The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 27, 1934, Page Page Three, Image 3

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Barney Early Loses Brother Was University Grad Brother Of Popular Secretary Passes Away At His Home In Baltimore Charles E. Early, brother of Barney A. Early, alumni secretary at the University of South Carolina, died at his lionie in Baltimore, Md. last week. Charles E. Early was born July 6, 1887 at Early's Crossroads, Darlington County. His parents were Bernard A. Early, Sr., and Annie (Law) Farley, both of prominent Darlington County families. Mr. Early's father was a leading Darlington County merchant and large landowner for 40 years. Mr. Early has many friends and kinsmen throughout the State, particularly the Pec Dee section, who will be saddened to hear of his death. He attended the public schools at Darlington and Florence, and was a graduate of the University of South Carolina, class of 1907. After being graduated from the University, Mr. Early practiced law at Florence up until the year 1917. He was city attorney and for several years recorder at Florence. In 1917 Mr. Early attended an officers' training camp, and was commissioned therefrom as a lieutenant, lie served in the World War with the first Pioneer Regiment, being overseas until June 1919, and being gassed. After the war Mr. Early practiced law at Augusta, Ga., for two years, moving from there to Washington, in the early part of 1922. He had been in Baltimore for the past live years. The family residence is at 1207 Edmondson Avenue. Besides his brother, Barney A. Early, of Columbia, he is survived by three children, William B. Early, of Baltimore, Charles Law Early, of North Augusta, and Mabel S. Early, of Augusta. He has one sister, Mrs. John I. Shannon, of Florence. Funeral and interment was held in Baltimore last Wednesday afternoon. !G .. u'8'? I he movie producers over-estimate 2, our dumbness, which is something we V> an't do for them.?Olin Miller in the r Thomaston, (Ga.) Times. r I r-. V, GOODALL'S FAMOUS PALM f BEACH SUIT IS FEATURED I' AT 5o * The Hope Davis Co. Including all Models and Colors Double-breasted and Sport Models LINEN SUITS $8.50, $12.50, $14.00 Hope-Davis Corner Lady and Main NO GAPPING .j||?|<|jBg NO SLIPPING ? MOST STYLES Nunn-Bush^ -Anhft. hidhiorxjul' OjcfoteU.. .tOR MEN MARSHA 1535 Ma: Faculty Members , Attend Meeting Discuss Junior College Dr'B^ef; Dean Bradley, And Mr. McColl Attend Meeting At ( Newberry Suggestions on the subject of the public school-junior college work were read at a meeting of the South Carolina as- . sociation, of colleges Tuesday, April 17 t at Newberry College. The University < representatives at the meeting were President L. T. Baker, Dr. F. W. Bradley, < and Professor VV. C. McCall. The committee appointed by the Pres- ] "lent to investigate, report and offer recommendations to the faculty on the ] acceptance of public-school-junior col- ; lege work submitted the following: "The Committee on the one hand dc- i sires to enlarge the scope of the ser- | vice of the University to the State and applauds the aspiration of high school i officials likewise to expand their work. But we realize on the other hand that , there are grave difficulties to be met f at the present time for the successful execution of the plan. Under present financial conditions affecting the support , of the University, the faculty is not in , a position efficiently and effectively to exeicise the necessary supervision of ( this high school instruction. For finati- i ci.il reasons the high schools cannot sup- | ply the required library, laboratory and , instructional facilities for the maintc- | nance of university standards and scholarship. \\'e recommend, therefore, that i the I niversity enter into this cooperative jil.ui only when the following conditions ; can be f til til led by both parties. "Conditions to be met by the high schools: 1. J hat such courses as are given un- * der this plan shall be known as emergency junior college courses. ' "2. 