University of South Carolina Libraries
Concert Given By Orchestra In Drayton Hall Thurs. Directed By Felice deHorvath, Symphony Orchestra Will Be Assisted By Mrs. Dobson The University of South Carolina Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Felice de Horvath will give its first concert next Thursday, November 21, in Drayton Hall. There will be no ad mission charges and all University stu dents are invited to attend. Assisting the orchestra will be Mrs. James Dobson, soprano, and the Tru jenshi Trio of Orangeburg. The orches tra will play the following selections: "The Poet and Peasant," overture by Suppe, the "Jupiter Symphony," by Mo zart, and Hungarian Dances numbers 5 and 6, by Johannes Brahms. A group of prominent Columbians will serve as patrons of the orchestra this year. They are: Dr. and Mrs. Reed Smith, Mrs. Richard Lane, Miss May Marshall, Miss Katherine Heyward, Dr. E. C. Coker, Mrs. Morris Lumpkin, J. B. Coleman, Dr. and Mrs. L. T. Baker, Dr. Catherine Munro, Dr. Wade Hamp ton, Dr. Hugh Murchison, Prof. and Mrs. Rion McKissick, Dr. John B. Setz Icr, Mr. and Mrs. Christie Benet, Mrs. Robert Gibbes, Mr. Fred Parker, Mrs. Curran Jones, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Black, Mrs. 'Addie Madden, Mrs. Margaret Godfrey, Mr. and Mrs. George Ropp, Miss Margaret Chilas. And Mrs. M. L. Hallman, Mrs. James Perry, Mr. Leonard Schwinn, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Humphries, Mrs. Walter Samson, Mrs. Elliott McCants, Mr. John Jacob Seibels, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor, Mrs. Percy Crown, Miss Myr tle Taylor, Mrs. A. R. Childs, Mrs. Carl Summers, Mrs. Helene Anderson, Bishop Kirkman Finlay, Miss Leila Johnson, Mrs. Rovena Graham, Dr. Isadore Schayer, Mrs. Q. L. Garrett, and Dr. Jen nie Lee Epps. The following are members of the orchestra: E. O. Black, pianist, Winifred Dent, Lila Sayres Davis, Mrs. L. C. Moltz, Mrs. George Ropp, Margaret Sampson, Dorothy Rice, Mrs. P. M. Therrell, Lu cile Platt, Mrs. Henry Johnson, Sarah Iulick Smii, Margaret Patrick Toal, Pickett Fulmer, E. O. Black, Robert Conard, James Folk, Charles Lee, Dr. COLUMBIA OFFICE SUPPLY CO. "EVERY OFFICE NEED" Office Furniture. Filing Cabinets, Safee Printing and Rubber Stamps 1112 Lady Street 'Phone 11S3 YELLOW CAB TAXI DIAL 811DIA L 1 to 5 Passengers-25c For more than 90 years we have b Coinmunity with their Bo4 "Any thing Needed : THE R. L. ] 1440 Main Street COLUMBIA Special Rates IF THEY LEAVE THEI. LA1 BY 12 O'OLOOI 1323 Taylor Street. -WHEN YO STEIN-KING B You Are Assured Of The Higi Possible to Mal STEIN-KING IS OLDEST BREWE: -.-DMAmN THra BmE I StudentDirectory Appears Monday [ssued By Blue Key Book Gives Addresses, Telephone Numbers Of Students And s Faculty Members The Student Directory, issued by Blue Key honorary service fraternity, ap ?eared Monday morning for distribu- la :ion on the campus. sl The dedication this year was to Mrs. w Addie Madden, University infirmary ma- si ron. t< "Anyone who has experienced the dis- I :omfort of any disorder ranging from listorted imagination to major diseases el and has had the occasion to visit the ti infirmary carries away with him affec- R tion, respect and esteem for Mrs. Mad- a den. Efficiently and excellently schooled I in her profession, Mrs. Madden does i more than cure and administer medicine. F Her most efficacious pills consist of the H ingredients of friendship, motherly love, N and understanding. Nothing is too a small to command her attention; noth- P ing is too large for her ability. She is both ingenious and ingenuous." n Thus the editor of this year's direc- t< tory describes the services of Mrs. Mad- l den. ti Gedney Howe of Charleston is editor f this year's issue, and Randolph Mur daugh is business manager. Students may secure their copies at the University post office from Mrs. Moon, post mistress. There will be plenty for all, since 2,000 copies have been printed. Simply made up, an impression of the Blue Key medal is shown on the cover ( page. Features of the book include a roster I of ex-collegio members of the fraternity, present student members, faculty mem bers, and a list of all the chapters in the United States. The faculty section includes the s names, degrees, departments, campus ad dress, city address, and telephone