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' .. 155 ':,velynJ. ch'1:d.~Hc . E CARDINAL. 2207 Alta Ave· . ~ Loui sville 5 , Ky. CLASSIFIED ADS ARE ON PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE'S OFFICIAL WEEKLY PUBLICATION VOL. XXII Dot Bridgewater Selected New Editor of Year Book • Dot Bridgewater, a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences, has been named Editor-in-Chief of the Thoroughbred for 1950-51. The appointment was made last May by the Board of Student Publications. Maurice Trautwein, a junior pre-law student, was named Thoroughbred Business Manager for this year. Last year Dot held the position of Photo Editor of the Thoroughbred. She is a member of Chi Omega Sorority and Mortar Board. A graduate of Shawnee High School, she is majoring in political science at the University. Trautwein, a graduate of Jeffersontown High School, was Sports Editor of the Thoroughbred last year. He is a member of Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity. The new editor and business manager fill the vacancies created by Kay Hardy, Editor-in-Chief, and Dick Barnett, Business Mana-ger of the 1949-50 Thoroughbred. Other members of the new editorial staff of the 1950-51 Thoroughbred are as follows: Nancy Schikli, Art Editor; Julian Klapheke, Activities Editor; Peggy Moll and Carol Stiebling, Co-Feature Editors; Marlyn jeppson Organizations Editor; Ted Guiglia, Sports Edit&; and Eva McGough, Office Manager. The Schools Editors are: Lawrence Tobe, Arts and Sciences; Bob Edwards, Speed; George Gilson, Music; Bill Burbank, Law; and Clint Borders, Medical. The Editors for Dental School, Kent School and Division of Adult Education have not yet been selected. - ( C~rdi,;;;l 'photo by Elrod MAURICE TRAUTWEIN AND DOT BRIDGEWATER Business Manager and Editor-in-Chief of the Tho_roughbred U of L Representatives Attend Student Congress By BETTY THOMPSON Do you know anything about. the United States National Stu· dent Association? This is the firs!: in a series of features on the• organization and its annual con· gress that will be published in The Cardinal this year. The University of Louisville is a paying member of the group. You as a student should know something about it. The Korean War, academic freedom, discrimination and individual campus problems were among the issues discussed at the Third Congress of the National Student Association which was attended by four U of L students this summer. Jim Bowling, Frank Grdnic, Chet Hall and Betty Thompson. traveled to Ann Arbor, Michigan on August 23 to represent the student body at this annual con·· vention of NSA, the only national. student government organization in America. The delegation was elected by the USC last spring. Academic: Freedom Discussed During the ten days of the con-· gress the U of L students learned. about the student governments and campus activities; they discussed problems of the different types and size co~eges and gathered ideas for proJects to be started here. . They also spent many hours. m sessions discussing and passmg resolutions on important world and college affairs that eve!?' st.u dent body should have a vo1ce m. ference on discFiminatien and to offer its fullest cooperation. They also urged NSA member schools to estab'tish through their student governments campuswide human relations programs directed toward better intergroup understanding through the expansion of informal social contact. These situations and many more were discussed at the congress by the 600 students present. But more important to the U of L student may be the campus projects worked out in the smaller committees. They will be discussed in next week's Cardinal. Any student who is interested in the organization, its projects or in joining the NSA committee . of the University Student Council should contact one of the four U of L delegates at the USC Office or at their homes. Free Tickets For Students Taking 12 Hrs. All students in Arts and Sciences, Law and Speed School who· carry at least twelve hours are entitled to tickets for all athletic events. S o m e Music School students are also eligible. This information was released by the ticket sales office. Again this year the Identification Cards which students had made at registration time will be necessary to purchase tickets. Although seven hundred of the ID cards failed to take, there are no serious difficulties involved in purchasing athletic tickets, since the next home game will be October 28, before which time the pictures for the ID cards can be retaken. Each student will be entitled to one student ticket, and has the option of purchasing a guest ticket for one dollar. This year the student sections have been moved from the North to the South stands. Sections four, five, six, seven, eight and parts of one and two have been reserved for the students. Boxes E and F (seats 45 through 88) have also been reserved. Cincy Tick"ets Available Section three has been set aside for Medical, Dental, DAE students, employees, and faculty. The Medical and Dental students can pick up their tickets in the Medical Bookstore. Part-time students, employees, and faculty members may pay five dollars for ticket privileges to the football and basketball games with the guest ticket privilege mentioned above. Those desiring the ticket privilege will present a receipt for five dollars from the Cashier at the Registrar's office where they will have their picture made. A point to be stressed is the fact that in no case can tickets be secured on the day of the game. Tickets for out-of-town games are purchased at Room llO of the Naval Science Building. Tickets for the Cincinnati game, scheduled for October 7, 8:30, •at Cincinnati are now on sale at $2.50 a reserve seat. AAUP Selects New Officers for Year The University of Louisville branch of the American Association of University Professors held its first meeting of the new term in the Jefferson Room on Oct. 2. The purpose of the meeting was to elect new officers. They are as follows: Dr. Donald M. Bennett of the Physics Department, president; Dr. Lawrence