1 hat the high school offering emergency junior college courses must be a member in good standing of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. "3. That the instructor selected to take charge of a course shall have a Master's degree or the equivalent from a standard institution, with special study in the subject to be taught. The instructor shall be approved by the head of the University department concerned ' and by a permanent committee to be appointed by the President for that purpose. "4. That the instructor selected by the high school shall follow a definite syllabus furnished by the University dc- ' partmcnt, so that the courses offered ' Shall correspond as nearly as possible with those given at the University. "5. That the departmental facilities of the high school shall he inspected and approved by the University department concerned. "6. That a representative of the University department concerned may conduct a class or classes and otherwise investigate and direct the progress of work in the high school. These representatives shall make a report of their findings to the permanent committee of the University. "7. That students desirous of taking these advanced standing courses for provisional college credit shall fulfill the prescribed requirements for admission to the University prior to their admittance to the advanced standing courses. "8. That the final examinations for OR COOLNESS \nkle fashioned for comfort ^ Here's coolness to gladBilk den your feet on the warmibvPwi shoes are ventilated to let i the air circulate right 1 jkk NJHIRl through them. Like all tn\aaBL Nunn-Bush shoes, they are Ankle fashioned? you will see and feel tiio difference when you LL'S, Inc. in Street ?_ a n js u a J ScienceCouncil Elects Mem bers Three Made F ellows Sopenhaver Reveals Latest Activities Of Academy Of Science According to Dr. J. E. Copenhavcr, professor of chcmistry and secretaryreasurcr of the South Carolina Academy >f Science, the following were elected ts fellows in the South Carolina Academy >f Science, at a meeting of the council >11 last Sunday morning: Dean S. B. Earle, Clenison, Dr. Roe E. Remington, Medical College of South Carolina, and Dr. J. E. Mills, professor of chemistry it the University. Dr. Copenhavcr also announced that the following had been elected to mcm)ership in the Academy: Dr. Walter I. Bristow, Columbia physician; Mr, M. R. Lunz, Jr., of the Charleston Museum; Mr. J. Cordon Tucker, assistant in the department of Biology at the University >f South Carolina; Professor J. 11. Hoch, Medical College of South Carolina; Professor W. II. Zeigler, Medical College :>f South Carolina; Professor E. J. Karris, Medical College of South Carolina; Miss Nell Ilenry, Department of Bi?logy, Lander College; Mrs. Beverly Coles Griffin, Lander College; Dr. Margaret Zeigler, Department of Mathematics of Lander College; Dr. Bruce, denlist of 11 artsvillc, South Carolina; Air. Leon Schectcr, Department of Chemistry at the University; Mr. D. D. Ritchie, assistant in the Department of Biology it Eurman University, and Mr. R. K. Taylor, Jr. u. a. o. -'ach semester may he conducted at the L Diversity by the University department :oncerned, unless the department desires to send a representative to administer the examination at the high school. "9. 1 hat the grading of these courses shall he determined by the University. "10. That provisional credit shall be given upon the satisfactory completion :?f such courses, but must be validated by the satisfactory completion of one years' advanced work at the University in each course concerned. "11. That this cooperative plan refers inly to courses of freshman level. Should the high school offer courses alxivc freshman level this agreement terminates, for then, if officially recognized, the school falls under the jurisdiction of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools as a Junior College. "Conditions to be met by the University : "1. That no department of the University of South Carolina shall undertake this emergency junior college work unless the plan is approved by the head of the department concerned and by the permanent committee to be appointed by the President of the University. "2. That the University reserves the ri^ht, at any time, to discontinue this cooperative plan, in any course or courses, where, in the judgment of the permanent committee such action may be necessary. "3. That the approved plan be presented to the executive secretary of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. u. s. c. Taber Selected Sorority Delegate Miss Elsie Taber has been elected as delegate from the Alpha Lambda chapter of Delta Delta Delta at the University. She is a Columbia girl, a junior, and will serve as marshal in the chapter next year. Edith Woodruff, a sophomore, from Baltimore, was elected alternate delegate. She will be chapter recording secretary next year. Among others who are planning to go to the convention, arc Miss Betty Payne, Miss Sue Korbes, Miss Helen Gayle Bell, Miss Anna Davis and Miss Bonnie Shand, all of Columbia, and Miss Bessie Cheathem of Durham, N. C. Delta Delta Delta, international collegiate fraternity for women, is holding its seventeenth national convention STORES I > S:| ||f THE CANTEEN |:| if: Sandwiches, Cold Drlnke, Toilet Article*, Colleoe .