19370401 1 |
Previous | 1 of 6 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
THE CARDINAL Official Student Publication of University of Louisville VOL. 5. LOUISVILLE, KY., THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1937 NO. 23 Ky. Association Joins School OfDentistry Birthday Activities Hundreds of Alumni of the School of Dentistry and members of the Kentucky State Dental Association will jointly celebrate! Centennial Week from April 4th 1 to the 10th. The Celebration will j be one of the largest of its kind to be held in the City since the days when the American Dental Asso-ciation convened here. Prominent men of the Dental profession have been invited to speak at the Celebration. Among them are Drs. Leroy Miner, dean, Harvard University, School of Dentistry; J. Ben Robinson, dean, University 0 f Maryland, School of Dentistry; U. G. Rick-ert. University of Michigan; L. D. Pankey, Miami, Fla.; B. F. Sapienza, Birmingham, Ala.; Glenn J. Pell, University of In-diana; and Ira G. Nichols, Cham-paign, 111. The Celebration will start Sun-day April 4th, at which time Registration and a meeting of the Board of Trustees will take place at the Brown Hotel: During the first three days of the Centennial Week all activities will be held at t'.e Brown Hotel as well as at the Srhool of Dentistry. The School of Dentistry will play an important part in the joint Celebration of Centennial Week. On Tuesday morning and Wednesday afternoon, April 6th and 7th respectively, there will be talks by members of the fac-ulty of the School of Dentistry and Medicine. Among the facul-ty members to give talks are Drs. W. M. Randell, E. C.Hume, J. L. Selden, H. T. Knighton, A. VI. Homberger, and J. Murray Kins-man. In addition table Clinics will be given by members of the student body in the School of Dentistry. The students who have been selected to give table clinics have been working diligently for the past few months on their respec-tive subject matter. It is ex- Eleven UL Students In New ‘Who’s Who’ In the current issue of “Who’s Who Among American University Students,” which just came off the press, there are sixteen young people recognized for this honor from the State of Kentucky. Of this number, eleven were chosen from the University of Louisville. They are: Willie Ware, Wil-liam Rieger, Thelma Allen, Mel-zar Lowe, Robert N. Kelso, Jr., Stanley Bergmann, Charles ••Graves, Roy Boesser, Ella Garth Choate, Mildred James, and Rob-ert Leopold. Dental Speakers Gather Vniono- those who will address the Dental Centennial sessions ■re (pictured from left to right, top row) Dean Arthur D. Black Northwestern University; Dean J. Ben Robinson,. University or Maryland; Dr. Ira G. Nichols, Champaign, Illinois; Dr l. G. Rickert University of Michigan; Dr. L. D. Pankey, Miami, Honda; (second row) Dean Leroy M. S. Miner. Harvard University: and Dr. Glenn J. Pell, Indiana University. (Insert) Dean John I. O’Rourke of the Dental School. Dr. H. Webster Edits Pamphlets For L. A. College Centennial leaflets about the Liberal Arts College, which will lead the Centennial observance the week of May 9-1 5, are now being prepared under the , direc-tion of Dr. Harvey Webster of the English department. Among the pamphlets, each dealing with some phase of the College, are those of Dean Threl-keld on “Social Activities,” Dean Oppenheimer on “Aims of the College,” Dr. Mallalieu on a “History of the College,” Mr. Stamm on “Vocational Possibili-ties,” and Miss Detc h e n on “What the College Offers High School Graduates.” The Centennial Essay Contest, which closed March 27, is being judged by Prentiss Terry, treasur-er of the University, Morton Levinstein, instructor in Advertis-ing in the D. A. E., and Dr. Webster. Winners of the contest will be announced in the near future. C. I. O. Official Speaks for ASU, Monday, April 5 W. E. Jeffries, official C. I. O. organizer, who organized the re-cent Louisville Textile Mills strike, will speak at a meeting of the A.S.U. in the Alumni Rooms at 12:45 P- m - Monday, April 5. His topic will be “John L. Lewis —Committee for Industrial Or-ganization." On next Friday, April 9th, R. E. Blackwell, Director of Publi-cations, and Robert N. Kelso, Editor of the CARDINAL, will discuss “Administrative Censor-shop” at' a meeting of the A. S. U. The meeting will also be at 12:45 in the Alumni Rooms. Both meetings are open to the public. Thomas Bledsoe, editor of the University