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Alt Beaux Arts Club Meets Annual Ball Planned Composed Of Students From Music, Painting And Dramatic Departments Formed as a social club for the promotion of all the fine arts, including music, art, and dramatics, the "Beaux Arts" one of the newest clubs on the campus, held its seeond meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Matteson on Tuesday evening. Members of the club arc from music, painting, and dramatics departments. They plan an annual "Beaux Arts" Ball to be given by the club every fall. The new club was entertained by its patrons at the home of the Matteson's Tuesday. After the business was transacted the members were invited into the dining room where refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs. Maurice Matteson, Miss HcylX ward and Mrs. Allan Rembert. Mrs. o ^ Dulic Hanson and Mr. Richard Lofton 3 were guests. After the refreshments, Mr. and Mrs. f(j Matteson entertained with several ^ musical numbers. Miss Ruth Hunt also played during the evening and ?i later dancing was enjoyed. The first meeting of the club was ^ held at the home of Nilla Gunter- in ^ ? April. The club is scheduled to meet on every first and third Tuesdays. Its officers are, Ed. Sallcnger, president; Julian Bolick, vice-president; Helen Terry, secretary-treasurer; Ruth Hunt, corresponding secretary. The charter members arc: Ed. Sallenger, Julian Bolick, Fred Yotingblood, William Halscy, Charles Crowson, Bland Hammond, John Houghton, William Richardson, Paul Benson, Nilla Gunter, Sarah Trenhol'm, Helen Terry, Lucy Oliver, Ruth Hunt, Alyce Whaley, Joy Courtney, Corry McCallum, Dorothy Wilson, Blanche DuBose. At the past meeting the following were passed by the club and are eligible for membership; William Woods, Harold Mauney, Mike Brown, Frank McLean, Virginia Wolf, Mary Stuart Aycock, Marion Emerson, Lucilla Mikell, Richard Morgan, Jack Payne, Eva Mae Dabbs, Randolph Johnson. Dr. E. T. Bonn, and Mmc. de Horvath were elected to honorary membership. U. 8. O. Culp Visits Charleston For Thesis Material Barlo Culp, Union, who is studying for his M. S. at the University, was in Charleston last week-end to collect material for the thesis which he is preparing on the subject, "The Losses Of Iron, Copper, and Manganese In Cooking Vegetables By Different Methods." n. i. o. Ghosts And Bugbears Haunt U. S. C. Building Ghosts and bugbears live in the basement of the Extension Building, formerly the home of the presidents of the institution, at the University of South Carolina. At least, this is the belief of the young grammar grade pupils who pass hy it on their way from school. Only the bravest dare to go the length of t ie dark and deserted corridor. The children stand at the back entrance and argue whether they shall take t e fatal step or not. Usually they come to the conclusion that there is ety in numbers and so dash through ln a body. XJ. B. O. Claims Carolinian Is Far Less Efficient ' 'lc South Carolinian is, in gen. less efficient in business habits the average American and is Ca. y ca,,8ht by "get rich quick" M'T08' ('cc'ared C. L. Epting in an thesis written at the University . >So?th Carolina entitled "What Facors in (|lc Social Heritage of South aro ina are Favorable or Unfavorable to Education." spirit of "Do or Die" which P So displayed in the defense of i'ls J)r'nciples can be accounted for 1rge y by tjle Scotch-Irish blood that clared ve'ns"' Opting deISL, imni TV Variety Features Vesper Services Programs Of Past Semester Ai Analyzed; Speakers And Music Featured Important speakers of this state ar other states, Christian pageants, ar Negro quartets have^ provided varic programs for Vesper Services at tl University during the past semcstc Programs that have been given j the services are as follows: A speech by Alfred Scarboroug member of the House of Represent; tives from Richland county; music b a negro quartet from the Blossoi Street Baptist Church; talks made b the Y. M. C. A. team of Clemson Co lege; a pageant by the Y. M. C. i students; a talk given by the Rev. Joli Lake, of China. Other programs were marked b speeches made by Rev. Wade Smit of Richmond, Va.; the Y. M. C. A. ; the University; Havalah Babcock, d rector of Extension department at tl University; G. Croft Williams, pr< fessor of Sociology; Dr. Page, of tl Columbia Bible school; the Y. M. ( A. of Newberry