The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, December 07, 1934, Page Page Two, Image 2
Disscussion Gr
Fifteenth
? ^
Tenement Seven Leads
Group Headed By Deling Booth
Has 957 Points To Set Pace
For This Year
The fifteenth consecutive year o? un- 1
interrupted activity will mark the last
meeting of the University Y. M. C. A. ;
discussion group next Tuesday night,
December 11, with tenement seven leading
the present race with 957 points,
according to R. G. Bell, executive secretary
of the Y. M. C. A.
Following closely are tenements 23 I
and 17. Deling Booth, is president of .
tenement seven and Tom Crawford and |
Fred Ellis, head respectively tenements
23 and 27.
Tenements seven and seventeen each
have 31 members enrolled.
It is the custom of the past campaigns ;
of the discussion groups to give the win- i
ning tenement a banquet after Christ- t
mas at which all members of other
groups having perfect attendance will
be invited. The same procedure will be s
carried out this year, under the manage- 1
ment of the University Y. <
This is the fifteenth year in which the i
discussion groups have continued its t
campaigns, winning for the University I
the unique distinction o f carrying on (
this work longer and more successfully t
than any other institution in the coun- ;
try. Jim llardwick, nationally known i
student worker, remarked while at the i
University recently that the discussion '
groups conducted here are better than i
those of any other school. i
LORETTA YOUNG
?in?
"The White Parade"
?with?
JOHN BOLES
MON.-TUE.-WED.
~ .............. . . - _ ?
METROPOLI'
"THE OLD I
THE STUDENTS' I
1520 MAIN STREET
* ?
?WHEN YO
STEIN-KING Bl
You Are Assured Of The Higl
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STEIN KING- IS
OLDEST BREWE]
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p CHRISTMAS ?
% * Duckit Cigarette A
gw Five Year Diary
& Cigarette Humidor
?? MS Leather Handy B03
fa Cigarette Case?w
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W ONE DOLL
w Desk Set?with In]
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^ Parker Pen and Pe
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Many More Approi
W Christmas Gifts I
THE STATE
I BOOK ST
K 1224 Main Stree
oups End
Year Tuesday
Deering Here
Next Monday
To Address Freshmen
Deering Is General Secretary
Of Y. M. C. A. At
V. P. I.
Paul Deering, general secretary of the
Y. M. C. A. of V. P. I. has been secured
l>y the University Y. M. C. A. to spend
i day here Monday, December 10. With
liim will he the Rev. Lee Sheppard of
the University church at Lykcsburg,
Virginia.
While here, Reverend Sheppard will
address the Freshman Chapel Monday
morning, and Mr. Deering will speak
o the Freshman council Monday night.
Paul Deering is one of the outstanding
itudent workers of the South according
o Mr. R. G. Bell, executive secretary
>f the University Y. M. C. A. Speakng
of Deering's career, Bell remarked
hat at about twelve years old, he lost
>oth eyes in an accident, but in spite
>f this accident lie went on through
:ollcge, receiving an A. B. degree and
in M. A., being awarded Phi Beta Kap>a
thereafter. He lias been student sec- i
etary at V. P. 1. for twenty years, lie
will tell the story of his own experiences
in life, here on his stay, to the Freshman
group.
U. I. o.
INFIRMARY
Nine patients?all hoys?have been
sick in the University infirmary during
the past two weeks. At present, all of
them have been discharged except
Ernest Cooke and Lewis Taber. Those
who have been on the sick list are:
Leroy Stroud, C. B. Littlejohn, N. A.
Pearson, Orville Stiff, L. C. Blaickwcll,
Freeman Husky, H. R. Lilly, R. O.
Brady, M. T. Pitts, H. B. Richardson,
Ernest Cooke and Lewis Taber.
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Katherine Hendley, (left) senior leadei
junior leader, who will lead the special ji
Damas held tonight at the Jefferson hote
Macbeth Closes
At T<
~
Davis Elected T
To Committee
Of Language Association
mc
Mrs. Rowe Made Secretary Of the
German Section Of Modern pr<
Language Association or<
JTp
Professor Henry Campbell Davis was sU
signally honored last week by his elec- Gt|
tion to the executive committee of the
South Atlantic Modern Language asso- ma
ciation at the meeting held in Charleston.
Professor Davis has long been a ^r<
member of the association and has taken
a prominent part in its activities.
Mrs. Adaline Rowe, wife of Professor
W. Ii. Rowe, and professor of German
and French at ^Columbia College, was
cr*
wamtmamamammmmmmmummam
!"
K*x JZi'jZr-x
CAMPUS RUMORS ?
see
Have you seen those new Fan-Tan
hose at Mangel's? They're nifty and ^
priced so reasonably ... If you can't
pa i
get an arm around your neck, try a tj
new muffler from Marshall-Tatum's
. . . Those Adjusto lamps at The State jr
Book Store are the stuff. You can
clamp them on bed, chair or table, and ,
(1C1
they make a very good reading lamp. t|?At
Lachicotte's ?.(<
. they are showing Ra
newest in Kc,
watches and C|K
Vf rings; peep in at the
them and you'll the
are being worn Ea
this season, and The Cut-Rate Men's the
Shop has them in Piedmonts of every the
hue. They are also showing pajamas, ma
Swank tie sets, and genuine hand-made bit
ties. Visit them and see their Xmas ]
specials . . . At the Jacqueline Slipper '/?
