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CROWING FOR A GREATER CAROLINA Damas Ball s . ^ Ju I ' 1 CMLV^jgCOC/f, UNIVERSITY OF jr SOUTH CAROLINA Volume XXVin, Moi. 9 COLUMBIA. B. 0., FRIDAY. DECEMBER 7 mid Glee Club Leaves For Long Trip Chicago To Climax Tour Eighteen Members Will Leave Wednesday For Annual Trip To Northern States December 12, the University Glee Club composed of eighteen members will leave" Columbia on its annual northern tour which will take them to Chicago, it was announced Wednesday night by Professor Maurice Matteson of the University Music department. The Glee club has recenlty adopted the name of Carolina Folk Singers, and will continue under that title on its tour. The Singers have chosen for one of their numbers a selection from Professor R. Bass's book on folk songs, an appropriate spiritual, for which the south is noted. The itinerary for the singers will take them to seven different cities, the climax of the tour coming in Chicago, 111. where two radio broadcasts will be given, one over the National Broadcasting system, and one over the Columbia system. The vocalist will appear on a program with George Olson and his orchestra at the College Inn in Chicago. In Atlanta, where they will stop on December 14, the Singers will broadcast twice over station WSB. The following itinerary for the singers has been announced by Professor Matteson: (Continued on Pago 4; Column 5) Mothers Protest German Initiation Rites Are Made Easier Club Receives Letter From Dean Bradley Charging Brutality Charges o( "brutality" were made against the initiations of the German club in a letter from Dean F. YV. Bradley read at a meeting of the club last 'I ucsday afternoon. The letter stated that the matter had been brought to Dean Bradley's attention by various mothers of men who had been initiated recently. Following the reading of the letter the club took action to decrease the severity of the initiation. During the meeting it was announced that the Christmas German will be held in the Field house on the night of December 10. Harold Minson, president of the club, termed the use of the Field house an "experiment" and said that if that arrangement proved unsatisfactory future Germans would be held somewhere off the campus. In the past all Germans have been held in the gymnasium but by recent action of the faculty all dances have been banned from there. Though no men passed the club at the meeting Tuesday it was announced that an initiation of those who have previously been elected but who had not yet been initiated would be (Continued on Page 4; Column 4) ?u. H. a. Holman And Powell Are Phi Delta Phi Initiates Two men were initiated by the local chapter of Phi Delta Phi, national legal fraternity, at a banquet of the chapter at Scarboroughs last week. The two were Marion Ilolman and Roy Powell. Holman is a senior in the law school and is a former captain of the tennis team. He is a member of the Pi Kappa Phi social fraternity and of Omicron Delta Kappa, national leadership fraternity. Powell is also a senior in law. A graduate of Wofford college, he then took two years of law at Duke University before coming to the University of South Carolina this fall. He is slated to become the secretary of Governor-elect Olin D. Johnston when Johnston takes office in January. The banquet last week was presided over by Charles Spenser, president of the chapter. Other officers of the club are: secretary-treasurer, Bill Hawkins; historian, Andrew Bcthca. Frosh Now Wear Caps Old Tradition Revived Law Laid Down By K. S. K. In Freshman Meeting Monday Of Last Week The importance of wearing "rat" caps was stressed at a meeting of all men in the freshman class held Monday night of last week in the chapel. The meeting was called as a result of the intensive drive on the part of the Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity to enforce the regulations requiring all freshmen to wear the caps. Of the 180 men in the class, 117 attended the meeting and each was required to present a cap or give a valid reason for his not having one. During the meeting the roll of the class was called. The question of measures to be taken against those who failed to at- sei tend will be taken up at the next meet- D{ ing of the fraternity. ? The meeting was presided over by d Luke Williamson, president of Kappa * Sigma Kappa. While continuing its drive to force all freshmen to purchase and wear caps, Kappa Sigma Kappa is