University of South Carolina Libraries
The Gamecock Founded January 30, 1908 ROBERT ELLIOTT GONZALES, First Editor Published weekly by the Literary Societies of the University of South Carolina during the college year except during examinations and holidays Entered as second class miatter at the postoffice at Colunbia, S. C., Noveinber 20, 11,0S Subscription Ilate--2.00 per colletge year. Circulation--ISW0 Advertising rates furnished upon reqiest Offices in Tenetnent 16., I'ni%ersity ca:liPus Phone S123 1935 Member 1936 Rssociated Colle5icate Press Distributor of CoLe6iate Di5est Sole and Exlusi%e N:at iit l .\.tver i .iu lepreentatives N.\TION.\l. AI 1:lt l-lN ; si:litvIc:. Itc. 420 1;alisun Au,ni,'. New York ('itv Chi,a no-- noston-Sat Frant i- .. Ati:eles I'rtiland-Seattle IIOw\\Al) Cooi--:4 - - - - - - - Editor ArilErox Wl.Al.:Y - - - - iisiniess Ialatget'r T. '. MT 30t-: - - - - - - Managingt Editor FRANCIS WiiLLAM8s - - - - - ports Editor MAY ANIW-S - - - - -- - Society Editor Ex.E.AtO Wl.:i:t.\' - - - - - Co-e(1 Editor .FRE-D I.:t.I.is - - - - - l'irrillatlioll AIallai er Assotl.\T:s Miiles Eliiott, Jack C:lea, 1o)) llinphill. Statinon lims, associate editors; Ed I.ter. Iluint ;i.thant. -int I lit I , associate managing editors; Ray lt.ugeron, Zack s-ibh.it a. Felix (;reene, assistants to the oiu n,ess ini.un,iger sl'.\FF W\lItrl.ls Donald Causey. lleen tiler. .\atite ninso and Bu-n.e Littlejohn, sT.\FF .\SsisT.\NTIs Joe Cam ak. S. It. lI:t-s. 's, itnt sport e.lit~rs; Sani Clelanil, James w lhan.I aloert tron , is. itant circilation mina:gers i'il )AY, Nt \'E.\lm 8, 1935 Your First Real Chance for a Swim ming Pool is at Hand. Reach Out And Grasp It )o or (to not. 1 'iiiversity- of Soutl ('aroliina stit dents wat a swiliIInIg- pl)tn) ? This is a <pitestint that mtlst be (tide<tl inunediatelv'. Fifteen huindre(l dolhirs Was the goal set fot' We stutleits to raise for the lniversity pool. TOtlay that go;al dloes nOt appear to be in si ght, unless drastic action is takn'll by lmlembl erls of the student bodv in loihg their share toward contribtit ing to the pool. ('arolina's sitnttting pool las been the dteniun of a few far-seeigttr men on the faculty for Via i's. Long agO )latns were lrawII IIor the p)ool, long ago plans were stl)ub itted and re jecteil, now at last the l'niver.ity has solethin,g talngille to go ott--a -1.000 grattt from the gov ernutlnet, leaving only 1.:(00 as the Universityl's part of the total cost. "A. Iolllar" is too lllh.'" coies the rv. -Maite so, but Professor Sitnwait <lonated $1,500 in ser Vic'es for the pool. T'It. is trule Carolina Spirit. Wou;;; that more sttilenits had that intaigible spirit that calls for the good of the Un'iversity above everYthing. "I don' t sw\iml," has been usedl as an excuse. With a pool available the Lniversitv's philysical etluta tion p)rognunl w\ill be rouindedl out. and1( you wilt leartl how to swYiml. "WVell, I wol't be I>ack lext year." Yes, blit how about the stutlents ill vears to come? SmtIlle botly had to mlake a start sotmewhere, and it is the Senlio' s iiiisforttunet.' to Ie tlit. ontes to Ie startetd on. Iltowever', if a shiot sightedt jioliley is to lbe folloiwedi by the studttent body, therie WILIL BW NO SW IM M1NG~ POOL. "Oh1 , thle mloney will be ra ised somIlehtow if we don't tdonatte." Yes, it miay be andI IT MAY' NI )TJ ber 15 atit Satuntilay ntight at miidniighit has beten set as the ernd of the eunipaigni. Pei'ha ps doiting tto thle pool fiitil may mean nt goin)g to thle mnovit's three or f'ourt titmes netxt week, tor it mtay meian cttttailinig ifexpetlituresi' on a date. btit whien halatnetd algainist having a swim mlinig piool on the t'unipts, that's noithing. "Th'le onily school ill thet State of' auny size wvithi t iont hms been ntt