Shoppe the Co-eds are really getting fir:
bargains in evening and every-day
slippers . . . Snuggle up in one of those
Bunny jackets at Kohn's and thumb at
your nose at 'Ole Man Winter, and '
don't forget those Carolyns . . . For C?i
Christmas we suggest: ba
Those initialed handker- i T)
chiefs at Coggins'; a f^TS th<
lounging robe from /M ^ j
Hope-Davis ... A cer- / 1
tain member of the .J.--'a
GAMECOCK
staff smokes five brands ft, I ce
from Five Points-huh. ? St
By the way, I see that the Ritz thea- ~
tre is bringing the "House of Rothschild"
next Monday and Tuesday;
Let's go. See you next week.
DUPRE
PRINTING
COMPANY
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Book And Job Printers
"Since 1899" Phone 7044 /
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; . V | SC
P
r, and Amelia DesChamps, (right)
mior-senior figure at the Christmas a,(
1. s[
i Run "
SC
own Theatre,
wo More Performances ?l
itendance At This Play Has Sur- J
passed All Other y
Records
\ performance tonight and one to rrow
afternoon will end the run of
: Town theater's 1934 Shakespearean
^taction, Macbeth. Attendance reels
for all other plays given by the
imp have been surpassed, and many
idents have come to Columbia from
icr cities to witness the current play.
In staging Shakespeare's most draitic
tragedy, Bel ford Forrest and his
wn theater cast have put a zest and
:shncss into their work that raises it
above the run of amateur attempts. |
has not been an aim to make an elab- ?
ite presentation, and so well has this
iplicity been observed that often the
>st restrained scenes are the most pow- ?
ul.
Die stage settings are plain, and cos- ^
lies are no more gaudy than tastes of _
period require. To offset this situ
city, there are weird lighting and
ind effects which are made even more ^
pping by the contrast. n
liyrnes Bentley in the leading role is
vverful and sympathetic, and although j
tends at times to be disturbingly noihe
more than compensates for it by
i restraint which he displays in the
lies of tensest emotion. Me ably por- C
lys Macbeth's early struggle and later
lodthirsty abandonment; and he im- C
rts to his audience the true tragedy of
man.
As Lady Macbeth, Mrs. Elsie Keith
rber is especially notable for the manin
which she shows the change uti-gone
between the first and last porns
of the play. The contours of her
:e change until they arc almost hag- ?
rd in the closing scene; her voice, >ture
and posture undergo (a like
inge, and so skillfully is it done that
: audience finds no trouble in feeling
: correct amount of sympathy for her
her final scene.
MacDufT is forcefully portrayed by
rl DeLay, who is also responsible for
: lighting effects. Without exception,
: other parts were well carried off,
iking the play as a whole an unusual
of entertainment.
It was announced that the next play,
iother Language, will be presented the
st week in January.
cted secretary of the German section
this meeting also.
The states of North Carolina, South
irolinsji, Georgia, Florida and 1 Alama
are included in the association,
le meeting next year will be held at
i University of Georgia in Athens.
Georgia, not Pennsylvania, is the
rgest of the original 13 states.
Large deposits of potash have rently
been exploited in the United
ates.
filjYOUR STORES
THE CANTEEN
lis; Ssndwlchet, Cold Drlnkt, Jgi
Toilet Artlolw, Colleo*
if J'w'lry M
IUNIVER8ITY BOOK 8T0RE V jj
Th? Offlolal Book 8tor*
CAROLINA PRE88INQ fcfifew.
CLUB
I For fln? dry olwmlng ^
i nViVi
\ '
# ' ; 4,7 ^
Four To Take
Special Study
n Rhodes Competition
'omplote Program Of Supervised
Study Soon To Be v
Initiated
Complete programs of supervised
ludy for William James Humphries,
/illiam Ogilvie Sweeny, David Harper
leans, and Julian H. Bradsher, who
ere selected and approved by the facIty
as the four representatives of the
University in the Rhodes scholarship
>mpetition, will be instituted soon.
These will include oral and written
imzes, reading lists, psychological and
iltural intelligence tests. Some will be
:lf-administered by the candidates and
railed by them; others will be held by
rofessor W. H. McCall and marked
:cording to the standard excellent
icet.
The psychological and cultural intellience
tests are very similar to those
iken by entering new students and
phomores.
After extensive study, the candidates
'ill meet with representatives from
her schools of the state for eliminaons
in Columbia on January 3. Two
-0111 these will be sent to Atlanta to
icct with men from North Carolina,
ennessee, Georgia, Florida and AlaCOLUMBIA
Special Rates
LEAVE YOUR LAUNDRY
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Callcott Reviews
Recent Election
"The recent national election was not
such a sweeping Democratic victory as
is seems," said Dr. W. H. Callcott,
professor of history. He pointed out
that 47% of the votes were cast by Republicans
and that the party was not
by any means dead.
He would not commit himself on the
subject of whether or not the G. O. P.
could make an effective comeback in
1936, but he did say that this was the
first thne in many years that the party
in power has increased its forces in the
house and the senate at the re-election.
bama. There the finals will be held
January 7, ' when four men from this
group will actually be awarded the
scholarships.
Business Training
is Essential to Everyone, Particularly
College Men and
Women. Day, Night, and
Special Classes. '
Draughon's
Business College
' 1218 Sumter Street
Telephones 5951 and 6317
LAUNDRY
; To Students
l AT THE CANTEEN BY
EACH DAY
Telephone 4954
*** ???? .
JUT SACRIFICE!
me You Please.
WRITER SHOP
pton Ave.
0
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I
WAY"....
I
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ust the kind I like.
;erie?what a grand
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worn Fan Tart hose
*d the clothes, well
us is Mangel-eone,
I'm really "that
SEL'S.
ft
gels
iylor Street