College; Carlisle Rol erts, and Dr. Frierson, law professoi at the University; Dr. Webb, pastor c the First Baptist chaurch; and D Henry Phillips, of the Trinity Episct pal Church. In addition a quartet from Allen Un versity was in charge of the music fc several services, and the Columbia Co lege Y. W. C. A. conducted interestin talks on religious subjects. U. O. Jackson Is Claimed As Native Of Stat A biography of Andrew Jackso which is called "the most complete an most interesting story of the life c 'Old Hickory' ever published" contend that Jackson was born in South Care lina. The new biography was writte by Marquis James. He writes at som iSo t '."T'VV-.V.T l hhHbH?| WM 5.-' 1 ? -VH| t-'-'fHmS fjum i-vfl ??? Hi =^=g==g5=S=g=5gar== ems I, < i Daniel Given j School Honor ? e K South Carolina Reporter [J ld Has Written Several Booklets On l(1 Schools During Depression r< fr :a Dr. Joseph McTcirc Daniel of the c< 1C school of education lias been chosen A r- reporter for the School Retrenchment ta at Commission of South Carolina, it was a< announced recently. Dr. Daniel has several booklets which tell of the con- si l" ditions facing the teaching profession di y during the depression. tl 111 One of them, "The American I); * Secondary Education Bulletin" for Cl February asks "What kind of a so- w lution is it going to be?" about the 1,1 present crisis in education all over the c< nation. c: - This Bulletin says that Alabama has 1 been forced to close all the public 01 l} schools in about "one-third of the aj counties" before January 1. "This lc meant that 85,762 boys and girls of b' 5" elementary school age were totally ol l_f without the advantages of education. P' " "More than half the school districts in W ) the wealthy state of Ohio arc in fi- ^ ^ nancial straits, due to decreased appro1 priations. The testimony of Professor , r' Neals Anderson, sociologist, of Coluin- V )_ bia University, before the Senate Man- S1 ufacturers Committee gave corrobo- W ' rative evidence by revealing that a cen- ^ >r sus taken by the Y. M. C. A. and the 1- Salvation Army showed that 1,500,000 as K persons, many of them children, are ^ roaming the highways in scarce of work and food." u. s. o. P* tc g length on the former president's life S; in Charleston. lij " The territory in which he was born d was disputed by North and South Carolina, but was later adjudicated to ^ 's South Carolina. sc tr. s. c. b< n England became a kingdom in the fc e ninth century. S< mediin^ tioi O f ? ifl it m fl hp ' S& X sk-ttWB Bp::'' Ik s HI Ba Thane Given At Y Services Oriental Religious Play ames Booth Plays Lead Of Drama Showing Problems Of Missionaries "Bathane" a mlssonary play of urma, in the Orient, was presented ) a large audience at the regular veser service in the University Chapel y the Y. M. C. A. last Sunday night. The play was intended to give a ialistic idea of the problems that con*ont the modern missionary in foreign Duntries. Often a presentation of tncrican and European life far dismt from the Christian conceptions ivanced by the missionary arc given. James Booth was cast as the misonary, and gave a view somewhat ifTerent from the average thoughts of ic solemn narrow missionary of the ist generation. Jane Register ably irried out the part of the missionary's ife, with ease and sincerity. Hazel Wilson was the child, prcscious yet naive, on account of her cpcriences in the Orient. L. E. Ab3t, dressed in native costume, gave ric of the outstanding performances > "BaThane," a jungle youth who had ?en converted to Christianity and was eing trained by the missionary as one F his helpers. His sister, May .Mae, layed by Lodena Gaines, had been rouged by Fox, an uncouth Amerim oil driller, played by Herbert inchcr, and as a consequence "Bahane" ran amuck. In the last sccne : came in to kill Worth, the misonary, but on overhearing the prayer hich Worth was offering he was ovcr>mc and accepted the part that a real hristian should play. G. T. Daniel, i a cynical American newspaper man as the foil for the earnestness of forth all through the play. Ed. Sallcnger, chairman of the Vesir Committee was the casting direc?r, Ryan Bolt was property man, and anders Guignard had charge of the ghting. U. 8. O. As a result of the efforts of Dr. !. P. Barnes, principal of the boys' :hool, the Kamehameha School for Dys has been granted a charter to irm a branch of the National