Howe, History Department, vice-president; Dr. Paul Bowman, Psychology Department, secretary; and Mr. Gilbert Ohlmann, English, treasurer. Drs. Warwick and Kutak were selected as members of the executive committee. Among the world situations passed on by the congress delegates was the Korean ~ar. The· group reaffirmed the Umted Na-· tions position and urged the US Government to continue its sup port of the organization. The students also passed a reso ltition on academic freedom. The)l· stated that the purpose of a uni·· versity is "to perpetuate and en .. large the sum total of h~ll!l· 'lo.Owledge, to cultivate a spll"lt ' 0f continuing inquiry, and to - ( Cantbual photo b11 l'lrod EDWINA CRUME AND BOB SHELLMAN talk to Brigadier General Darid Sarnoff after be wu gina &D honorary degree of Doctor of Hum&De LeHers at a conTocation held lut week. serve as a matrix for participatio in the processes of democracy .. "One medium through wh1c the university fulfills this pur• pose is vigorous discussion of controversial questions." NSA, then reaffim1ed its belief in the con~pt of unqualified academic freedom. Another of the biggest issueS of the meet was that of discrimination in sehools of hijber education. NSA has always atood for the elimination of all cliscriminallld individual campus eomof the or1anization bave much to forward this ainL , Louisville Orchestra Annual Ticket Campaig!l Ends Today School Work Too Tough? Maybe ·you Should Join Some Fraternity, Buddy By EMIL AUN There is one advantage in belonging to a fraternity or a sorority which hardly ever gets any mention. During rush, nobody tells the rushees that a person joining a Greek letter organization also gets to utilize the school work of that organization's brightest students. They never hear about the "filing system" until later. It is always overlooked in the sales talk. It gets lost in the rush, so to speak. But every year, the filing system is serving a more important function in the school lives of fraternity and "sorority members. Sometimes this function is good but sometimes it is questionable. Suppose a fraternity man majoring in biology doesn't want to bother his brains about an English assignment. If his organization boasts of any kind of efficiency, it is possible for him to go to its files, pick out a high-grade English theme, and turn it in as his own work. He can work this game in almost any subject, and if he wants to, can make a lot of his college work the easiest job in the world. Actually, the primary purpose • of this filing system is not to make it easy to cheat, but to furnish members with reference work when they are stuck with a hard assignment. Most members use it for this purpose, and it is a valuable item to have around. Some Files Weak Just recently, one fraternity gave us leave to go through its files. These were housed in a small green filing cabinet, four drawers high. In the bottom drawer we found several folders marked "biology", "English", and so forth, all in alphabetical order. In the Natural Science folder was a set of drawings and answered questions, about two hundred pages in all, complete enough to carry a student clear through N. S. 102 without his doing a single jot of original research. · The biology file carried a fine bunch of embryology drawings, and sever~! stal)dard examina. tions, both subjective and objective, graded, and with the wrong answers clearly marked. There was a long, completed accounting problem in the Econ file marked "A"; an A paper on Thomas Wolfe in the English file along with another on O'Neill; an A paper in political science, and NROTC Entering Sixth Year Here The U of L unit of the NROTC is celebrating its fifth anniversary this year. Established in July of 1946, with the expiration of the V-12 officer procurement program here, the NROTC has organized a thorough naval training plan and extracurricular activities program. Divided into two companies, Speed School and Arts and Sciences, the unit is made up of 153 members this year. The companies are staffed by students in their junior or senior year of school and headed by Captain G. C. Gill. The unit graduated its first officers this past school year-two in June; three in August. They were given commissions as ensigns, US Navy, or lieutenants, US Marine Corps. They then begap their fifteen months to two-year tour of active duty. Pistol Matches Coming another in history. The organization also had a fine Speed School file, but they were a little v.eak "in languages. Our guide assured us that this weakness was temporary, as the file was only a little over a year old and ought to improve with age, and besides, a lot of the papers were bE~ ing used at that particular time. It Doesn't Always Work In a conscientious fraternity, one student explained, the files will grow fatter and more complete every semester. To accomplish this, all members should write their themes and term papers in duplicate--one for the teacher, and one for the files, with the final grade marked on it if possible. With exams it is little harder. When the teacher grades and returns it, the student must keep stalling about giving it back until the teacher either demands it or forgets it. Most files do not have a lot of exams, possibly because the teachers have too much stamina or the students not enough. Sometimes funny things happen when students try to use papers for cheating purposes. One fellow got a B on a SWift paper, lent it to a girl, and it got her an A out of another teacher the following semester .. But it doesn't always work out so well. Once, a transfer student put an A philosophy paper he had brought from Cornell into his fraternity :files. A fraternity brother borrowed it for his girl friend who typed it up verbatim before returning it. When she went to class to hand it in, she got in a conversation with a fellow, and it turned out that he also had a verbatim copy of the same paper. To avoid embarrassment, one of them didn't hand in a paper, although I never got it clear whether it was he or she, or how they deCided who wouta get feft The teachers who put a real crimp in these maneuvers are the ones who change assignments every semester. They can render the finest dissertations on one group of subjects obsolete by handing out a new bunch of assignments every semester. ( Ccmtlnued em JICllle 3) Registrc:ation Down From '4~9 Figures; A & S Hit Hardest University .. wide registration figures for the fall semester came to a total o:E 5,1 90, according to Mr. John M.