and chairman of the A. S. U., will preside at both meetings. These meetings are the second and third in a series of discussions on topics of im-mediate interest to the student body. Weyler Resigns; Grodzins Takes ‘Cardinal’ Post Miss Juanita Weyler, junior in the College of Liberal Arts, re-signed her position as managing editor of THE CARDINAL, Mr. R. E. Blackwell, Director o f Publications, announced Tuesday. Morton Grodzins, member of ! the News Bureau, has been ap-pointed acting manager. Con-firmation of the appointment is expected at the next meeting of the Board of Publications. The new managing editor, who is a graduate of the John Mar-shall High School, Chicago, where he was editor-in-chief of the newspaper, is attending the Uni-versity on a Public Relations Scholarship. He leads the sopho-more class scholastically. Mis: Weyler, who is vice-pre-sident of both the Women’s Ath-letic Association and tne l ard-inalette Club and who last sem-ester was awarded the J. B. Speed Memorial Sop h o more Scholarship, gave finances as tne i veason for her resignation. Players Portray Co-ed Existence In Newest Play bv George Rieger. The University of Louisville Players will present their third production of the season Monday night, April 5, at 8:30 p. m. and again on Tuesday night, I hill ip Barry’s three-act comedy of New England college and sorority life, Spring Dance. 1 Jean Parrish portrays the lead role of Alex, a vital young co-ed intent upon marriage. Opposite her is Livingston Gilbert as Sam, a serious, self-styled unromantic who has a desire to leave Amer-ica for Russia with his pal The Lippincot played by Shirley Mc- Gaughran. The Lippincot is a per-fect portrait of a suave woman-hater. Alex’s roommate Kate is Gilbert Miss Parrish CENTENNIAL FEATURES FOUNDER’S DAY Dedication, Meeting, Saturday, Highlight Of Medical Program An open meeting in the Mem-orial Auditorium and dedication of the new dispensary hospital on Founder’s Day, Saturday, March 3, will culminate the first part of the University’s centennial ob-servance and four days of cele-bration activity by the School of Medicine. Dedication of the dispensary will be held at 9:30 a. m. and the speakers for the occasion will be President R. A. Kent, Mayor Neville Miller and Dr. Hugh Rodman Leavell, Director of Health of Ihe City oi Louisville. An inspection of the building will be followed at 12:30 by lunch-eon at the Louisville City- Hos-pital. The new dispensary, an annex to the City Hospital, will house the Medical school's fourteen clinics an and laboratories which were formerly in the basement of the hospital. A gaStroscopic clinic will be installed in connec-tion with the medical clinic. The new gasiroscope, an instrument used to examine the stomach through the throat is the first to be placed in a Kentucky hospital. Dr. John Walker Moore, Oean of the School of Medicine and chief of staff of the City Hospi-tal announced that for the first time there will be a full time dental interne in attendance at the new five chair Dental Clinic which will make for greater co-operation between the- Hospital and the Dental School and an in-crease of service to the public. Dr. Simon Flexner, Director Emeritus of the Rockefeller In-stitute of Medical Research and l>r. r iexner Dean Moore Blackwell Asks For N.Y.A. Time Sheets Mr. R. E. Blackwell, Director of the N. Y. A., requests of all students now working on N. Y. A. that their time sheets be hand-ed in to him at the latest by Monday, April 5. This will not only help keep the records clear but also facili-tate the payment of salaries for the current month, Mr. Black-well said. (Continued on page 6) (Continued on page 6) (Continued on page 6)
Object Description
Title | The Cardinal, April 1, 1937. |
Volume | 5 |
Issue | 23 |
Description | The University of Louisville’s undergraduate newspaper. The title of this publication has varied over the years, but with the exception of the period 1928-1930, when it was known as the U. of L. News, the title has always been a variation of The Cardinal. |
Subject |
Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals University of Louisville--Students--Periodicals |
Date Original | 1937-04-01 |
Object Type | Newspapers |
Source | Scanned from microfilm in the Louisville Cardinal newspapers collection. Item Number ULUA Cardinal 19370401 |