ached to t he I'n iver.,it v f'otr stitte tittie. Th'ie call to ac'tioui is att li;iiol. tIhe respotnse mutst lbe now. not next week or next spr'intg; bit now. Some stttdetts t'antit aff'ortd to giv~e anyl tiling, butt mtost tatanlfon' to give soi'luetng and( it is thtt spiirit that c'tunlts miorec than anythIinig else ini a nitttter of' thiis sor't. Thiis is the first time ill yetars that ('ar'olitna sItu denits havye been ca lIed ott f'or somtethintg thait re iiir'es co0-operaltionu, atid lths fari it appears as if' the studi ent body has f'a ile<lI to r'esp)ond . A smnall batnd of loyalI Ca(intdina stiltdet ha liive! )sponsored this dr'ivte without r'e('eivmg alny beinefit fr'omt it. hav~e gi veti tip vnIal utl timue, tIat tshold Ihavii e bteen spient ini stitdy, wor'kintg on the c'ampaign muiitst they stimil bacttk and1( seet theirt eiit'ts go to niaughf wh'len C o-OPIERATJION WiI LL I NM!lm SI'C As a Football Player You Should Be Willing to Abide By the Rules ''GinlIne at cigatret te, I 'ti not al lowved to carr't' thieti my1self." Suich is a veryt 'fre<p nen It' request on thle partt oh' mainy (if the freshmttan antI bohitutk football player's at the Uniiv'ersity. TJhe"e mteni atre kept her'e itt at dlir'ect explense to the alumttni andt supporters oif thle Uive"trsityv. Thle very'~ fnict that thev nre here shnol menn that they m;'il A Well-rounded Education is Neces sary for Our Leaders to Rightly Conduct Themselves To ullgarize a statement by Conl igressian I. P. Fuhner, "W11hat this country needs is better edlu ca1tedl public mern." Tlruie, he puts a w ell-rOulil education on a competitive basis, saying that it is n'cessarV for ambitious young people to have one in ordter to (oll)ete witth educated mien, but what he meant was-that in order to give the na tion the benefit. of our intelligence and to make it possible for us to fit into the country's life, we umst. prepare ourselves for the job. It is significant that lie said, not "an education," but. "a well-rounded education." To many inuls tries have been governed byl men who hadi no in tinate knowledge of facts and conditions outside the purview of their ow'n enterprises. 'Ile lbaiker's who have been "forced" into retirenient knew all about rates of exchange and conditions causing a tellporary fluctuation of values. What they did not know was the importance of the long-range at titude, the attitude that their owin"I prosperity (le 1)endied on the p)roslerity and happiness of bil lions of people with w"hom they never cane in contact. Perhaps a better way of stating it is that they lacked that unlerstandi g of the surge aini resurgelce which. originating iln obscure sour('es. determines the balance which life and in dltistry is to assuite. Such al un1(derstarling is not gleaned fromIl bal ance sheets antd stock reports. It colmes froii a lIroldl un<i(lerstatidinig of hiniianlIt nature. lulnian suf fering, the laws of physics and the laws of natlure. It is the understantling that is the conicomitant of a wrell-rounded kiiow\ledge of the arts and sciences. Not. si narrow\ ar"itliietic taking into coznizance only the factors of one's own 1 hlisiness, but a wile nlathemnatics of knowledge. This is t he surest way of making the worl ourt' oyster. We are still too inexperienced to criticize. but whenl the conditions of the last. years have throwvn the foreinost banikers into disagreelent, shown the sharp <i\ivergenice aliolig the econo nlists, ald split the )Olitical parties into two, three anll( f(II' factions. then the logical inference chunii 'S for ani audience. The familiar fable (f the blindl men (lescrihing an elephant a fter each had felt a different part of its hotly is a goodI explanatiou of the failure to agree. Each ma1n i has a constricted outlook whitb