· Houchens, Registrar. This total is independent of Speed School which registered Monday. Registration in the Collge of Arts and Sciences dropped to I, 769 from an all-time high of 2,251 last fall. The decline is attributed in part to a greatly decreased number of veterans. Registration in other colleges is: Law, 187; DAE, 1,948; Medical School, 377; Kent, 79 ; Dental School, 236; Music, 97; LMC, 182; Graduate, 315. Compared to last year's enrollment, Kent School has more than doubled in si,ze, and LMC has fallen to a littloe better than half its 1949 status - (Cardinal photo by FoTd . THESE GOODLOOKING GIRLS will be giving their all for Pop Martin starting Monday, Oct. 9. That's when Martin's Little Theatre group will open the current ·season with Fay Kanin's "Goodbye. My Fancy.'' The play. a smash Broadway hit, will run four nights. The girls, all members of the cast. are, frorn left to right, Annette Lillard, Francis Vick. Barbara Dearing, Shirley Pontrich, and Chris Hassold. ~ Trade-Economics Co~[trse Being Offered This ~erm In order to meet the increased interest and enrollment of students in courses of modern trade, transportatiorr, and traffic principles, the Transportation Club of Louisville, in cooperation with Division of Adult Education, is sponsoring a new course in International Trade-Economics A43l. The class is taught by C. Y. Du Pont, manager of Universal Carloading and Distributing Company, and meets from 8 to 9:50pm every Friday. Mr. Du Pont is a member of the forum committee of the Transportation Club. The new transportation course will provide a thorough study of shipments destined for foreign commerce from the time they are manufactured until they arrive at their destinations. Other Subjects Cheerleaders Elected Today Six freshmen, 3 boys and 3 girls, will be elected in open competition at noon today for the new Freshmen Cheerleading Squad. One male Sophomore, Junior, or Senior will be elected at the same time to fill the single vacancy in the Varsity Cheerleading Squad. All who are eligible and interested will try out at noon. Each contestant will lead one cheer. The contest will be judged by a group of the faculty. The tryouts will be held on the Belknap quadrangle in front of the Administration Building. In case of bad weather a substitute location will be announced over the public address system Friday morning. Tf'llining dasses for contestants have been conducted by the members of thi! varsity cheerleading squad at the gym this past week. Kanin Comedy To Be Given In Playhouse By JIM O'LEARY Fay Kanin's Gooddbye My Fancy will make its Louisville debut as the Little Theater's opening production at the P layhouse on Oct. 9. The comedy was a smash hit on Broadway and one of the "ten best" of the 1948-49 season. It concerns the triangle that forms when a successful Congresswoman returns to her alma mater to find two old beausone a photographer, covering her story for "Life" magazine, and the other a college president who welcomes her back. The play somewhat resembles James Thurber's "The Male Animal" in its treatment of a triangle and conflicting campus ideologies. As a tract on campus personalities and situations, it should have more than average appeal to college students. Beginning on Monday, the play will run for four days, curtain time at 8:30. U of L students who appeared at the tryouts and won parts in "Goodbye My Fancy" are Cris Hassold, Barbara Dearing, George Morrison, Wesley Gunther, Annette L i 11 a r d, and Elizabeth Hoerth. Bob Richmond, also a student, is holder of the book. Graduates who have been cast for the play are Mrs. C. Robert Weiller, Mrs. Louis Stark, and George Williams. Boyd Martin, director of the Little Theater Company is very anxious to have more student participation in the Playhouse. He says: "The main thing I would like to get. over to · the readers of the Cardinal is that the Little Theater Company is the development of a practically resident company on the campus and that the purpose is to produce dramas which Louisville would have to forego without such a company." Other plays of the season will be The Heiress, The S i 1 v e r Whistle. Disraeli, and one other not yet chosen. Season coupons for the Playhouse productions are available to all students of the Kentuckiana area, except those enrolled in the adult education courses, at the rates of $2.50 a book. These students ·coupons are reduced from the regular price of $tr.50 and must be exchanged for reserved seats before every performance. Methods in foreign sales; export markings, packing and invoicing; foreign collections and financing; ocean rates' and transportation; steamer space; export licensing; dock receipts; delivery of cargo to steamship; consular documents; ocean bills of lading; marine insurance and the value of exports and imports to our national economy are to be analyzed and studied. Other courses sponsored by the Transportation Club are Fundamentals of Transportation, in which is included a study of transportation fac ~ lities, functions, and working pr cedure of industrial, railroad, and motor truck traffic; and Rates and Tariffs, a study of tariffs and checking of rates with actual work in tariffs constituting the major part of the course. Two New Women Join ~hysica~~ Education Staff Two Hour Course Commerce Law, a course'""designed especially for laymen and those who seek knowledge in the field of laws governing transportation; Practice and Procedure before the Interstate Commerce Commission, a study of commission investigations and suspensions, hearings, briefs, reports and petitions are also being offered. This course offers