Citation Information | See https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/description/collection/cardinal#conditions for guidance on citing this item. To cite the digital version, add its Reference URL (found by following the link in the header above the digital file) |
Collection | Louisville Cardinal Newspapers Collection |
Collection Website | https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/cardinal |
Digital Publisher | University of Louisville Archives and Special Collections |
Date Digital | 2019-02-04 |
Format | application/pdf |
Ordering Information | To inquire about reproductions, permissions, or for information about prices see: http://library.louisville.edu/archives/order. Please cite the Image Number when ordering. |
Image Number | ULUA Cardinal 19370401 |
Rating |
Description
Title | 19370401 1 |
Full Text | THE CARDINAL Official Student Publication of University of Louisville VOL. 5. LOUISVILLE, KY., THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1937 NO. 23 Ky. Association Joins School OfDentistry Birthday Activities Hundreds of Alumni of the School of Dentistry and members of the Kentucky State Dental Association will jointly celebrate! Centennial Week from April 4th 1 to the 10th. The Celebration will j be one of the largest of its kind to be held in the City since the days when the American Dental Asso-ciation convened here. Prominent men of the Dental profession have been invited to speak at the Celebration. Among them are Drs. Leroy Miner, dean, Harvard University, School of Dentistry; J. Ben Robinson, dean, University 0 f Maryland, School of Dentistry; U. G. Rick-ert. University of Michigan; L. D. Pankey, Miami, Fla.; B. F. Sapienza, Birmingham, Ala.; Glenn J. Pell, University of In-diana; and Ira G. Nichols, Cham-paign, 111. The Celebration will start Sun-day April 4th, at which time Registration and a meeting of the Board of Trustees will take place at the Brown Hotel: During the first three days of the Centennial Week all activities will be held at t'.e Brown Hotel as well as at the Srhool of Dentistry. The School of Dentistry will play an important part in the joint Celebration of Centennial Week. On Tuesday morning and Wednesday afternoon, April 6th and 7th respectively, there will be talks by members of the fac-ulty of the School of Dentistry and Medicine. Among the facul-ty members to give talks are Drs. W. M. Randell, E. C.Hume, J. L. Selden, H. T. Knighton, A. VI. Homberger, and J. Murray Kins-man. In addition table Clinics will be given by members of the student body in the School of Dentistry. The students who have been selected to give table clinics have been working diligently for the past few months on their respec-tive subject matter. It is ex- Eleven UL Students In New ‘Who’s Who’ In the current issue of “Who’s Who Among American University Students,” which just came off the press, there are sixteen young people recognized for this honor from the State of Kentucky. Of this number, eleven were chosen from the University of Louisville. They are: Willie Ware, Wil-liam Rieger, Thelma Allen, Mel-zar Lowe, Robert N. Kelso, Jr., Stanley Bergmann, Charles ••Graves, Roy Boesser, Ella Garth Choate, Mildred James, and Rob-ert Leopold. Dental Speakers Gather Vniono- those who will address the Dental Centennial sessions ■re (pictured from left to right, top row) Dean Arthur D. Black Northwestern University; Dean J. Ben Robinson,. University or Maryland; Dr. Ira G. Nichols, Champaign, Illinois; Dr l. G. Rickert University of Michigan; Dr. L. D. Pankey, Miami, Honda; (second row) Dean Leroy M. S. Miner. Harvard University: and Dr. Glenn J. Pell, Indiana University. (Insert) Dean John I. O’Rourke of the Dental School. Dr. H. Webster Edits Pamphlets For L. A. College Centennial leaflets about the Liberal Arts College, which will lead the Centennial observance the week of May 9-1 5, are now being prepared under the , direc-tion of Dr. Harvey Webster of the English department. Among the pamphlets, each dealing with some phase of the College, are those of Dean Threl-keld on “Social Activities,” Dean Oppenheimer on “Aims of the College,” Dr. Mallalieu on a “History of the College,” Mr. Stamm on “Vocational Possibili-ties,” and Miss Detc h e n on “What the College Offers High School Graduates.” The Centennial Essay Contest, which closed March 27, is being judged by Prentiss Terry, treasur-er of the University, Morton Levinstein, instructor in Advertis-ing in the D. A. E., and Dr. Webster. Winners of the contest will