cainot reach bevond the confines (f his own-t lin derstanding. '.a(li keeps his nose pressed to his own grindtstone. All the' know is that the stone is n1ing. What mioves it, what it is niale of, how\ big it i, they\" call only sllrlise(-atl of course each will guess somiething dil'erent. To go hack to the eleplhant. to one hanker the skini feels grm'. to aniother green. to another calloused, to a f'ouirth . velvety. And wih-en a hlnler who has felt the au inld ini tel'ms of its leg, and the m:atumfactuirer whl Ias felt it in termis of its truni1ik. attemnt to reach an agreeiiient. on the dlescriltion of an elelh,alnt, the resullt has the aspect. of a pied gal ley of a (,er trule Stein essay. narr'owniess of Iurl public imen fliat prFompite'd Mir. Fuhuiier to urge thle groupi~ of stutdenuts toI whlom lit wans talking to get au well-rounded tedituationt. Thtus, (lilt owni benel(fit iinerely. but tifote benelt't (If' flit' nati iton U( ariet eplie as a w hole. ----. .. 0. Dynamic Personality of Dr. Henry Crane Revealed to Students in Religious Lectures IIEal tol every el'mnt ini fte studet bodie's of Petnn. Th'lis is oiie of' lie latrgtest re'ligiouls pl'rognons 1'etv'er li I'drakeni. tin -oilrI campulls, andt eta ily the mlost. suit'cessfl onelt. ( )ver six humih-edl persons1l lis.teneod to ft' open'ling a Idrness (If h)r. ('rant' 51un day ntight. mal lar'ge audliencest' fllt'ne out e'very' ntighit durlinlg theit serties. \ mi re plrolli that our1 campullls or'ganlizations a-e wiillng to otld'rtake' ,-ucce'ssf'ully pre'tsenlt such' a pro(gnunii mial we shall heart ilv' to-oper'late ini we.l --o. ..o.-. abide' by rles of' the coacinig st aff, dr'awn upj to b elto'er fit themtn to regaill thle sch ooil's form'erit 1 prets ti(rt ingiioncrls W'ilum' ey~ prested thiemise'l ves as eamid hate's f'or fte f'ootball team.i whethfler they~ lie fretshmlian orI has bee at(lissigniethhem ftoI do. D)oes theo fact fliat t hey iiret memberl'ts oif thle grid squadit mieant atiythinig to thm ofthiet' t han aii giutaan.. ft'' of lioard' andt roomIli. If so, they wimll chet'ck this urigt' to slip) behiindl the barn and grab a few tdrags in fte absetnce of thle ('one(h. Politics is the ar't of obtaining money fr'om fte r'it'h and v'ote's from the p(or on the pre'text of Ipr'otecting each from the other-Oscar Amer'inger. Carolina To-day ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Usual Happening )r. Bass was in the middle of a long discussion concerning culture when some loud noise was heard just outside the window. Without think- 1 ing, the professor renarked: C "''hat was probably another batik breaking." A Sophomore On the bulletin of the chapel of t the University of Northwestern t there appeared a sign reading: "Do you know what hell is?" Some scamp has written beneath it, "Come listen to our lectures." 1 ? ? ? The I.os A ngeles Junior Collegian comes forth witlt this: "l)o vou really like conceited co a eds Ietter than any other kind?'' "\What other kind? t He Missed Nothing Carl A. Bertmann of Morrison ville, Ill., a graduate of Marquette University, never missed a class during eight years .in graded school, four years of high school and four years of his college ca reer. If he were to attend the University law school and not miss a class, he would really hang up a record. Short t "I,revity is the soul of wit," says t the sage, so this must be funny. In a history final at the University of 'alifornia, students were asked to give an outline of the Nlonroe I)oc trine in as brief a form as possible. Thle prize answer was: "Scram, youse fore igners." Poem As I was layin' on the green, A little English book I seen. t "Essay on Man" was the edition, So I let it lay in the same po sition. College Spice "I hate that chap," sai( the co-ed