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? BRADLEY TELLS Wm j OP ARMY WORK SECRET UNIT EXPLAINED AH Who Expect to Find Exciting Nick Carter Adventures Discouraged by Dr. Bradley Professor Francis W. Bradley of the Language Department, spoke to the Romance Language Department, spoke to the freshman class Wednesday on * the subject of the United States Intelligence Bureau. Dr. Bradley saw service with this unit during the World War. "The General Staff of the Army was organized during the war. It is divided into three sections, G-l, G-2, and G-3. G-l controls the supplies and G-3 has to do with the execution of orders. G-2 is the intelligence department and is meant to discover the intentions and disposition of the enemy. "G-2 is separated into four divisions. < One is for the reading of soldiers letters. Often soldiers let slip important and damaging facts in their correspondence and it is the duty of this division to censor the letters. The second division has as its duty to discover military intelligence by direct contact with the enemy. The third controls the espionage and counter espionage systems. This means spying and the prevention of being spied upon. The fourth division deals j^^ittfekwith topography or the position of the Mfcnemy." . I Dr. Bradley discouraged all those who Hdanned to take up secret service work Htecausg they thought it resembled the ^Bdoings of Nick Carter or some other - - ' * Whero of the penny dreadfuls. Secret servHicc work does not require the hiding in t Hclosets or donning dark glasses and false Hwhiskers. Dr. Bradley had to read and study - >,T I blood-stained photographs, maps and let*7 ? ters. He had to learn wireless and the r:M detection of battery implacements by - ? sound. He had to learn to locate aero I planes and discover their purposes. Comparison of conditions as shown by ' I aerial maps and the number of shells and Swl/i'l vehicles is important. Every change no I matter how small has a' meaning. ' Absolute vigilance is required of the " I secret service man. He must always be on the alert. Men are stationed in balI loons behind the lines and they observe I the enemy through powerful telescopes. . - I Listening posts are situated along the ? I lines. The enemy must be watched every I minute of the day and night. ; 1 The secret service man must have ; " . I alertness, energy, the. ability of conveying information, and a flair for news. H He must submerge himself in the unit so that the service may work as one man. CENTRAL 1204 Mai OPEN AL1 Barrymoi Shirts $1 65 i AND k w $1 95 , i I NEW SH Blues an< This Shirt is Hes Smart Collei OTHER GO< $1.15 a See 1 hope-d; : , ^ Main al Joe Hiott, Campi 1 1 ?. i fc .. .. Clariosophics Jo Hold Reception Next Week To Celebrate Recent Inauguration of Newly Elected Society Officers The Clariosophic Literary Society held its ijrst regular meeting since the in-j auguration of new officers, last Tuesday night with a literary program. , Introducing the program, R. M. Newton gave a very interesting speech on "The Proper Attitude of the Legislature Toward the University of South Carolina." The next speaker, J. H. Wolfe, gave a very informative account of the "Smcdlcy Butler-Mussolini Case." The query for the debate of the evening was Resolved: "That the Wearing of Freshman Caps on the Campus of the University of South Carolina Should Be Abolished." J. W. Brown and J. H. Galloway upheld the affirmative and were opposed by T. C. Hank ins and J. Sam | Taylor. The judges decided in favor of the affirmative. It was decided by the society that the reception for new officers would be given ( next Tiiesday night. ] v. ?. c. ^ Fraternity Houses Ordered Padlocked Five fraternity houses at the Uni- 1 versity of Michigan were padlocked by : police last week upon the discovery of ( a quantity of liquor in a series of raids. ' Under an order issued by the faculty 1 committee on student affairs the five houses must remain closed until Sep- 1 tembcr 1. They may then reopen, but the fraternities will be on social probation for the 1931-1932 school year, j That means the organizations involved may have no social functions during the t year. * u. s. c. x Middle-Aged Men Can 1 Learn Fast as Young , That middle-aged students can learn 1 as rapidly, if not more rapidly, than young students, has been proved by the University of California in a series of examinations conducted here. ' According to university officials, adults v taking correspondence work, as well as 1 regular college courses, during the past' ' year have, in general, showed greater progress in their subjects than campus undergraduates of college age. This superiority is laid, in part, to the * serious intentions of the older students, j All girls interested in the art of fencing please report to Mr. ( Crawfords office Friday at 4:30. ?????