an opportunity for classroom practicing in the conduct of hypothetical law cases. All transportation courses are two hour subjects and offer certificates upon their sucessful completion. The instructors are men whose experience in their fields has placed them on the educational committee of the Transportation Club. B·y GEORGE MORRISON - (Cardinal photo bl/ Wilaon. JEAN APENZEL.LAR J oining the Physical Education staff this fall will be Miss Eleanor Morrison. Miss Morrison comes to U of L from Illinois State Normal School, where she received her Master's Degree in Physical Education. While on the faculty Miss Morrison expects to teach major intramural sports to girls, as well as classes necessary toward the BS in Physical Education. She is also interested in camp counselling, having made this her main interest in her own college career. She expresses some hope that she will be able to teach the course offered here in camp counseling. Among the extra-curricular activities of the organization are football, the Eagle and Anchor Club and a navy rifle team. The unit's football is entered in the independent division of intramural sports and competes with the other teams in the'league. Mademoiselle And Vogue Magazines Offer Positions On College Boord Staff Another new member of the faculty is Miss Jean Apenzellar. Her appointment to the Physical Education department as instructor marks Miss Apenzt!llar's iirst trip to Kentucky. The duties which Miss Apenzellar will fulfill are teaching Major Sports to freshmen girls and conducting a class in first aid. She too is interestE~d in camp counseling, as she was the head counselor at a private camp in Maine between semest,ers for six years. Miss Morrison lives in Cincinnati where she got most vf her education. She received her BS in Physical Education at the University of Cincinnati in 1941, after which she taught a year in the Cincinnati High Schools and six years in College of Mt. St. Joseph on the Ohio, also of Cincinnati. Miss Morrison is equipped to teach General Science and English as well as Physical Education on the High School level. Miss Morrison is completely new to Louisville, having paid her first visit here last June while investigating the possibilities of the job she now holds in the Athletic Department. When asked what she thought of our fair city, she said, "The traffic situation is terrible, but otherwise, I'm favorably impressed." She now resides at 1816 Stevens Ave. The rifle team, a new activity to be offered to mid-shipmen this year, is arranging a series of postal matches with other unit teams. They will shoot in the newly com· pleted rifle range in the basement of the Naval Science Building. A prospective candidate for the NROTC program must fill out an application, pass an aptitude test given in December and a physical examination. The State Selec· tion Committee makes the final appointments. · Applications for the fall term of 1951 can be picked up in the Naval Science Office on the first floor of the NS Building. Lit Club Planned Dr. Ernest C. Husold has inVited all Enllish majors to attend a meetinl today to ~Net the foreip students llld new majors and · ten them about student activities. &.old also waD&!! to ctt.cusa the polliblUty of formiDI an _,tab CIAb Gil eampua. II~ Is 1100D ID tbe Womaaa's ~ By TIM L. BORNSTEIN The editors of "Mademoiselle" are interested in a number of outstanding undergraduate young women for their annual College B o a r d Contest. Those who have especial interests and talents in one of the following fields: art, fiction , J~eature writing, fashions, merch dising or sales promotions. If selecte you will receive three assignments for y o u r ' speciality, a chance at one of the ten cash prizes for each special field, a lett,~r of recomendation to assist yo11. in securing a better job, and finally an opportunity for the gra l:t prize. Available to the twenty top contestants, he grand prize is a full, salari month in New York City, during which you help compose the August, college issue. If interested ir1 entering this conest, you must fill out a data sheet and • mail it with a small snapshot to the College Board Editor of ''llademoiaelle" before November 1, 11150. You can obtain fw1ber jnformation about the data sheet &Dd the contest in Dea.n Threlkeld office. oertme•s a-wastin'," so inquire now. Another opportunity for a writing position with one of the nation's leading fashion magazines is offered by the editors of "Vqgue". This career contest is open to senior college women working toward a Bachelor's Degree only, and is in the nature of two quizzes of four questions each. The first set of four questions was printed in the August issue of "Vogue", and the second will be printed in the forthcoming November issue. Should you do well with these two quizzes an opportunity will be given you to write a thesis on an editorial or merchandising problem. The first prize for this 16th an· nual contest will be a full year, with a full salary, as a junior editor for "Vogue". Six months of the year will be in New York and the other months will be in gay Paris, with all expenses paid. The HCOild place award is a six months job with "Vope" at full salary. If additional information is desired of this contat, inquiry may be made iD Dean Threlkeld's offtce also. Miss Apenzellar was born in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, where she attended Wilson College. She received an AB in English there in 1947, as she wished to gain a liberal education before concentrating on her major field. In 1949 she received her MS in Physical Education at the Uni· versity ·of Wisconsin. Last year Miss Apenzellar was instructor in Physical Education at College of Wooste Wooster, Ohio. When the opport nity came to transfer to the m ch larger University of Louisvill ~ she took it. Miss Apenzellar is ,;•ery inter· ested in the NSA, and "' desirous of seeing an honor s· stem en-acted on campus. Sb~e 1 oted that her experience at w· College . indicated that a heal r atmo.- phere is produeed w a atu- .dent can ~ to sease of .
