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. =r? ' ; -? ? ^ "" W% " Representatives Ignorat ~~ 7~ /. "You can take the boy out of the i country, but you can't take the country ! out of the boy." The truth of this statement might be questioned, but some of the experiences of Willjam Columbus Herbert and Wilson Osbourne Weldon on their recent trip to Pittsburgh certainly go to show that it is at least difficult for some boys to become accustomed to new surround^ ings. Herbert, after walking on the city streets for one day, contracted an infection in his foot and had to wear a ' bedroom slipper for ihe rest of the trip. It is rumored that he was standing in the ihiddle of the street gazing at a nearby skyscraper when a street car came along and grazed his foot, cutting it slightly. When asked about the truth of the rumor, "Bill" refused to comment for publication. The editor, Weldon, also must come in for his share of attention (if he sees this, a certain associate editor will be looking for a job). It seems that a young lady called "Sue," whose further identity cannot be ascertained, invited him to a party to take place- while he was on the trip. What makes one talk in his sleep, the reader can determine for himself, but the fact remains that it is a fact that Wilson was apologizing to "Sue" for missing her party, at least half of the g night on the way up to the "Smoky I City." S WHALING SPEAKS I IN CHAPEL SUNDAY l_j "Ex-President Of Seminary Gives Talk On Choice Of Vocation o 3 On Sunflay night Dr. Thornton Whaling spoke to a large number of students in the chapel on the subject, "Choosing a Vocation." In the course of his speech, Dr. 'Whaling said that a person in choosing his life work should first consider his aptitudes and abilities. Then he should ask himself what the chosen work will do for him and what it will do for society. Dr. Whaling was president of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary* in Columbia before its removal from the city. He was a classmate and fraternity brother to Woodrow Wilson at Davidson College. He is now retired and living in the city. TYPEWRITING and MIMEOGRAPHING At Low Rates MRS. MOON Caippus Post Office Buy Yellow Cab Ticket Books . SAVE 20% 1 Passenger, 20c 2 Passengers, 10c each When in Need of Taxi Service, i 'Phone 8101 YELLOW CAB CO. Ruth Waxes Great! . . . Yes, this lovely little Ziegfeld her delightful, snuggled-in-your-het of this freshest Columbia release. Both melodies, as you know, are coming from Ruth, they hearken be Hear this fine disc to-day?and week, too... Record No. 2318< Laughing at Life I'm Yours (from Paramount-Publii Picture "Leave It to Lester") ? Record No. 2319Ukulele Moon J Waltz Baby's Birthday Party J Fox Tr Record No. 2320You-rb Simply Delisii (from Metn Mayer Picture "Those Three Fre (You Were Only) Passing Time Wi i Record No. 2322 Football Freddy ) (My Collegiate Man) > Fox Trots ' Fraternity Blues ; Columbia \ *" ???? , 4 ii i , ' '> <" . ' . I . ' '' , ' ' ' * ' Show ice In Big City CHRISTIAN CLUB \ IS VERY ACTIVE Visits Several Local Institutions Over Week-end, Presenting Programs Taking advantage of the holiday for Thanksgiving, members of the Carolina Christian Service Club presented two programs in institutions in the neaf vicinity of the city. On Thursday morning about twenty students went to the Richland County Alms House and put on a song service. On the night of the C) same day, a large crowd journeyed out c to the Girls' Industrial School to the north of Columbia, and gave a diversified program. j On Saturday night, about thirty mem- p bers again made the trip to the same in- si stitution. The program was featured by el the banjo playing of Jimmy Valentine fi and the music of C. C. Leaphart and his al piano-accordion. The Glee Club bus was c pressed into service for all of these oc- tl casions. Four members made the trip to b the Confederate Soldiers' Home on = Tuesday. Although there were few pres- r ent, the spirit was good and a fine pro- r gram was given at which Mr. Leaphart again played his accordion. The Christian Club holds its weekly meeting on Wednesday night. CAFETERIA DANCE THURSDAY NIGHT < s| Mrs. Henning Offers Much En- ?A tertainment For Boarders At Steward's Hall A dance will be given Thursday eve- ' ning, December 11, from 8:30 until 