| t DRUG CO. n Street L, NIGHT t IPMENT i Whites i iring- the Call of i ?e Dressers OD SHIRTS nd Up 'hem wis CO. t Lady is Representative EXCHANGES| SEVERAL ON THE PROFS Five gullible professors at the University of Rochester were fleeced of $13 apiece by a flattering crook "from one of the best established publishing houses in the country," who informed them that they alone had beei) chosen "from the 1,500 most outstanding and prominent professors in the United States" to own a "beautifully designed set of Morocco bound leather encyclopaedia." The embarrassed victims now assert that over a billion dollars are lost annually through fraudulent investments and that they are proud to have done their share in filling the quota. Students at Berkley, California, had a practical demonstration of the absentminded professor when Professor Stuart Daggett walked into a classroom and began a rapid fire lecture on an engineering problem. Prompted by a student, he blushed, said, "I must be in the wtong room," and left. x Dean Parsons of the University of Oregon states that nine-tenths of the college professors would starve to death if they had to make their living any other way. At last something new in college rackits comes to our attention. At Colorado, ^ou can be insured against being called 5n in class. Rates vary with professors. Should a student who is insured be called lpon, he receives double his premium. This sort of puts a premium on cither aziness or modesty.?Crimson-White. Freshmen at Mississippi A. and M. Colege recently handled an edition of the deflector, the student weekly newspaper here. It was printed with green ink on jreen tinted paper, but the freshmen vercn't so green, for they published a food paper. 1 If you like to dance, go to Oregon State. Fifty-two dances were held there n one week. Relativity Explained "When you sit with a nice girl for two lours you think it's only a minute, but vhen you sit on a hot stove for a minitc, you think it's two hours. That's re- | ativity."?Albert Einstein. The new collegiate system of measure: . Two pints, one quart; two quarts, one iglit; one fight, two cops; two cops, one udge; one judge, thirty days. A Good Reason Why Cornell men never date one of heir own co-eds has at. last becorpe evilent. Measurement of brains at the university has definitely demonstrated that he women there are equal mentally to he men. A "Dating Bureau" Kansas State College has installed a 'dating bureau" for students. Women "iling their names with the office, to make he bureau succcssful should answer a luestionnaire including the following >oints: Height? Waist? Drink? Smoke? tfcck? Appetite? Age? One of the oldest freshmen in the .vorld is at the University of Chicago. He s 72 years old and obeys all the regulaions and rules which the frosh must fol- I ow. Oherlin College trustees are building wo dormitories, one of which is to be 'or married students. This will be cquipicd with "kitchenette suites and all mod:rn conveniences for married life," an mnouncement says. It has been found that the greater percentage of failures in college occur in the J ircshman class, so the Kappa Phi Kappa I National Educational fraternity of F.mory ind Henry College of Virginia is atempting to help the members of that class >y giving them soecial tutorage in the I lormitories. The plan is to have those upicr classmen who arc majoring in a cer-1 ain subject help any freshman who may I >c having trouble in that subject.?Old Gold and Black. Co-eds at Southwestern resented the I statement made by a local minister to the effect that the girls of the school had attended dances on the campus in indecent costumes, and demanded an apology. _ ? Paid to Drink Beer The Work Psychology Institute in I Dortmund, Germany, is paying a lad to drink 14 bottles of beer a day. The idea is this?the psychologists want to find out how long it will take a person fortified with 14 bottles of beer to be- I come tired. There was more than one I applicant for the position. The class of 1882 of Iowa Wcsleyan College has finally erected a class monument. A grey granite boulder which the seniors bought in 1882 to be used as a memorial was stolen by the junior class and was not discovered until recently. Kilpatrick Speaks Id Chapel At Sunday'T' Y. M. C. A. Hears of Hia Experiences in Soviet Russia After the War . The speech that Professor Emmet Kilpatrick was to deliver in the Chapel | materialized last Sunday night in the form of a dynamic, gripping, interesting, and inspiring oration on "Soviet Russia." Jn the beginning Professor Kilpatrick traced the rise of bolshevism in France and other countries and showed how it spread into Russia