num ber of the professors. b The student section includes in alnha betical order the names of all academic, c law, special, and graduate matriculates, along with their home address, campus address, telephone number, school and r year in college. -UU".a6- C Mrs. T. J. Bell Dies At Home In Atlanta The many friends of R. G. Bell, Sec retary YMCA, regret the death of his mother, Mrs. T. J. Bell of Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. Bell died Saturday morning, No vember 9, after a heart attack. Funeral services were conducted last Sunday. Besides Mr. Bell_ a daughter and a son survive. -U. .. Wade Hampton, Maurice Humphries, I Gus Williamson, Linley McCants, Au brey Mae Dickert, Virginia Simcox, t Jean Garrett, Jerry Clark, Julia Smith,t Eleanor McDermiid, Mary Elizabetht Hallman, William Turner, Margaret t~ Smith, Mary McDavid, Leon McCor-e mnick, Fred H-oller, Rachel Little, Alvin !j Taylor, \Villie Sanders Taylor, Editht Taylor, William Taylor, Leonard Brown,t E. 0. Black, Jr., Tonm Stevenson, Ethel Mae Madden, and Louis Lachicotte. een supplying the Students of this ks and School Supplies. n the Class Room" IRYAN CO. Columbia,, s. a.i LAUNDRY To Students JNDRY AT THE CANTEEN [ EACH DAY~ Telephone 4954 U DRINK EER AND ALE~ iest Quality Drink That It Is ce-Because MADE BY THE EY IN AMERICAv 'RON YOUR DE ALTER-.- a g 14 Apply For M Scholars hips On 'o Select Two Men Mon tate Committee For Selection ' Will Meet December 12 And Choose Candidates M Fourteen students from the state at comi rge have sent in their Rhodes Scholar- song iip applications to Professor J. E. Nor- Sin ood, English professor at the Univer ty, who is Secretary of the Commit e for Selection in South Carolina. 11 hese students are as follows: gues Julian Bradsher, Howard Burns, Jos- club >h Cohen, and Herbert Schreiber from fet e University of South Carolina; Wil- A am M. Geer, James T. Thorpe, Jr., the id R. N. Hobbs from The Citadel; lowi ames Trowbridge and Jacques Yost Mus -om Furman; Edward K. Harden and nab lemen Bomar from Wofford; Hope inee [enry Lumpkin from *Sewanee; Colen club . Hudson from Presbyterian College; We. id William M. Connor, Jr. from West club oint. The State Committee for Selection will eet December 12 and choose two men go before the District Committee hich will meet in Atlanta the first of e year. Professor Norwood has also been ap yinted to serve on the District Coin ittee. --v. s. o. Legion Hears Crow Speak stud wer )n Educational Subject .icat 'oints Out How School Enroll- F ment Increased After el World War e The Stressing the fact that during the war "onl )ldiers began to realize the value of ed- beer cation, Dr. Orin F. Crow, Dean of the b e chool of Education, spoke to the mem- T ers of Richland Post of the American pres .egion Thursday night. Dr. Crow mal poke in connection with American Edu- tare ational Week. pres "Shortly after the war ended the en- end >llment of schools and colleges was soci oubled and -later tripled," declared Dr. pag row. Stu ra The American Legion was one of the trA rganizations to inaugurate the Ameri- thi an Educational Week. U. 3 O*call, natt Carolina tere tern 1.0 Years Ago A ago For Hali a thousand Carolina students the acking the Gamecocks in Greenville Sat- poli rday saw their team defeated 2-0 by met urman. asst "To the victor belongs the spoils," and lect; ae freshman football team really enjoyed Wir te spoils last Saturday evening when lar te Charleston County Alumni enter- T tinedl them at a banq~uet in the Newv ted ort Sumter hotel. Mfayor Stoney', uanti armer varsity quarter, made the main ' ilk, and T. S. McMillan, captain of pres te famous 1911 baseball team, was alsoA resent. fo Miedals for the best news story and girl eature story published in Thec Gamecock non rere given for the first time last year. girl 'hey were offered by Dr. WV. W. Ball, resc )ean of the School of Journalism. The appi aedals are on the same order as The ther 'ame:cock editor's medal: a Gamecock of aside the gold "C", his throat arched ack as if crowving. --t The University band is a development the f the last two years, and a great part had f tht- credit is due to Professor Olsen plat rho has given considerable time to this flou ctivity at Carolina. It is being planned ing book a complete tour of the state or next spring, giving concerts. --e. s o.