11:30 C< at the boys' cafeteria, for the patrons of the cafeteria. No script will be charged but only those who patronize the cafe- s< teria regularly will be admitted. Everyone is urged to bring a date. The mu^ic *5 will be furnished by Piute Wimberly and his Carolinians. The cafeteria this year; under the management of Mrs. Henning, is offering much in the way of amusement. Every evening during supper, music is ren- a dercd by Piute Wimberly and his Carolinians, and on Friday evening from 6:30 I to 7:30 a dance is given by the manage- I ment. On account of the dance Thursday evening, the regular Friday evening dance for that week will be dispensed with. n . n r- ? c fi Meet Me at d CAROLINA c SWEETS tl We Serve Regular Dinner e; (All Day) 30 Cents p c< Breakfast, 20 Cents b< WE SERVE SUPPEIt ni pi _ p? star?Ruth Etting?lias stamped ?rt personality right into the wax th or i proven hits of the season. And, sc itter than you've ever heard them. then hear these steppere-of-them; D, 10'inch, 75c Vocala . . . Ruth Etting ^ D, 10-inch, 75c Guy Lombardo and of His Royal Canadians D, 10-inch, 75c >-Goldwyn- ) Fox Trots nch Girls") > Smith Rallew and rrn Me ) His Orchestra Dt 10-incA, 75c Ted Wallace and His Campus Boys ^Records n ii mmmmmm+m mmmmmmmmmmUmmrn . t\ . < t r J l t 1 i i l i I < Nigel A. League, who has re- ( ently completed a highly sue- j essful * season as head cheer- ^ :ader. League has held this posi- . on for two years, and has raised heering on the campus to a high lane. He organized the Cheerio ection last year, and by so doing ( licited much favorable comment J rom students and outsiders . like. His work as cheerleader will 1 ontinue out the rest of the year, ' hrough the basketball and base- ' all seasons. PROFESSORS TO ATTEND MEETING: ?? i louth Carolina Chemical Society i Meets In Spartanburg , Saturday Dr. J. E. Minis and Prof. T. F. Ball, oth of the University faculty, will peak on the program at the meeting f the South Carolina section of the Linerican Chemical Society to be held i Spartanburg Saturday. Doctor Minis, who is a former hairman of the national research ouncil, committee on chemistry and ' :chnology, will speak on "The Po- ' :ntial and Developed Chemical Re- ' Durces of the State." Professor Rail will take up in de- 1 iil both the developed and the un- ' eveloped water power resources of ne state. The meeting \\ ill be held at Con- ' erse College. Dr. W. A. Whitesell, ' f the chemistry department, will also ' ttend the meetings. *LAN VOCATIONAL TALKS FOR FROSH . i Professor Robert Sumwalt, chair- ' lan of the University Personnel Com- ' littee, and R. G. Bell, head of1 the ampus Y. M. C. A., met with the cshman class officers Wednesday to iscuss the vocatinoal guidance prorain to be presented to the freshmen vcr.y Wednesday at chapel. Monday a questionnaire will be dis ibuted at the chapel exercises and ich freshman .is asked to check his j references of the list of professions mtained in the blank. The results of a lis will determine which subjects will ^ e presented to the class by leading s ten in the selected professions. j Last year a similar program was resented at the freshmen chapel f jriods and an even more ambitious j oject has been planned for this year, ^ore stress will be placed on prossions for women than was done last ^ :ar> . . (1 The University is one of the few mitutions which has these programs id its work along this line is gaing nation-wide recognition. t The purpose of these lectures is to sip the students in choosing a prossion before leaving school, in order at they can prepare themselves for eir careers and not be at a loss ^ hen they finish- school. ?o. s. c.? ;; Before the days of automobiles and e consequent stalled cars, runners ^ i third weren't the only ones who sj orcd on balks. a v C' "He certainly is a promising young ^ ?n." p "I'll say he is. He's in four breach-of n omise suits now." GARNET AND BLACK C) The time limit for individual tc pictures which are to be entered tr in "The Garnet and Black" has been extended to December 15. This is absolutely the final date ai on which a picture can be entered. The time was extended only through the courtesy of Mr. Sargeant, offic'al photographer, as the contract called for all pictures to be in by December 1, Have your picture taken immediately. . , ?