when the time was ripe and become supreme. He gave a vivid .picture of the economic freedom and happiness^that Soviet Russia is enjoying today, due to the displacing of capitalism by a government of soviets. He made a lasting impression upon his hearers by his narration of some of his hair-raising experiences as a captive of the bolshevists' in the course of and shortly after the World War. Professor Kilpatrick painted word pictures of his personal observation of battles, of his ' confinement in the most terrible prisons in the world, and of his numerious hair-breadth escape from crack firing squads. In closing he reviewed the present economic condition of the world and ' showed the effect that bolshevism is 1 having and will have upon it, pointing * out that the world needs a leader w,ho will free it from economic slavery. * u. s. c. _JOKES I; ?????-?_._J 1 At a bridge party, a college boy asked his partner if she objected to his smok- < ing a pipe. "Yes," was the unexpected reply. "Then you'll never make a good actress," he rejoined. "My mother objects to kissing." "But I didn't ask to kiss your mother." ^ \ "What happened to Bill?" ( "Drowned while skating." "Fall through the ice?" ? "No; he fell down and spring came I before he could^get up." 1 She: "Sir, do you realize to whom you i are speaking? I am the daughter of an i English peer." i He: "That's all right; I am the son i of an American doc." ] 1 St. Clause: "Here, boy, what's the i matter with Prancer?" J Ganomee: "He's got athlete's hoof A again, boss." x ] Critic: "The picture of the horse is ! good, but where is the wagon?" Artist: "Well, now, you know, the * horse is supposed to draw that. "And how's your husband getting on ^ with his reducing exercises?" "You'd be surprised?that battleship ^ he had tatooed on his chest is now only ^ a rowboat." < . ] Two tourists met in a street too narrow for them to pass. One, being very hot-tempered, shouted to the other: I ( never back up for any damn fool." The other driver calmly threw his car in re verse and backed out saying: "O. K, pard, I always do." 1 Hiram: "May I have the lantern to go * see my girl?" Farmer: "To go see your girl 1 Why, ' I didn't use no lantern when I went a- ^ courting." J Hiram: "Well, look what you got." ^ ______ J Caro: "This has been a trying week." 11 Lina: "What have you been trying to 1 do?" 1 Caro: "Trying to pass exams." < i Bill says his cigarette lighter is like a second-hand store?three failures and then a fire. Docs anyone remember when "neck" was a noun? Mother: "Why, daughter, look at this house! Don't tell me you'v? been smoking!" Daughter: "Why, mother, that isn't tobacco smoke I've just been shooting my husband, that's all." A. T. O.: Most of the Caroling co-eds prefer not to marry. ' S. A. E.: How do you know? A. T O.: I've asked them. If all the collegiate Fords at Carolina were placed end to end on Main Street, it would be foolish. Wife: Do you realize that twenty-five years ago today we became engaged? That Absent-Minded Professor: Twenty-five years 1 You should have reminded me before, dear, it is certainly time we got married. .v. v" CLUB PRESENTS MANY PROGRAMS Confederate Soldier's Home, Alms House and City JaU are Visited Reports of the various programs given by the Carolina Christian Service Club at the Confederate Soldiers' Home, the Alms House, City Jail and other institutions were presented at its regular meeting in Sloan College Wednesday night. An interesting discussion of the question "How May We Determine What Is Right or Wrong" was led by thg president in the devotional period. On Tuesday afternoon a program was presented for the veterans at the Confederate Soldiers' Home. The program especially featured piano selections by S. M. Salley and J. M. Taylor. J. J. Brown forcefully presented a talk on "Christ Universally Meeting the Needs of Mankind." A male quartette sang numerous religious hymns requested by the veterans and also a number of the old Southerly melodies. Programs have been presented regularly for the old Confederates of the home and they seem to greatly ippreciate the interest that the University students are manifesting in hem. At the meeting plans were made for ictivities of the coming week. A stereopticon lecture is being planned for the next Vegular meeting ind. according to President Brown )lans are being made for a series ot >rograms at the Holly Hill schools. SULLIVAN PRIZE TO BE AWARDED (Continued from page one) :he award are those of helpfulness to ellowman and of influencing those vith whom the recipient comes in :ontact toward higher standards of iving. The character of Algernon Sydney Sullivan exemplifies these >rinciplcs. The award was established at the University in 1926 and in 1927 the first