also tak- f-v ing up the matter of the theft of caps ^ from freshmen by upper classmen. Several such thefts have been reported to the fraternity and drastic action will be taken if the practice continues. Carolina i,s nc To-day ? . Fr Problem M Scruggs llope is all worried about a as momentous question with which he was co recently confronted, namely, "It you call Ai cne cup of ice cream 'A Mickey Mouse/ tai what do you call two cups of ice cream? Two Mickey Mice' or 'Two Mickey mj Mouses ?" Scruggs suggested that j1(1 Doctor Babcock be asked to settle the a II controversy. Kr Bride Elect _i( Rumors are that Fritz Turner, w S. P. E. pledge, is planning to jump into the sea of matrimony n some time soon. Can he swim? ^ Fun Among the K. A.'s Even these wintry December days the K. A.'s may be seen on almost any afternoon, gayly disporting themselves on |a* their lawn. They appear clad in sweat ,n* shirts and white pants, and coyly fling ')C balls to one another, much in the manner of the ancient Greek games, we presume. tin mi Excitement bei The Sigma Kappas have a new mc recruit to their meetings. Last pr< Monday night they heard a 1 mysterious rattling at one of the ch; door knobs; and, suspecting a bur- (In glar, went to a member's house fr;, and phoned the police. ca; (Continued on Paoo 4; Column 3) j.jj, FIVE INITIATED INTO CLARI0S0PHIC r Five new members were initiated in- J to the Clariosophic society at its weekly meeting Tuesday night in I.egare College. The initiates were Jack Kdens, C. C. I Gaskins, Jr., McKay Brabham, James acl C. Williams and Sidney D. Young. - Co G. C. Gaskins, father of one of the new members, was present and de- |t.a livered a very interesting and humor- '] ous address, in which he disclosed the sev problems and actions of the society l)rf some ~0 years ago, when he was one . . . wil of the members. On The topic of discussion of the so- co|] ciety was "Resolve that Medicine be wit Socialized." Bernard Thomson, Pick- tha ney Walker and T. K. Mathews were sixi the leading speakers for the radicals, coll while Alton Brisscy, Kent Hunger- 'I pillar and J. G. Thomas spoke for the Un conservatives. an The query will be discussed further lear at the next meeting of the society. be i Lead Gram Jr t ^jw J; Elizabeth Carlisle (left), president of th tid (right), vice-president, who will leac imas tonight. Irisp Heads ? Service Club ther Officers Elected H jputation Sent Out Each Week Hi To Various Homes For The Unfortunate In The City Bill Crisp was electcd president of 1 : Carolina Christian Service Club at sa| weekly meeting in Flinn hall, Wed- jar sday night. Other officers elected iej Sara Rcctor, Tom Crawford, 0jj mcs Walsh, Catherine Cannon, and pj; ances Lybrand, vice-presidents; th oye M ollette, secretary; Betty Ligon, My sistant secretary; Kvelyn Wilson, w] rrcsponding secretary; Morgan Sj, rant, pianist; and Jim Taylor, assisnt pianist. tli The club sends out deputation com- cj; ittees each week to the city jail, an une of the blind. Confederate home, j)r d other places, where religious pro- to ams are carried out. \\ All students are cordially invited to ea tend the meetings of the club every th ednesday evening at 7:15. jK. U. 8. C. ft)1 loot Court To ^ Be Held Again , ' h Moot courts will be resumed by the v school in about two weeks, accordX to an announcement made to nienirs of the I.aw Federation by J. ! iley Brown, president. pa These trials are held every year by wc < law federation, and always attract ... . A rt>f mv besides law students. A memr of the faculty or some prominent mber of the local bar will he the pa; jsiding judge. wc Drown, with the assistance of the I lirmcn of the law clubs and one of ^ 1 professors in the law school has ined testimony for the opening ;e, and he expects that the trial will ,n< ce place just before ChVistnias holi- rai ys. K?"r Poster Attends Of Southerr Or. R. K. Foster, director of student | t ivities at the University will attend i Co annual meeting of the Southern I of nferencc, to be held in Richmond, [ \\? ginia, December II and 1">, it was No rned today from his office. I'll This year, according to Dr. Foster, ^ eral important changes have been I posed in the Constitution of the clia iference by various members, which me 1 be considered at this meeting, anc e important change to be seriously I isidered by the conference deals / li its membership. I' is possible t. membership will be extended to and teen members, allowing