The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 21, 1916, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

33C Oamrcoc* ITNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA 14"ie I Live I Crow'' PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY TiE LITERARI SOCIETIES. TERMS $1.60 A YEAR. ';:E .\ I I It-' II- T(IIs. -dilfr-inl-Chirf R. W. WADE (Euph)..........Chester MAnaging Editor. M. W. PRICE (S't Body) Danville, Va. Reporters: T. M. JONES (Enph).........Columbia D. N. KOHN (Euph).......Orangeburg C. M. WILSON (Clar) ....... Newberry W. C. MANN (Cla*r) ........... Pickens R. R. HARLEY (Clar)........Allendale 1). J. CRIDER (Ath) ...... St. Matthews J. B. BATES (Y M C A) ......Eastover A. E. MERRIMON (Law) ....... Sumter MISS E. W. AYER (Co-ed) .... Florence Hiifaex .11ana *fer. L. H. TEMPLETON, JR....Cros- Anchor sixxjalntl 1:1in1xx Moanif-r. D. S. P0L ER...................Aiken Circuflatbonl Manager P. K. SMITH................H atesburg Address all business communications to the Business Manager; all others to the Editor-in-chief. Enterd' at Columbia, S. C. postoffice November 20, 1908 as second class mail matter. Columbia, S. C., March 21, 1916. Last Sunday---a feast of bon nets. ")uae fuerent Ariovisti ux ores; utraeque in ea fugo peri erunt."- Caes. H. G., 1-5'-4, Please accept our heartfeltissimus, thanks friend Ariovistus. Another one of the fellows we always have with us is the one who "can keep it up or stop it whenever he wants to." With some of our friends the Bachelor's Degree will be about the last important step of bach elorhood. Let's settle the insurance mud (ie by permitting the S. E. U. A. to come back upon the condi tion that each company add a flunk policy to its line. Your Roonmate's Motto. To have and hold, Be she ever so cold(. THIOUGHITLESSNESS Everyone knows that speakers and those wvho have anything tc say before a crowd are always glad for their hearers to be ap preciative. But when the audi ence becomes so appreciative that ninety per cent, of the time is taken up in cheering, and every word is a signal for an outburst of continuous hand clapping, what wvould he en. courrging becomes embarrassing. Whether or not one is taking part in a formal meeting it is that one's duty to refrain from any conduct that will interfere with the regular order of the program. There were some pres ent at chapel Monday night-no doubt it was thoughtlessness who did not acquit themselves with the proper decorum as be coming visitors at a public meet ing, and as hosts of those visit ing the campus. A LITTLE CHANGE Last Saturday evening at six o'clock a Dutch supper was 'served to abont thirty students at the city Y. M. C. A. Dur;ng the meeting a brief outline of some of the work being done by college students throughout the country was given by one of the international secretaries of the Young Men's Christian Associa tion. A mention of this work is made elsewhere in THE GAME COCK. To those wh. were pres ent-- and still more to those who were present Sunday night when the class for teaching English to about twenty-five Greeks was organized - -the fact that the opportunity for college men to do real work while in college presented itself in no un certain terms. The presence of such a large number of men and the expression by several of their willingness to respond to the call for help is an indication that students are cQming to see the reality of college life rather than look upon it as a period of passive acquirements. Another event of this week that denotes the change in the attitude of student life in our colleges, was the union meeting of the prohibition clubs of the colleges of the city last Monday night. Whether or not these organizations have or will have any enfluence upon the sobriety of the State is another question, but it shows that college men and women are seeing their re lation to the state and the duties that fall upon them as a result of the advantages they have been permitted to enjoy. Anoth er feature of the meeting Mon day night that commands our attention is the prominjent part being taken by students of the female colleges. Whatever our attitude may be, this fact forces on us the realization that woman suffrage, whether we welcome it or niot, is coming. All this is nothing new. These conditions are in full swvay in many plac'es. But our attitude in this p)art of the country has been slow to change, and these are a few of the things that in dicate the new life that is de veloping among the college men and women of our State. TOBACCO and like tunes g Only the best of ' grow old with th touch o' age like OfferS A Special You will be glad will have the satisfa sued your course i training institution i Bookkeeping and are worth a great deal to a Let us prepare YOU in Shorthand and Typewriting will aid Our system easiest learned, CALL FOR PART M. H. BOWE A Manson Building You Will Finally Only What You START SAVINC C. W. Es TES, General Agen outheaste Of The College Man's Clothing Store 1405 M AIN ST RE ET *e *O. pipes are ' fiddles. em live to at mellow VELVET. I 25 Per Cent. Discount to the Univ outh Carolina Men. you attend our college, for you ction of knowing that you pur n the most thorough business n the South. Penmanship man in business. these brancbes. you in your college work Join class now. fCULARS (,Manager 1207 Taylor Street be Worth Save TO-DAY L if 612 Palmetto I Bank Building 'EN ON SUNDAY Main St. Phone 372 The Savoy S. W WESBERRY, Prop. Hot Lunches, Candy Cigars and Tobacco Fountain & Pool Room Installed ?CE ROVS ESPPIAL-L.Y INVITED