iward was given. John Ralston Pate ind Silas Seidman were the students eceiving the award. The non-student iward went to the late George H. Huggins, at that time treasurer of the University. Through some mistake the iward that year was made to two male >tudents instead of one man aijd one voman. In 1928 the awards went to Thomas Moore Craig, Charlotte, N. C., and Bessie Lcora Johnston, St. George. The non-student award was conferred in Dr. Frank# Hilton McLeod, of Florence. No pr9sentation was made in 1929 )ecause the faculty committee could ind no one whom they considered worthy of the award. In 1930, Frank Buie, of Patrick, and Lottie Virginia Muller, of Blythcwood, received the itudent awards and Mrs. Addie S. Madden, who for twenty-five years ias been matron of the infirmary, rereived the non-student award. The New York Southern Society ias established the award at the folowing .southern colleges and universities: Antioch College, College ot William and Mary, Davidson College, George Peabody College for Teachers, lampden-Sydney College, Judson Colege, Mercer University, Rollins Colege, St. John's College, Uhiversity ol Mabama, University of Kentucky, University of North Carolina, University of South Carolina, University of Virginia, and Washington and Lee University. These colleges have written nany letters to the national committee >n the award telling of the outstandng place that this honor held on their \ JUNIOR-SENIO Name Address Do you expect to come to the recep If so, will you bring a date? If so, check which of the following Junior? Senior? % All juniors and seniors are respectfi at their earliest convenience and gi . to be put in box 84. "sr. t'' i-x ' - \ Proposed Debates are Announced! (Continued front page qne) March 30, affirmative team of the University of Tennessee versus negavin tive team of Carolina. April 1, negative team of Weber College of Ogden, Utah, versus af% firmative team of Carolina. April 3, negative team of Pennsylvania State College versus affirmative 1 team of Carolina. The following debases will be held away from home February 26, negative team of the University of South Carolina versus ' affirmative team of Davidson. On this trip this same team will debate the negative team of North Carolina State College at Raleigh on February 28. Affirmative team of the University versus negative team of University of Miami, date undecided but in near future. On this trip this same team also debate the negative team of the University of Florida and the negative team of Georgia Tech. March 30, affirmative team of CaroUna versus negative team of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. On this trip this same team will also debate the negative team of Vanderbilt University and of the University of Mississippi. April 10, negative team of South Carolina versus affirmative team of Georgia Tech at Atlanta. On this trip this same team will also debate the affirmative team of Emory University _ | and of one other college which has not been chosen yet. Negative team of South Carolina versus affirmative team of Duke Unl- ] versity, date undecided. On this trip j the same team will also debate the affirmative teams of the University of North Carolina and of Wake Forest u College. fJPj The query which will be used in all of these debates is, Resolved: "That yfl All the Nations Should Adopt a Policy j of Free Trade." , j FAIR HOUSE HAS VALENTINE PARTY The Fair House was the scene of a Valentine party on February 14. The house was attractively decorated in red and white crepe paper and pale red lights helped to complete the color scheme. The reception room was given over to dancing and in another room a bridge game was enjoyed through the evening. The high spot of the whole affair was j when a group of children from the surrounding neighborhood invited themselves to the party and began to make|^ merry on the porch. They were noisy and amusing. Some of them even sang.'-J songs for the benefit of the boys, who were the guests of the fair damsels inhabiting the annex. u. s. c. "Ask the Man Who Owns One"? if you want to borrow a lawn mower. campuses. The award is not very wellknown at the University at present, due mainly to its newness. "Vv T ^ The bulletins of the award wett placed at the disposal of the upperclassmen at chapel on Tuesday. Dean Baker gave a short sketch in the tfur- :.j pose of the award and asked for student nominations to be handed to him. The committee will convene shortly to discuss the various nominations and the recipients will be named later the spring. Telephone 4620 Main R RECEPTION J j j Phone - ffl m ition? jjj I your date will be: uj Outsider? 1 illy requested to fill out this coupottj a vc it to Mrs. Moon at the postofficrjj I t * (u3aP'*