be announced in the near future. C. I. O. Official Speaks for ASU, Monday, April 5 W. E. Jeffries, official C. I. O. organizer, who organized the re-cent Louisville Textile Mills strike, will speak at a meeting of the A.S.U. in the Alumni Rooms at 12:45 P- m - Monday, April 5. His topic will be “John L. Lewis —Committee for Industrial Or-ganization." On next Friday, April 9th, R. E. Blackwell, Director of Publi-cations, and Robert N. Kelso, Editor of the CARDINAL, will discuss “Administrative Censor-shop” at' a meeting of the A. S. U. The meeting will also be at 12:45 in the Alumni Rooms. Both meetings are open to the public. Thomas Bledsoe, editor of the University and chairman of the A. S. U., will preside at both meetings. These meetings are the second and third in a series of discussions on topics of im-mediate interest to the student body. Weyler Resigns; Grodzins Takes ‘Cardinal’ Post Miss Juanita Weyler, junior in the College of Liberal Arts, re-signed her position as managing editor of THE CARDINAL, Mr. R. E. Blackwell, Director o f Publications, announced Tuesday. Morton Grodzins, member of ! the News Bureau, has been ap-pointed acting manager. Con-firmation of the appointment is expected at the next meeting of the Board of Publications. The new managing editor, who is a graduate of the John Mar-shall High School, Chicago, where he was editor-in-chief of the newspaper, is attending the Uni-versity on a Public Relations Scholarship. He leads the sopho-more class scholastically. Mis: Weyler, who is vice-pre-sident of both the Women’s Ath-letic Association and tne l ard-inalette Club and who last sem-ester was awarded the J. B. Speed Memorial Sop h o more Scholarship, gave finances as tne i veason for her resignation. Players Portray Co-ed Existence In Newest Play bv George Rieger. The University of Louisville Players will present their third production of the season Monday night, April 5, at 8:30 p. m. and again on Tuesday night, I hill ip Barry’s three-act comedy of New England college and sorority life, Spring Dance. 1 Jean Parrish portrays the lead role of Alex, a vital young co-ed intent upon marriage. Opposite her is Livingston Gilbert as Sam, a serious, self-styled unromantic who has a desire to leave Amer-ica for Russia with his pal The Lippincot played by Shirley Mc- Gaughran. The Lippincot is a per-fect portrait of a suave woman-hater. Alex’s roommate Kate is Gilbert Miss Parrish CENTENNIAL FEATURES FOUNDER’S DAY Dedication, Meeting, Saturday, Highlight Of Medical Program An open meeting in the Mem-orial Auditorium and dedication of the new dispensary hospital on Founder’s Day, Saturday, March 3, will culminate the first part of the University’s centennial ob-servance and four days of cele-bration activity by the School of Medicine. Dedication of the dispensary will be held at 9:30 a. m. and the speakers for the occasion will be President R. A. Kent, Mayor Neville Miller and Dr. Hugh Rodman Leavell, Director of Health of Ihe City oi Louisville. An inspection of the building will be followed at 12:30 by lunch-eon at the Louisville City- Hos-pital. The new dispensary, an annex to the City Hospital, will house the Medical school's fourteen clinics an and laboratories which were formerly in the basement of the hospital. A gaStroscopic clinic will be installed in connec-tion with the medical clinic. The new gasiroscope, an instrument used to examine the stomach through the throat is the first to be placed in a Kentucky hospital. Dr. John Walker Moore, Oean of the School of Medicine and chief of staff of the City Hospi-tal announced that for the first time there will be a full time dental interne in attendance at the new five chair Dental Clinic which will make for greater co-operation between the- Hospital and the Dental School and an in-crease of service to the public. Dr. Simon Flexner, Director Emeritus of the Rockefeller In-stitute of Medical Research and l>r. r iexner Dean Moore Blackwell Asks For N.Y.A. Time Sheets Mr. R. E. Blackwell, Director of the N. Y. A., requests of all students now working on N. Y. A. that their time sheets be hand-ed in to him at the latest by Monday, April 5. This will not only help keep the records clear but also facili-tate the payment of salaries for the current month, Mr. Black-well said. (Continued on page 6) (Continued on page 6) (Continued on page 6) |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for 19370401 1