= 5CHAYER PRESIDES OYER JEWISH MEET rhree Hundred Prominent Jews Attend Hebrew Convention ? At a meeting of 300 of the leading fews of South Carolina, sponsored by the Jnion of American Hebrew Congrega- ' ions for the purpose of threshing out )roblems related to Jews in South Caro- ' ina, men connected with the University 1 >laycd a prominent part. The entire afterloon session was devoted to special prob- 1 cms at tlfc University, and was presided >ver by Dr. Isadore Schayer bf the ( faculty. ; B. W. Hyman, a senior in the School )f Law, spoke on the Jewish student and 1 mtlined his position on the campus. His ?apcr was declared by Rabbi. Jacob Raisin, of Charleston, to be the best 1 japer he had ever heard on such a subicct. ' ^ Dr. Schayer, in a brief paper, declared :hat there was no Jewish problem on the :ampus, due to the fact that the Jewish student was assimilated into the life of the school and was not a separate part of it. Coleman Karesh, formerly a prominent nember of the University student body and now practicing law in Columbia, ;pokc on "The Jewish Student and the Community." Rabbi Shillman, of Sumter, who is a student in the School of Law, also spoke at the convention and had charge of some details of its arrangement TWENTY ELECTED TO SERVICE FRAT INITIATE DECEMBER 21 Loyalty Ahd Service Chief Factors In Choice Of Men Kappa Sigma Kappa, local honor service fraternity, held its semi-annual elec;ion of new members Thursday evening, ^bout twenty men were elected. These will be notified at once of the initiation to take place Thursday eveViing, December 11. Election into this fraternity is the reward that is received by those who have exhibited loyalty to the alma mater on all occasions. It is a recognition of one's past service to the University. Promotion of a better spirit and greater co-operation among the students in their everyday life has been another object of Kappa Sigma Kappa. By bringing about this better school spirit, the cheering of the past few years has been improved. The sale of frosh caps has been conducted through the co-operative store under the guidance of this fraternity. u. s. c. Fraternity Men Better Students, : Conference Finds The scholastic average of all fraterlity men throughout the country is lighcr than the general scholastic iverage of all male undergraduates, iccording to a statement made today >y Alvan E. Duerr, Chairman of the cholarship committee of the Interraternity Conference. This statement vas made in a report at the annual necting of the - Conference at the lotcl Pennsylvania, New York City, o delegates of seventy national fracrnities having a total membership of 50,000 men, of whom 60,000 arc unergraduates. The conference, which has during lie last twenty-one years directed its fTorts toward developing college fraernities as a co-operative element in he American system of college eduation, has for the past five years laid peci^l emphasis on scholarship. "Each one of these years?' Mr. )uerr declared, "has shown consistent nprovement over its predecessor. For tie college year 1929-1930 the comlete returns from 125 institutions aving a male enrollment of 200,000 liow that the fraternity men's averge is somewhat more than one per ent. higher than the average of all icn undergraduates, and almost two er cent, higher than the- average of on-farternity men." u. S. c. Bagpipe music was broadcast resntly. Lots of people took their sets > pieces in an endeavor to locate the ouble. Taxicabs are like ball games, they re often called on account of the rain. ? I've never seen a purple cow. And never hope to sec one, But judging from the milk we get, I'm sure there must, be one. The woman always pays and pays; Her plight is quite heart-rendihg. Yet pity, too, ie surely due The man whose cash she's spending. ~ SIZE OF TANKS 1 ARE DECREASING 1 Gasoline Now Being Consumed In Quarts And Pints "You know," said an operator of one of the filling stations near the campus, I "these new Austins certainly give us a lot of trouble and amusement. A year or two ago, we could put in gasoline by the five gallons, but now, with these little cars, we have to do it in very small li quantities. it "The other day a fellow drove up in g one of those Austins, and I asked him o what he wanted. He looked at some sort it of an indicator and