Object Description
Title | The Cardinal, October 6, 1950. |
Volume | XXII |
Issue | 2 |
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 | 1950-10-06 |
Object Type | Newspapers |
Source | Scanned from microfilm in the Louisville Cardinal newspapers collection. Item Number ULUA Cardinal 19501006 |
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 | 2019-01-30 |
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 19501006 |
Rating |
Description
Title | 19501006 1 |
Full Text | ' .. 155 ':,velynJ. ch'1:d.~Hc . E CARDINAL. 2207 Alta Ave· . ~ Loui sville 5 , Ky. CLASSIFIED ADS ARE ON PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE'S OFFICIAL WEEKLY PUBLICATION VOL. XXII Dot Bridgewater Selected New Editor of Year Book • Dot Bridgewater, a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences, has been named Editor-in-Chief of the Thoroughbred for 1950-51. The appointment was made last May by the Board of Student Publications. Maurice Trautwein, a junior pre-law student, was named Thoroughbred Business Manager for this year. Last year Dot held the position of Photo Editor of the Thoroughbred. She is a member of Chi Omega Sorority and Mortar Board. A graduate of Shawnee High School, she is majoring in political science at the University. Trautwein, a graduate of Jeffersontown High School, was Sports Editor of the Thoroughbred last year. He is a member of Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity. The new editor and business manager fill the vacancies created by Kay Hardy, Editor-in-Chief, and Dick Barnett, Business Mana-ger of the 1949-50 Thoroughbred. Other members of the new editorial staff of the 1950-51 Thoroughbred are as follows: Nancy Schikli, Art Editor; Julian Klapheke, Activities Editor; Peggy Moll and Carol Stiebling, Co-Feature Editors; Marlyn jeppson Organizations Editor; Ted Guiglia, Sports Edit&; and Eva McGough, Office Manager. The Schools Editors are: Lawrence Tobe, Arts and Sciences; Bob Edwards, Speed; George Gilson, Music; Bill Burbank, Law; and Clint Borders, Medical. The Editors for Dental School, Kent School and Division of Adult Education have not yet been selected. - ( C~rdi,;;;l 'photo by Elrod MAURICE TRAUTWEIN AND DOT BRIDGEWATER Business Manager and Editor-in-Chief of the Tho_roughbred U of L Representatives Attend Student Congress By BETTY THOMPSON Do you know anything about. the United States National Stu· dent Association? This is the firs!: in a series of features on the• organization and its annual con· gress that will be published in The Cardinal this year. The University of Louisville is a paying member of the group. You as a student should know something about it. The Korean War, academic freedom, discrimination and individual campus problems were among the issues discussed at the Third Congress of the National Student Association which was attended by four U of L students this summer. Jim Bowling, Frank Grdnic, Chet Hall and Betty Thompson. traveled to Ann Arbor, Michigan on August 23 to represent the student body at this annual con·· vention of NSA, the only national. student government organization in America. The delegation was elected by the USC last spring. Academic: Freedom Discussed During the ten days of the con-· gress the U of L students learned. about the student governments and campus activities; they discussed problems of the different types and size co~eges and gathered ideas for proJects to be started here. . They also spent many hours. m sessions discussing and passmg resolutions on important world and college affairs that eve!?' st.u dent body should have a vo1ce m. ference on discFiminatien and to offer its fullest cooperation. They also urged NSA member schools to estab'tish through their student governments campuswide human relations programs directed toward better intergroup understanding through the expansion of informal social contact. These situations and many more were discussed at the congress by the 600 students present. But more important to the U of L student may be the campus projects worked out in the smaller committees. They will be discussed in next week's Cardinal. Any student who is interested in the organization, its projects or in joining the NSA committee . of the University Student Council should contact one of the four U of L delegates at the USC Office or at their homes. Free Tickets For Students Taking 12 Hrs. All students in Arts and Sciences, Law and Speed School who· carry at least twelve hours are entitled to tickets for all athletic events. S o m e Music School students are also eligible. This information was released by the ticket sales office. Again this year the Identification Cards which students had made at registration time will be necessary to purchase tickets. Although seven hundred of the ID cards failed to take, there are no serious difficulties involved in purchasing athletic tickets, since the next home game will be October 28, before which time the pictures for the ID cards can be retaken. Each student will be entitled to one student ticket, and has the option of purchasing a guest ticket for one dollar. This year the student sections have been moved from the North to the South stands. Sections four, five, six, seven, eight and parts of one and two have been reserved for the students. Boxes E and F (seats 45 through 88) have also been reserved. Cincy Tick"ets Available Section three has been set aside for Medical, Dental, DAE students, employees, and faculty. The Medical and Dental students can pick up their tickets in the Medical Bookstore. Part-time students, employees, and faculty members may pay five dollars for ticket privileges to the football and basketball games with the guest ticket privilege mentioned above. Those desiring the ticket privilege will present a receipt for five dollars from the Cashier at the Registrar's office where they will have their picture made. A point to be stressed is the fact that in no case can tickets be secured on the day of the game. Tickets for out-of-town games are purchased at Room llO of the Naval Science Building. Tickets for the Cincinnati game, scheduled for October 7, 8:30, •at Cincinnati are now on sale at $2.50 a reserve seat. AAUP Selects