&, \ i _-"w,"y>Jj UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE The Official Book Store^ j CAROLINA PRESSING club l1 FOf dfy C,#*nln? ^ JECO C K Calcott Plans Mexican Trip Gets Research Grant U. S. C. Professor To Complete Study Of Life Of Santa Anna This Summer By mentis of a grant from the Social Science Research council, Dr. W. II. Callcolt, professor of history at the University, will be enabled to complete his study of the life of Santa Anna, Mexican leader during the light for independence, in Mexico this summer. I he Social Science Research council appropriates sums for the scholars who have done work for publication, thus enabling them to go further in their studies. Doctor Callcott has spent three summers working on this subject at the University of Texas which probably has the best store of available material on Mexican history. He has completed his research into the life of the Mexican leader with the exception of several local phases. "Church and State in Mexico*' is a scholarly book written by Doctor Callcott., ?U. H. O. and second international convention from June 2:$ to 28 at Virginia Beach on the Atlantic Seaboard. This is the first such gathering in the South and is of especial significance because Tri Delta was the first of the Northern orders to enter the heart of the "old South." Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston University on Thanksgiving Eve, 1888, and today it has 87 chapters in colleges and universities of the United States and Canada. It has a total membership of 22,000. There arc 135 alumnae groups. This convention will bring to the delegates a consciousness of early American history and an appreciation of the life of the Colonial Period. The last day in old Virginia will be spent in Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in America, at Yorktown, where Cornwallis surrendered his army in 1781, and at Williamsburg, the oldest incorporated city and the social center of colonial days. Here William and Mary College was founded in 1G93, the oldest in the country. Thei PA LiV RESILIENCY COME-BACI RECOVERY! Hang it up over-nigh kles bounce out. The i to its normal beauty most as well as if pres: This is due not to a which might vanish if but to new developme construction of the fabrt $1 At 1 G O O D A L L Showing how Palm B< made of four totally different Two sets of photographs wei over-night. The Palm Heach S truly amazing facility in the m shows results after banging.) jUJ| RESULTS OF WRINKLIN Debate Held 1 In Society "Resolved : That co-ed education is bet- < ter than segregated education" was the i (|uerry of a debate at the meeting of the < llvpatian Literary Society held Wednesday afternoon in the Clariosophic I Iall. ' The affirmative, represented by Georgia Goodwin and Alie Floyd, was awarded the judges' decision. The negative was represented by Bessie Vigodsky and Margaret Sampson. Judges were Roberta i Hudson, Annie Maude Huiet, and Caro- i lyn Hodges. OPEN Coggins, Inc., 1300 Main, openir for University men and women, drop in and ask to see the new BELTED BACK AND DOUBL] Coggii 1300 Mail Young Men's Wear at * PARKER RATE CENTRAL1 DRUGS 1204 Mail "THE REXAL 'e's Bounce l BEACH \ \ / \ f V t, and the wrin- The wrinkle-ha suit comes back quality of the n and shape, al- and its smooth, sed with a iron. repel dirt and d ny added finish down upkeep. P l the laundry... and smart all si nts in the actual white and man c- lored by GOOD, 8.50 rour Clothier's COMPANY* CI ?ach Suits retain their smooth lines, summer fabrics, was subjected to precisely re taken: (1) immediately after mussing; (: uit not only wrinkled or mussed less than t latter of "automatic recovery." (See actualphc MMBR ^ 2 ^SUM O TESTS ON PALM BEACH AND C Page Three > Co-Ed Debaters Win Over Brenan A University of South Carolina co-ed debating team won a decision over a team representing Brenau in a debate Saturday night at Columbia College. Miss Maude I luiet and Miss Sara Rector composed the University team. Members of the Brenau team were Miss Jacqueline Harrison and Miss Betty Phillips. The query for the debate was "Resolved, That the powers of the president ol the I nited States should be substantially increased as a settled policy." Miss Mildred Guilds presided. BHmnBBnnnBMHB ING! tg today the latest sport wear If its Golf. Tennis or Baseball 3-BREASTED SPORT SUITS is, Inc 1 Street Young- Men's Prices DRUG CO. ?aPLLN a Street NIGHT L STORE" in a SUIT iting, crease-holding ew 1934 Palm Beach unfuzzy yarns which lust, combine to keep >Jow you can stay cool immer at low cost. In y colors. Stylishly taiALL. Fully pre-shrunk. 1 N C I N N A T I . Each of these summer suits, the same mussing treatment. 2) after hanging the suits up he others...hut also showed tographi. In eatb case photo on left >THER SUMMER SUITS