Honor Dciety.?Ka Moi, Honolulu, Hawaii. / to L * msf sa/i / ~7 I M?? ? Letter Tells Of Of Investii Judge Joshua Hudson Writes To ( Citadel In, 1886; Tells < Colleges ^rive To I The money invested in State colleges v "comes back to the people in benefits a increased a thousand fold," declared c Judge Joshua H. Hudson of Bennetts- c villc in a letter written in 188G to a c committee of graduates of The Citadel. The famous jurist, born and reared t in conditions of the utmost poverty, ^ secured his education only after an r extremely hard struggle and graduated a from the South Carolina College in s 1852 with the highest honor. t Judge Hudson's letter was, in part: s "The spirit of opposition to our n State institutions of learning is indeed 1 deplorable. Unless checked and over- li thrown, great disaster will befall our t people. f "Now, far more than ever in the r< history of the State, should we cherish t and foster schools for the higher edu- t cation of the white youth of the State, t Stern duties of citizenship arc before e them, and more serious problems? ii industrial, social, and political?await solution in their hands in the future, a than we or our ancestors have yet a encountered. k "These are too manifest to require f enumeration here. The highest order p of education, the loftiest patriotism j and most sterling qualities of man- p hood will be needed in the near future, r indeed are now called forth to pre- t! serve our civilization and maintain a j, healthy state of social and political a prosperity. The Military Academy is \ an excellent school for just such train- t ing as a large number of our youths t need and every county in the State a will be vastly benefited by having a number of such trained young men among its people. We are now in the midst of a conflict of races. It is in vain to deny f it. It is destined to become fiercer in its aspects?social, industrial, and C political. It is irrepressible. No one > is wise enough to foretell just how C it will progress or how end. In the I most serious and perplexing thought I upon the subject, the only consolation I y/inf somt A friend of CHESTERFIE a salesman who had "son "I dropped into a little 1 and when I asked for a p erfields the man smiled a was the seventh custom break to ask for Chesterfie after smoker,' he said, ' Chesterfields click ... I s as many Chesterfields as ] hack.'" Yes, there's something to sj erfields and it takes just si: it?w They're mild and yel ? 1933, Liccsrr & Myers Tobacco Co. V Page Three Benefits jigln Colleges committee Of Graduates Of The* )f Big- Return States floney Investors vc have is an abiding1 faith in the ibility of our race to meet every mergency as it arises, and to take :are of ourselves, our families and >tate. But, to maintain our supremacy, he highest order of education must >e conferred upon the largest possible lumber of our young men. In this lone is our solution. The common chools do vast good, but do not meet lie essential requirements of citizenhip, never at any time, but certainly jot in this troublous day and time, i he State fhust have wise rulers, and icr duty is to furnish the opportunity o her young men to fit themselves or exalted places of honor, trust and esponsibility. The money appropriated o these State institutions comes back o the people in benefits increased a housand fold. No investment can qual it in its return of dividend and uterest. To withhold these appropriations nd close the doors of the college nd the Military Academy will not 'CCP the wolf of hunger and want rom the firesides of our agricultural icople, but rather bring him there, t would be a serious blow to the rogress of the education of our young nen and would work great evil to lie people generally. My sincere hope 5 that our rulers will think seriously nd act wisely in this matter; and hat they will build up, rather than car down, these noble State instituions for the promotion of learning nd for the advancement of science. "Most truly yours, J. H. HUDSON." I v. o. The results of the State baseball race I ? W L Pet. I .arolina 2 889 Jewberry ? 65Q H -lemson 9 52Q ;urman 9 u 421 <rsk,ne 6 13 316 resbyterian 15 211 I H LD writes us of lething to say": tobacco shop, ack of Chestnd told me I er without a :lds. 'Smoker tells me that ell five times 1 did a while ny about Chestx words to say - they satisfy." I v i fou buy\ J?you get \ fresh as I