New Officers for Year The University of Louisville branch of the American Association of University Professors held its first meeting of the new term in the Jefferson Room on Oct. 2. The purpose of the meeting was to elect new officers. They are as follows: Dr. Donald M. Bennett of the Physics Department, president; Dr. Lawrence Howe, History Department, vice-president; Dr. Paul Bowman, Psychology Department, secretary; and Mr. Gilbert Ohlmann, English, treasurer. Drs. Warwick and Kutak were selected as members of the executive committee. Among the world situations passed on by the congress delegates was the Korean ~ar. The· group reaffirmed the Umted Na-· tions position and urged the US Government to continue its sup port of the organization. The students also passed a reso ltition on academic freedom. The)l· stated that the purpose of a uni·· versity is "to perpetuate and en .. large the sum total of h~ll!l· 'lo.Owledge, to cultivate a spll"lt ' 0f continuing inquiry, and to - ( Cantbual photo b11 l'lrod EDWINA CRUME AND BOB SHELLMAN talk to Brigadier General Darid Sarnoff after be wu gina &D honorary degree of Doctor of Hum&De LeHers at a conTocation held lut week. serve as a matrix for participatio in the processes of democracy .. "One medium through wh1c the university fulfills this pur• pose is vigorous discussion of controversial questions." NSA, then reaffim1ed its belief in the con~pt of unqualified academic freedom. Another of the biggest issueS of the meet was that of discrimination in sehools of hijber education. NSA has always atood for the elimination of all cliscriminallld individual campus eomof the or1anization bave much to forward this ainL , Louisville Orchestra Annual Ticket Campaig!l Ends Today School Work Too Tough? Maybe ·you Should Join Some Fraternity, Buddy By EMIL AUN There is one advantage in belonging to a fraternity or a sorority which hardly ever gets any mention. During rush, nobody tells the rushees that a person joining a Greek letter organization also gets to utilize the school work of that organization's brightest students. They never hear about the "filing system" until later. It is always overlooked in the sales talk. It gets lost in the rush, so to speak. But every year, the filing system is serving a more important function in the school lives of fraternity and "sorority members. Sometimes this function is good but sometimes it is questionable. Suppose a fraternity man majoring in biology doesn't want to bother his brains about an English assignment. If his organization boasts of any kind of efficiency, it is possible for him to go to its files, pick out a high-grade English theme, and turn it in as his own work. He can work this game in almost any subject, and if he wants to, can make a lot of his college work the easiest job in the world. Actually, the primary purpose • of this filing system is not to make it easy to cheat, but to furnish members with reference work when they are stuck with a hard assignment. Most members use it for this purpose, and it is a valuable item to have around. Some Files Weak Just recently, one fraternity gave us leave to go through its files. These were housed in a small green filing cabinet, four drawers high. In the bottom drawer we found several folders marked "biology", "English", and so forth, all in alphabetical order. In the Natural Science folder was a set of drawings and answered questions, about two hundred pages in all, complete enough to carry a student clear through N. S. 102 without his doing a single jot of original research. · The biology file carried a fine bunch of embryology drawings, and sever~! stal)dard examina. tions, both subjective and objective, graded, and with the wrong answers clearly marked. There was a long, completed accounting problem in the Econ file marked "A"; an A paper on Thomas Wolfe in the English file along with another on O'Neill; an A paper in political science, and NROTC Entering Sixth Year Here The U of L unit of the NROTC is celebrating its fifth anniversary this year. Established in July of 1946, with the expiration of the V-12 officer procurement program here, the NROTC has organized a thorough naval training plan and extracurricular activities program. Divided into two companies, Speed School and Arts and Sciences, the unit is made up of 153 members this year. The companies are staffed by students in their junior or senior year of school and headed by Captain G. C. Gill. The unit graduated its first officers this past school year-two in June; three in August. They were given commissions as ensigns, US Navy, or lieutenants, US Marine Corps. They then begap their fifteen months to two-year tour of active duty. Pistol Matches Coming another in history. The organization also had a fine Speed School file, but they were a little v.eak "in languages. Our guide assured us that this weakness was temporary, as the file was only a little over a year old and ought to improve with age, and besides, a lot of the papers were bE~ ing used at that particular time. It Doesn't Always Work In a conscientious fraternity, one student explained, the files will grow fatter and more complete every semester. To accomplish this, all members should write their themes and term papers in duplicate--one for the teacher, and one for the files, with the final grade marked on it if possible. With exams it is little harder. When the teacher grades and returns it, the student must keep stalling about giving it back until the teacher either demands it or forgets it. Most files do not have a lot of exams, possibly because the teachers have too much stamina or the students not enough. Sometimes funny things happen when students try to use papers for cheating purposes. One fellow got a B on a SWift paper, lent it to a girl, and it got her an A out of another teacher the following semester .. But it doesn't always work out so well. Once, a transfer student put an A philosophy paper he had brought from Cornell into his fraternity :files. A fraternity brother borrowed it for his girl friend who typed it up verbatim before returning it. When she went to class to hand it in, she got in a conversation with a fellow, and it turned out that he also had a verbatim copy of the same paper. To avoid embarrassment, one of them didn't hand in a paper, although I never got it clear whether it was he or she, or how they deCided who wouta get feft The teachers who put a real crimp in these maneuvers are the ones who change assignments every semester. They can render the finest dissertations on one group of subjects obsolete by handing out a new bunch of assignments every semester. ( Ccmtlnued em JICllle 3) Registrc:ation Down From '4~9 Figures; A & S Hit Hardest University .. wide registration figures for the fall semester came to a total o:E 5,1 90, according to Mr. John M.