said, 'A quart of gas h and a pint of Quaker State.' How do they expect us filling station men to F make a living at that rate?" \ Information on the subject is lacking, F but it is wondered if the owner in ques- tl tion is Professor McColl. V u. s. c. A PALMETTO PLAYERS u GIVE "THE GUARDS- 1 MAN" TONIGHT p (Continued from page one) a t< tain falls on this wonderful and moving Cl drama, leaving us all impressed with the ^ incomprehensible loveliness of love. The " point of fascination in this comedy is n that it breathes love?love, in definable v but unmistaken, mysterious but absolute, c understood by all, explainable by none, 11 and of greater, or at least more universal, c interest than any other emotion. a The complete cast is as follows: 8 The Actor Mr. Carl F. Duffner c The Actress, his wife Miss Elizabeth Belser a The Critic Wilmot Jacobs c "Mama" Mrs. William D. Melton J Leisl Miss Dorothea Dorn An Usher Rhoda McDuffie ' Concierge Jack Scholenberg ^ General Stage Manager.. Wilmot Jacobs Ass't Stage Mgrs., Carlile Courtenay, Jr.*. < Earnest Caughman, Louis N. Drake k Bookholder Marie Odom Properties Alice Prioleau, Jack Scholenberg rj Lighting Sanders Guignard Costumes designed by Mrs. William Dean. u. s. c. University Has g Early Beginning s a The University of Mexico is the oldest h university in America, according to an " article in The Pan-American Magazine. Scarcely had the Spaniards conquered " Mexico, when they began to erect a uni- t; versity, having been granted permission v from Charles V in 1551. The university e: was officially opened two years later with t; a regular faculty and a small group of students. s) This institution has remained in op- h eration continuously to the present day, b and many of the leaders of the Mexican h government have been its graduates. ai ? Mental I When you are afra on a BRAEBURN Pi are only two thine It Quit cutting in or we % The PRO $35 KINA1 1523 Main RALPH NE^ Campus Repre Arv>"' rage inree rYLER TO SPEAK AT UNIVERSITY n 'RESIDENT'S DESCENDANT ^^?US ^an To Lecture At * Chapel Sunday Night Comes From Augusta On Sunday night the students of Carona will have the opportunity of hearig John Tyler, noted world-wide evanehst, speak in the chapel. The subject f Mr. I yler's speech will be "An Amazig Tale," which is in effect the story of is most marvelous life. John Tyler is a truly notable character Je was born into the aristocracy of irgmia. He is the groat grandson of resident Tyler, and at one time he was ie classmate and fraternity brother of Voodrow Wilson at Davidson College lt thct timc of his birth, his father was ie richest man in the State of Virginia. ic was given every advantage in the ower of money and social position. He left school and traveled the world s a bum, finally returning to America. 3 find his father on his death bed. Reaving his inheritance from his father e went to New York and squandered it M i riotous and sinful living. With his loney gone, he became a beggar and a .'anderer on the face of the earth. Tyler ven sank so low into the dregs of hulan society that he promised himself to ?d it al by suicide. Before he could h,S I>urposc' a stranger b'-1?1 to a mission, where he was onverted. Such is the manner of man who will ddress the students Sunday night. He omes to Columbia from Augusta. Mr. y has Just completed a three years' our of the United States, during which . ,b safc to say a million people heard ' nm. STEWARD'S HALL I SERVES TURKEY I Thanksgiving Dinner And Dance Enjoyed Thursday; Other Boarding Houses Successful The Steward's Hall started Thanksiving off right by giving its patrons omethmg for which to be thankful. As n added feature to its annual dinner, it ad Piute Wimberly and his orchestra to provide music while you eat." About 160 students took dinner at the mess hall." There were also about twenty five visitors present, both men and romen. This total number is the greatst number of guests the hall has ciudS*' lined at any one meal. Other boarding houses also reported *" uccessful Thanksgiving dinners. Several undred pounds of turkey were consumed V all the student boarding houses, over a undred pounds being used at the S*Swrd s Hall alone. j I Hazard n iid of cutting in rom Tux....there js to do about ar a BRAEBURN /I TUX -/ ; V. .TO RD'S 1 i St. iVMAN sentative ^ ^ ^ ^