad third, not being able to defeat ry. There is another one on the EduVenus, who ran second. The most cation building.
useful subject, these students thought
6. Six.
was business law, although English
7. The approximate cost of the uniwas only one vote behind. The fav- versity stadium was $125,000.
orite prose writers were Conrad, Du8. S. A. Boles.
mas and Galsworthy, which seems to
9. Down the slope of the campus in
dispose of the notion that H. L. Menc- front of Mechanical hall which beken had become the god of the college longs to the engineering buildings.
generation, and that in consequence
10. Dr. W. D. Valleau, associate
the ruination of the country may be professor of plant pathology at the
expected at any time.
Experiment station.

-

J
Vm

* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

T?PAGE TWO

the feature at the Ben Ali Theater Robert Ober and Hayden Stevenson.
beginning next Thursday, is the first
Three acts of vodvil complete the
of the second generation of photog- program.
'
raphers, having been a child screen
SUMMER EDITION
star at the age of 3. In the cast are
She "May I have a drink of
Edarwd Everett Horton, Otis Harlan, water?"
The Kentucky Kernel is the official newspaper of the students and alumni
Aileen Manning, Margaret Quinby,
He "Is your throat tender?"
Published every Friday throughout
STRAND THEATER
of the University of Kentucky.
Malcolm Waite, Trixie Frifianza and
She "Don't be sil.'the college year by the student body of the university.
others.
He "You see, I got this from the
"AFRAID TO LOVE"
at Lexington Postoffice as second class mail matter.
Entered
A "funny little fat man with queer lake and the water's a bit rough."
"Afraid to Love," starring Florence
Vidor and Clare Brooks, will be shown paddling feet" was the description
EDITORS
Once there was a big strawberry
for the last time today at the Strand of Otis Hralan as offered by a promiNiel Plummer
nent New York dramatic critic. Oth- that by some oversight got into the
John R. Bullock
Theater.
ers in this cast are Edward Exve bottom of a strawberry box.
ers in the cast are Dolores Del Rio,
Examiner.
"DOWN THE STRETCH"
STAFF
has
The soul of the race tracks
Elizabeth Carter
Theresa NewhofT
Irene Brummett
been captured by King Baggot in the
stirring drama of the turf, "Down the
FOREMAN
BUSINESS MANAGER
producstretch," a Universal-JewDon Grote
tion adapted from Gerald Beaumnot's
James Shropshire
Red Book story, "The Money Rider."
TO STUDENT'S WORK
The picture will be the feature at
SUMMER
the Strand Theater on Saturday.
WELCOME

The Kentucky Kernel

PREVIEWS OF
LOCAL SHOWS

Smart Summer Dresses
New
Hundreds to Select From
Arrivals Daily Values That Defy

B. B. SMITH &

When registration closed
sistent.
Tuesday evening 1,018 students and
matriculated and the registrar's office expected nearly one hundred more
to matriculate before the end of the
week. This enrollment is easily the
largest of any summer school in the
history of the university.
To all who have the best interests
of Kentucky at heart, it is most gratifying "to note the increased interest
being taken in the summer sessions
Considerable
of the university.
shame has been cast on Kentucky in
the past because of her low educational rating. But now the state is
awaiting the dawn of a new day. In
the last few years interest in educational progress has increased many-folso that educational authorities
report that only one state has progressed more along educational lines.
Truly, the hour of dawn is close at
hand, and the work of the university
summer school is aiding in hastening
the glad hour.
To you then who have entered the
portals of the university campus this
summer for the sake of better preparing yourself for life's work, The
Kernel joins with university authorities and Lexingtonians in welcoming
you to Lexington and the Blue Grass
The
as well as to the university.
paper trusts that your stay here will
be enjoyable as well as profitable, and
that you may return to your homes
and occupations better prepared to
g
progress of
aid in the
the commonwealth.
d,

never-ceasin-

The appearance of this issue of The
Kernel marks the first time in the
history of the institution that the pub
lication of the university paper has
been continued during the summer
sessions.
As yet it is impossible to
predict just how successful the venture will be, but the support given by
merchants, faculty and students to
the first issue augurs a rosy outcome.
In undertaking to publish a paper
weekly during the two summer terms,
The Kernel is attempting something
relatively new. At the present time
there ae not a large number of colleges which have summer papers, and
in the South The Kernel is one of the
pioneers in the 'field. Because of this
the s