· Houchens, Registrar. This total is independent of Speed School which registered Monday. Registration in the Collge of Arts and Sciences dropped to I, 769 from an all-time high of 2,251 last fall. The decline is attributed in part to a greatly decreased number of veterans. Registration in other colleges is: Law, 187; DAE, 1,948; Medical School, 377; Kent, 79 ; Dental School, 236; Music, 97; LMC, 182; Graduate, 315. Compared to last year's enrollment, Kent School has more than doubled in si,ze, and LMC has fallen to a littloe better than half its 1949 status - (Cardinal photo by FoTd . THESE GOODLOOKING GIRLS will be giving their all for Pop Martin starting Monday, Oct. 9. That's when Martin's Little Theatre group will open the current ·season with Fay Kanin's "Goodbye. My Fancy.'' The play. a smash Broadway hit, will run four nights. The girls, all members of the cast. are, frorn left to right, Annette Lillard, Francis Vick. Barbara Dearing, Shirley Pontrich, and Chris Hassold. ~ Trade-Economics Co~[trse Being Offered This ~erm In order to meet the increased interest and enrollment of students in courses of modern trade, transportatiorr, and traffic principles, the Transportation Club of Louisville, in cooperation with Division of Adult Education, is sponsoring a new course in International Trade-Economics A43l. The class is taught by C. Y. Du Pont, manager of Universal Carloading and Distributing Company, and meets from 8 to 9:50pm every Friday. Mr. Du Pont is a member of the forum committee of the Transportation Club. The new transportation course will provide a thorough study of shipments destined for foreign commerce from the time they are manufactured until they arrive at their destinations. Other Subjects Cheerleaders Elected Today Six freshmen, 3 boys and 3 girls, will be elected in open competition at noon today for the new Freshmen Cheerleading Squad. One male Sophomore, Junior, or Senior will be elected at the same time to fill the single vacancy in the Varsity Cheerleading Squad. All who are eligible and interested will try out at noon. Each contestant will lead one cheer. The contest will be judged by a group of the faculty. The tryouts will be held on the Belknap quadrangle in front of the Administration Building. In case of bad weather a substitute location will be announced over the public address system Friday morning. Tf'llining dasses for contestants have been conducted by the members of thi! varsity cheerleading squad at the gym this past week. Kanin Comedy To Be Given In Playhouse By JIM O'LEARY Fay Kanin's Gooddbye My Fancy will make its Louisville debut as the Little Theater's opening production at the P layhouse on Oct. 9. The comedy was a smash hit on Broadway and one of the "ten best" of the 1948-49 season. It concerns the triangle that forms when a successful Congresswoman returns to her alma mater to find two old beausone a photographer, covering her story for "Life" magazine, and the other a college president who welcomes her back. The play somewhat resembles James Thurber's "The Male Animal" in its treatment of a triangle and conflicting campus ideologies. As a tract on campus personalities and situations, it should have more than average appeal to college students. Beginning on Monday, the play will run for four days, curtain time at 8:30. U of L students who appeared at the tryouts and won parts in "Goodbye My Fancy" are Cris Hassold, Barbara Dearing, George Morrison, Wesley Gunther, Annette L i 11 a r d, and Elizabeth Hoerth. Bob Richmond, also a student, is holder of the book. Graduates who have been cast for the play are Mrs. C. Robert Weiller, Mrs. Louis Stark, and George Williams. Boyd Martin, director of the Little Theater Company is very anxious to have more student participation in the Playhouse. He says: "The main thing I would like to get. over to · the readers of the Cardinal is that the Little Theater Company is the development of a practically resident company on the campus and that the purpose is to produce dramas which Louisville would have to forego without such a company." Other plays of the season will be The Heiress, The S i 1 v e r Whistle. Disraeli, and one other not yet chosen. Season coupons for the Playhouse productions are available to all students of the Kentuckiana area, except those enrolled in the adult education courses, at the rates of $2.50 a book. These students ·coupons are reduced from the regular price of $tr.50 and must be exchanged for reserved seats before every performance. Methods in foreign sales; export markings, packing and invoicing; foreign collections and financing; ocean rates' and transportation; steamer space; export licensing; dock receipts; delivery of cargo to steamship; consular documents; ocean bills of lading; marine insurance and the value of exports and imports to our national economy are to be analyzed and studied. Other courses sponsored by the Transportation Club are Fundamentals of Transportation, in which is included a study of transportation fac ~ lities, functions, and working pr cedure of industrial, railroad, and motor truck traffic; and Rates and Tariffs, a study of tariffs and checking of rates with actual work in tariffs constituting the major part of the course. Two New Women Join ~hysica~~ Education Staff Two Hour Course Commerce Law, a course'""designed especially for laymen and those who seek knowledge in the field of laws governing transportation; Practice and Procedure before the Interstate Commerce Commission, a study of commission investigations and suspensions, hearings, briefs, reports