six more Soi leges opportunity for membership. ( 'lie Athletic Advisory Board of the I iversity went on record as favoring ^ invitation to Furman, and it was Ycr< ned that a similar invitation is to Ine, extended to The Citadel. d March ' L, <s', e Damas club, and Katherine Town- tli< I the grand march at the Christmas fo re< ? - ? pr )ea/s Sold ap On Campus t . be [undred Dollars Goal Ja I an ighest Goal Of Any College In ,}? South Carolina Given sc' University "The goal for the Christmas Seal ^ le on the campus is -set at $100 dols. This will surpass any other colje in the state and we feel that Carna should stand at its accustomed ^ ice at the top in this as in all other ^ ings," says Mrs. Rosamond Wimbcr- g. , in regard to the seal sale drive liich the sociology department is onsoring. "The University has not undertaken is work since lHO.'i and since tliis so- c< il problem strikes closer home than ] tn y other, tuberculosis being the most jK' evalent in the college ages, it is up i the student to help," continues Mrs. | s' imberly. "175,000 lives are saved I 'a ch year by the money from < e seals. Most of these are young! ople, men and women with life be- I t<l re them. Their smiles of confidence |' i* blotted out and their dreams of j 1 R, (Continued on Page 4; Column 5) u. ?. c. HI IRA Money Is Given Out "! i _? i ja Students ;it the I Diversity are being ^ id $2,206.70 in FI'.RA money this ek and all students doing work are (nested to call at the treasurer's of- , of e as soon as possible to receive their tr; y. The moncv being paid is for . irk done in the month of November. I11( \t present there are 150 students on tio i campus who hold FKRA jobs, ey receive from $10 to $15 per ri"' nth for part time work. The work iges from manual labor to stcnoiphic work and theme reading. 1^ Meeting j i Conference f |>"t \t present the ten members of the K a nference are: Maryland, University South Carolina, Cleinson, Duke, toi ishington and Lee, University of ce? rth Carolina, North Carolina State, CI; ivcrsity of Virginia, V. P. I. and ha M. I. earhc following are the constitutional wn mges to he taken up at the annual ^ eting in Richmond, December 14 an' I 15. M< Yom Clemson: (o ^rt. II.?Territory: "The states of ' ryland, Virginia, North Carolina. aM' ! South Carolina shall constitute the ...' ithern Conference territory." * Omit the District of Columbia.) P" from V. P. I.: I )e <rt. IV.?Membership: "The Con- Coi Mice is composed of its sixteen dai rubers." (Change the words "ten ] (Continued on P?q? |> Column T) Trustees Will Hold Meeting discuss Baker's Report eeting To Be Held In Library Building- On December Twelfth rhe University Hoard of Trustees will Id its regular semi-annual meeting :ccmber 12 at 11 a.m. in the library ilding.' Discussion of the president's nual report will comprise the main siness of the meeting. Governor I. C. Blackwood is exicio chairman of the hoard, and the ite superintendent of education, chairin of the house committee on educan, and chairman of the senate comttee on education are members exicio. Among the matters to be discussed is : budget for the ensuing year, which rmed the basis of President Baker's jucst for an appropriation of $238,485 csented to the budget commission for proval three weeks ago. Elective membens of the board, elec'.by the General Assembly, arc as fola s : Cyrus L. Shealy, Edwin G. Seils, Legare Bates, David R. Coker, mcs II. Sullivan, 11. Gordon Hughes, d Dr. R. O. McCutcheon. Frank Welurne, treasurer of the University, is' cretarv and treasurer of the board. ?u. 8. c.? Court Rules ROTC Valid Itudents Must Drill; upreme Court Holds That Com- j pulsory Military Training Is 1 Constitutional 1 he right of students in land grant i )llcgcs and universities to refuse to j ,ke compulsory military training? was ven a deathblow by the United States upreme Court in an unanimous decion handed down by Justice Butler st Monday. Tlie ease in point was ic suspension of two University of ulifornia students for their refusal to ke the required R. O. T. C. work' that institution. Albert \V. Hamilton and W. Alonzo pynolds. Jr., entering the University! l'.i.n, asked to he exempted from ; ilitarv training on the ground that; ey believed training for war was imoral, in violation of the tenets of the ethodist Episcopal church and vioted the Kellogg-Briand pact to outiv war. Counsel for the university insisted I was entirely within the jurisdiction the school whether