as she rubbed cold cream on her lips. t She was a printer's daughter, I'ut she was not my type. li,very student should leave a w\ill, if only for the pleasure of saying his say withoutt hearing any back talK from professors. Good Racket Hard times and depression aren't stopping some ambitious fel lows from sipping the nectar of high education. Even when there aren't jobs to be had, certain Co lumbia University students started businesses of their own. One chap started what you might term the human alarm system. For a small sum he will come around in the morning and get you up for break fast or in time for your first class. Another, started the somewhat less , original business of a shoe shiner. . Not content with remaining small dime eii eprenteurs, these two boys went into partnership under the following terms. Anyone who hired the waker-upper for five con consecutive mornings was entitled to a free shoe shine, and similar ly, anyone getting five shoe shines within a certain time was entitled to a free call from the human alarm. New Method One oi thle latest tmeanus of cribb inig on exananitationis has not yet reached lie I.ive rsitIy campus)11. A s1 tdent, int oirder to erib untder this new mtethtod, miiust irtst lbe equippitted with a pair. of eyeglasses antd a gtrapefrui t. The juice is squecezed from ithle oval atnd uIsedl as itnk to write on the glasses. Thle juice wvill blecotme inivisibile whten it (dries, tIhus imaking it impossi5ile for the lprof to dlelect anythting out of the otrder. \\'henci thle time comles, all the stud(etnt has to d1( is blow his breath otn the glasses, anid the juice will be Definitions A hero: The poor sucker who is drafted to fight a war he cares nothing about in the least. A diplomat: The fellow who makes the excuses for sending the heroes off to be shot. A patriot: The capitalist who sits with his feet on the desk and nonchalantly signs the checks that will keep the war going, so long as his profit is certain. Serious Tlhie war titust lie a very serious ita t ter to lit hiopia for it is wvritteni that Ohio State received a request fronm Addis Ababa for a copy of the school's foothall cehi,,fml for the y.. WHAT'S WHAT IN UN By Camil 'he Teaching of Literature in the I High School. ly Reed Smith,. I Il'h. D., 1Litt., Dean of the Gradu- I ate School, University of South t Carolina. Published by The c American look Company, 1935. C This is not the first book with Dr. i eel Smith's name to it, but it is ertainly one of his best and one which % 'ill always reflect great credit to him r nid to the University of South Caro- t na, where he is Dean of the Grad- I ate School, both for its high educa- s ional "altue and for its literary in- 1 'rest and charm, not only for teachers i ut for all lovers of literature. I le says himself: "I,iterature is the I .nglish teacher's hardest problem, be- t ause the field of literature is so tre- c tenduously inclusive and varied," and I ]so, he adds, it makes therefore, "the s reatest demands upon the teacher's f ersonality." lut he is right when he t dmits that the average high school tudents are not yet matnrc enough > appreciate some of the greatest oems or even biographies or novels. ut if judginig from an outside point f view of some of the high school oeims lie iluotes, especially those writ .n by" Coluimbia lIigh School stu cuts, they do know what is good oetrv and how to write it. Mitchell lots's "\'iewpoints," written while t the Columbia High School. is one hat is selected by Dr. Smith for his ook, aiid proves the exception to his uling, with its satirical maturity of hought and skill. )r. Smith's own love and admira ion of great poetry has been proven his writing and teaching of it, espe ially of the liallad, but his chapter in "'The Dawn of