and petitions are also being offered. This course offers an opportunity for classroom practicing in the conduct of hypothetical law cases. All transportation courses are two hour subjects and offer certificates upon their sucessful completion. The instructors are men whose experience in their fields has placed them on the educational committee of the Transportation Club. B·y GEORGE MORRISON - (Cardinal photo bl/ Wilaon. JEAN APENZEL.LAR J oining the Physical Education staff this fall will be Miss Eleanor Morrison. Miss Morrison comes to U of L from Illinois State Normal School, where she received her Master's Degree in Physical Education. While on the faculty Miss Morrison expects to teach major intramural sports to girls, as well as classes necessary toward the BS in Physical Education. She is also interested in camp counselling, having made this her main interest in her own college career. She expresses some hope that she will be able to teach the course offered here in camp counseling. Among the extra-curricular activities of the organization are football, the Eagle and Anchor Club and a navy rifle team. The unit's football is entered in the independent division of intramural sports and competes with the other teams in the'league. Mademoiselle And Vogue Magazines Offer Positions On College Boord Staff Another new member of the faculty is Miss Jean Apenzellar. Her appointment to the Physical Education department as instructor marks Miss Apenzt!llar's iirst trip to Kentucky. The duties which Miss Apenzellar will fulfill are teaching Major Sports to freshmen girls and conducting a class in first aid. She too is interestE~d in camp counseling, as she was the head counselor at a private camp in Maine between semest,ers for six years. Miss Morrison lives in Cincinnati where she got most vf her education. She received her BS in Physical Education at the University of Cincinnati in 1941, after which she taught a year in the Cincinnati High Schools and six years in College of Mt. St. Joseph on the Ohio, also of Cincinnati. Miss Morrison is equipped to teach General Science and English as well as Physical Education on the High School level. Miss Morrison is completely new to Louisville, having paid her first visit here last June while investigating the possibilities of the job she now holds in the Athletic Department. When asked what she thought of our fair city, she said, "The traffic situation is terrible, but otherwise, I'm favorably impressed." She now resides at 1816 Stevens Ave. The rifle team, a new activity to be offered to mid-shipmen this year, is arranging a series of postal matches with other unit teams. They will shoot in the newly com· pleted rifle range in the basement of the Naval Science Building. A prospective candidate for the NROTC program must fill out an application, pass an aptitude test given in December and a physical examination. The State Selec· tion Committee makes the final appointments. · Applications for the fall term of 1951 can be picked up in the Naval Science Office on the first floor of the NS Building. Lit Club Planned Dr. Ernest C. Husold has inVited all Enllish majors to attend a meetinl today to ~Net the foreip students llld new majors and · ten them about student activities. &.old also waD&!! to ctt.cusa the polliblUty of formiDI an _,tab CIAb Gil eampua. II~ Is 1100D ID tbe Womaaa's ~ By TIM L. BORNSTEIN The editors of "Mademoiselle" are interested in a number of outstanding undergraduate young women for their annual College B o a r d Contest. Those who have especial interests and talents in one of the following fields: art, fiction , J~eature writing, fashions, merch dising or sales promotions. If selecte you will receive three assignments for y o u r ' speciality, a chance at one of the ten cash prizes for each special field, a lett,~r of recomendation to assist yo11. in securing a better job, and finally an opportunity for the gra l:t prize. Available to the twenty top contestants, he grand prize is a full, salari month in New York City, during which you help compose the August, college issue. If interested ir1 entering this conest, you must fill out a data sheet and • mail it with a small snapshot to the College Board Editor of ''llademoiaelle" before November 1, 11150. You can obtain fw1ber jnformation about the data sheet &Dd the contest in Dea.n Threlkeld office. oertme•s a-wastin'," so inquire now. Another opportunity for a writing position with one of the nation's leading fashion magazines is offered by the editors of "Vqgue". This career contest is open to senior college women working toward a Bachelor's Degree only, and is in the nature of two quizzes of four questions each. The first set of four questions was printed in the August issue of "Vogue", and the second will be printed in the forthcoming November issue. Should you do well with these two quizzes an opportunity will be given you to write a thesis on an editorial or merchandising problem. The first prize for this 16th an· nual contest will be a full year, with a full salary, as a junior editor for "Vogue". Six months of the year will be in New York and the other months will be in gay Paris, with all expenses paid. The HCOild place award is a six months job with "Vope" at full salary. If additional information is desired of this contat, inquiry may be made iD Dean Threlkeld's offtce also. Miss Apenzellar was born in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, where she attended Wilson College. She received an AB in English there in 1947, as she wished to gain a liberal education before concentrating on her major field. In 1949 she received her MS in Physical Education at the Uni· versity ·of Wisconsin. Last year Miss Apenzellar was instructor in Physical Education at College of Wooste Wooster, Ohio. When the opport nity came to transfer to the m ch larger University of Louisvill ~ she took it. Miss Apenzellar is ,;•ery inter· ested in the NSA, and "' desirous of seeing an honor s· stem en-acted on campus. Sb~e 1 oted that her experience at w· College . indicated that a heal r atmo.- phere is produeed w a atu- .dent can ~ to sease of . |
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