to require such iining and that no federal question is involved, even though the national ivernnient had granted land and .mey to aid in founding the inslitun. ? In a similar cas^ last term, the court! used to review a controversy from j e University of Maryland resulting j (Continued on Pag# 4; Column 5) LARK U. STUDENTS ENCAMP ON FIELD Nineteen members of Clark univerv graduate school of geography are Lamped on the athletic field of the I liversity, for the purpose of studyf manufacturing systems of South rolina. I'liese men, including three instructs and a Swedish cook, left Worker. Massachusetts (the home of I ;trk) last September, and since they ve travelled over a great part of "?tern United States. The first stop s in the l'inger Lakes region of w \ork; thence through the Sheniloah valley to the C>rcat Smoky >untains> of Tennessee and on down the great steel mills of Birmingham, icy then set out for New Orleans :1, after a short stop there, proceeded *oss Mississippi, Alabama, and nrida to Miami. The party is stopig in Columbia on its homeward l> and will arrive in Worcester about ccmhcr 1;>. There the students will mplete maps and reports from the la gathered on their ninety-day trip. Dr. \\ allaec W. Atwood, president (Continued on P?0?^TCoruiTin 4) x ounaea i?u? Will Make Change In Coach Staff Contracts Expire Jan. 1 Shakeup At Meeting Of Athletic Advisory Board Next Week Predicted J here will be a definite change in the personnel of the University coaching staff when the Athletic Advisory Hoard meets next week it was learned from a reliable source yesterday. The present contracts of the coaching staff expires January ]. At the meeting the board will consider the nominations for the positions of head coach and assistants for the term 1The board will also consider the discontinuation of all complimentary passes to games except those of newspaper men. It has been stated by Dr. R. K. Foster, director of student activities, that the present athletic season has been one of the poorest financially ever experienced. Last year and the present season proved a failure as far as the financial end ol the athletic program was considered. A committee of the Board of Trustee* and a committee from the Athletic Advisory Board will consider the nomination. In the past the Advisory Board made the nomination subject to approval by the Board of Trustees. 1 lie Advisory Board in the past usually received from Dr. R. K. Foster, the names of persons to be con(Continued on Pu<je 4; Column 4) " $800 Subscribed For Y Budget Only $200 Now Lacking Campaign For Funds Proving- Successful As Goal Conies Within Reach Kiglit hundred dollars of the $1,000 required by the budget of the Y. M. C. A. to carry on its work for the year, have been subscribed, according to Archie Avers, campaign manager and treasurer of the . This is an increase of one hundred dollars since the week of November third when approximately $700 dollars were subscribed. 1 his figure is twice as much as was received last year. The drive which terminated this week has been conducted since the iirst of November. However, any contributions will <till be welcome according to Archie Avers. I.ending the canvassers with a total subscription of $25.50, Tom Crawford, stood out in front of approximately fifty nun who conducted the drive, hollowing closely are K. \Y. Masters with Harper Welhorn with $22.00 and Lamar Holley with the same amount. Canvassers who are in the race are as follows: A. M. Boy ce, I.amar Holley, Leon Pickens. McKae Galloway, John Turn(Continued on PaQe 4; Column 4) Junior Class Meets To Discuss Reception A meeting of all members of the junior class to discuss plans for a junior senior reception and dance has been called lor Tuesday immediately after chapel by Werber Bryan, president of the junior class. A short time ago Bryan announced that there would probably be no such function this year but he stated this week that he is now convinced that some sort of an arrangement can be made. He said that he was hoping to make some arrangement with the social cabinet whereby a regular gym dance can be given with the seniors admitted free. If such an arrangement is made a reception will be held for the seniors immediately beforehand. The meeting was originally planned for this week but was delayed until Bryan could get a list of all members of the junior class. He said that if the class agrees to have the affair it 'Continued on P?o? 4; Column 4) "