Appreciation" is lost particularly a masterpiece of nthtusiastic appreciation of the most nagnificent lines in the world of great toetry. One enters with him into Oie ieaint of goid" ini reading his elections aid (yuotations, and his own initins are broad and generous and ruly poetic with a scholarly yet ten ler appreciation of the heights of oct ry. ''here is neither time nor pace to quote the four greatest pas ages in poetry which I)r. Smiitli has I sen ''cach diTerent in tone and Il eal. but alike in perfection and in ensit." liut just to show his breadth i judgment. they are, first af all, the mmortal Keats' loveliest lines that charmed magic casements'' in his Ode to the Nightingale"; next a pa letic cry from iRobert liurns; and text Browning in "Fra I.ippo I.ippi", .ml last Webster in "'he I)uchess of Jlalli," one line on Ferdinand's dead ister whom he has killed: "t',iver her face; mine eves dazzle; le died young," which I)r. Reed iiith prais,es for "this single line >ears th ie unmii istakable stamp of ge iuis." and as another critic says "by ts inexorale and sunnuary quality ifts the scene tio real subilimiitv.'' I )r. SmiithI has given twelve of his wenltyV- inle c7hapter( ls to l 'octry aloneii or'where thle heart lies, let thte 1braiin ie alsi."' itt lie has just as fullyi til lthorouigly taught hiow to teach: mdt initerest the yting students andt eachiers ini chapters oil thle Novel, bot rt Story, lie IDramia, thle F.ssay, lie Speech andI lliographiy, biesidles )ut sidle R eadiing amlt Special A is and Open Forum -'.dino Th lGanwcoc ~k. )ear Sir: I wanit to' stress to imy fellowv stu lenits a few tof the hprimie imlpolrtanlces md necessities (of having a swinnniliing >ool conistrue ttd onl thle 1 'nIiver sity 'am pus andit to enucoturage thiemi tto enid their financial and mioral sulppotrt o the erection (of a pood. If all schotols in Southl Carollina andit >thter states cani have swmmg pools, xbly cani't we, a state l'nIiversity, have mec alIso? Suech a st ruectutre (il our 7amptus wvouild be oif iniestiumable value o thle promul ga t in oIf bet te(r stutdentis Id to th le ptrest ige of tinr college. Itlow iia nv if us have thle t imle re 'pired to gti sevenl miles otit of ttown ii a lake iir pondit whleni we have after bll classes aiid the varitous tither Iluties conltingenit ltio oulr beinig Se re. Sueh will bet itiur tippotrtuniiy fur a >uri hart. I realize that it is hiard for oiii of us to, give $t.00, but you 'hoiuld be able to sacrifice a few lux iries to'wardl this end. Ill thle past fewv daiys, miany K. S. K. iieiimbetrs have dIevoted all their a ft er ltills, and1( mueh of their evenhings, ini Ill effort to arouse enlthtisiasim suf icienlt to put th tidtrive across. Thle mllsotlicited sacrifice t hat somlle oif us 'Have matte woutldt be asto(11unig niews to you. Ini addlit ion to our services, omeil are horrowvinig moneliy iin order to make miore substantial conltribu IVERSITY LIBRARY la Sams )evices and Tests and MIeasurenents. or these last two chapters he has in is "acknowledgments" given special ianks for the assistance of Miss Fran es Sylvan of Columbia, long a teach r of English in the Columbia High chool who in her turn thanks the rincipal, Air. H. R. Crow and others ,ho opened their files to her. The lost modern methods are shown and hose that Dr. Smith prefers after is 25 years' experience in teaching tudents and teachers. There could e no book more helpful and inspir ig to them and to the general reader s well. It is a fine and useful addi ion to the South Carolina Room and he University Library, which wel onie it for itself and as being written y an honored I)ean of the Univer ity. It should be used at all colleges or teachers and will be well known hrough its popular publishers. Magazines There was a typographical error in lie notice of magazine articles on ootball in this colunn recently as ' "space" is in the Current I'eriod :al room at the Uiiiver--ity 1,ibrary or the Athletic and Y. \l. C. A. head' uarters sport magazines, there is too ittle room as it is now in the .ibrary veil for more magazines. There are owever, several magazines which arrv pictures aid athletic articles, nd one of them should especially be lentioned here for it is a fine mag zine. "The Athletic Journal." Oc oher number, carries a series of ar icles on football, written by coaches nd authorities such as "I)efenses Used \gainst Single Wing Back Forma ion" givinlg viewpoints from the Vest, Nlidwest and Eastern College xperts. Another series by experts re articles "Of Interest to Foot Ball )thieials on Rtuling on llouls Corm nitted lehind the Goal I.ine," and 'Directions for Timekeepers of Foot tall Gaies" ini the samie magazine, all >eing illustrated by players inl action. 'till another in the "October Athletic ournal" is on "-'Further Fiundamentals n l-'oot itall" by It. A. Ingerson, also Illustrated. The "National Geographic NI aga ine" for November is just out and has bree articles of interest and value on he I talian-1?tliopian- lurropean sittua ion. They are all profusely illustrated is usual and one is on "''he Suez Ca i. Short Cut to Enlpires," by J. \lden tlason; another is "The MIaltese slands,'' by Sir IHarry Liuke, and the hird, most aimusingly illustrated with 'ighteen photographs, is "The Open \ir I.aw Courts of Ethiopia" by 1er l I'. I,echen perg. The ''Atlantic \lagazine" for Novem >cr has two brilliant biographic articles 'y perhaps the most famous and reli ible of American correspondents, Eraink Sinionds, "Ilienito A\fricanus." ind( G eorge H. Sokoalsky's "IIluey Kong." Amon ag thle ima ny newspaper andit liagazinie criticisnms oif praise, (;er hiwin and D)ulHose IIleyward's great liiisica Id(ramiia or folk opierai "lI'orgy uliIess"' the fullest anrd most aul htitat ive is bys I rv inag Koilod in, mui - idalI critic, ini the Novemb11 er "Theiatre \rts l onthlv."' Wecaninot de'penid on ahuiia aid 'acuIty mnemibers to miake this drive a diccess. W\e wanit a st udenit 's I oo(l and 'tudeiit s are lead inag thle camiipa ign! Even thoi ughi vou are a senior andt, here ftore, may nott have tIhe privilege i using the pool, yon shoul lie glad co havye tIle privilege of niakiing a do iation. I know that you are piroudl of 1)u1r Iilbrary, educeation1 builIding, obs'er ,attory, stadium, and (otheri such insti ltit ins, whIethier or nott ytou take ad canltage of theim. Th ley' are thlings that von justly boast oif when you are away from school. I write t his letter as an appeal to vt uir spmirit of IloyalIty to thle lilt is p p)ortanlt anad hionorablec un adertaking 'ever at tedi tuped liy a stuiidenit group. As the treasurer of the swimmning poe' a fu ind, I pierstonally assure you Ilha t a st attem ent of thle receipts and L'\ ienses will lie puli shied ini JTe 'tmt'cock at an early date slitwinig Ilthe origin anid destiina tion oif all miioney passing through the treasury. Youil calntit altfordl to leave this mat ter up to allothler stutdemit biecause thle assastanee tif all is nlecessary for the su ccessfuil t erinatioin of thIiis cam p a ign. Wet cani securie one of the tlest antI lutst np-to-date pools in the South if vyoui will me(rtely g;ve $t.00. W\e dot nott ask yon tti camipaign for fiut!ds, bult toi give yt ur shiar e anad toi encteaourage tithlens 0(Id) t heir pairt. Tis is thle nearest that we have ever Iccen to hiavinlg a pool anid the necarest we ever will, so we must take adI vanitage' of it. It is upl to yotu to co opera te 100 per cenit! Let's Get The Swimming Pool! Contribute Now! tCIIARI4SC STiftCHl.'