--gro to rse Deplores h Dictator Rule m to People of the various nations have ever wanted wars; the rulers have al rays forced their countries into them, e )r. Josiah Morse, professor of phi- rse sophy at the University, told local asn ro. 480, National Federation of Fed- ton ral E~mployes, during an armistice day rogram Monday evening. to "It is almost unbelievable that after t ich a war as we have just passed t arough, after so much of carnage and nt orror, we should be working clay andti ight the world over in perfecting en- A ines of death that will make the next gett rar so frightening as to cause the last an a ne to seem as a Sunday school picnic. We "We, the people, do not make the and ars-Aever have. All that the people havi tant is peace and security; friendship nd good will. That Is true of about T 0 per cent, of the people of the latkc 'orld." 'witi 'Pointing out that the fighting of age Lusic Lovers ponsors Singers Southeastern Tour is Zucca, Famous Composer Will Entertain Folk Singers While In Miami adame Mana Zucca, world famous oser of "I Love Life," and other s will entertain the Carolina Folk ers at her villa in Miami on their hern tour, which begins December She has invited several hundred ts to hear the organization. The will later be her guests at a buf upper.. :cording to the "Musical Courier" ;ingers will be sponsored by the fol ng organizations on their tour: The ical Art club, Charleston; Savan Musical club, Savannah; Friday Mat club, Jacksouville ; Beach Music Daytona Beach; Woman's club, t Palm Beach; Mana Zucca Music Miami. onstitution Omissions Ided To Constitution tions Governing Election Of May Queen And Academic Class Presidents Given wo amendments to the University ent body constitution passed last year unintentionally omitted in the pub ion of the constitution in The Game last week. yrmerly the constitution read that y junior and senior co-eds shall be ble for the office of May queen." constitution as amended reads that y junior and senior co-eds who have winners in a beauty pageant shall ligible for the office of May queen.' lie second change requires that the ident of each academic class shall e a report of receipts and expendi s during his term of office to the ident of the student body at the of the year. The profits from the tl cabinet, each class, and beauty :ant will be placed in the created lent Body Fund. The University surer shall be custodian of this fund. orders for release of any part of fund shall be made after a ma ty vote of the students present at a .d meeting, and shall bear the sig ire of approval of the student body ident and Kappa Signi Kappa fra ity. n innovation was made two years in the way the May queen is chosen. merly a student body election decided matter. Yielding to assertions that tics figured too strongly in this hod, Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity med responsibility and based the se on on winners of a beauty pageant. ners in this are voted on in a popu student election. he "most beautiful girls" are selec hy three judiges, names not divulged I after the election. he three judges are selected by the idlent of the University. ppearing in the pageant are two girls n each sorority, four non-sorority from Richland County, and four -sorority non-resident girls. These are niamed by the groups they rep nt. The judges select three of them ~aring in pageant, and the students select one of these to be their Queen he May. s was due to having hostile rulers professor said that the World Wat ended royalty only to be sur ited by innumerable dictators whc rished in the soil cultivated by pass. sovereigns. *iographically tracing the back. und of Italy's Mussolini and Ger. iy's Hitler, the professor said that i' felt it necessary, after their :eoric rise from obscurity, to bru y persecute their subjects in order conceal an inferiority complex. rhere is no hope for peace anc d will so long as there is bitterness ntment and exploitation. So long :onditions exist for bad blood; sc r as there is injustice we are going aave dictators raised to the posi s of demigods. rhere is no hope until people come manage their affairs in a decent, ~hborly and Christian manner. Un hen we will have war." --U. I. C. merican brides and bridegrooms are ing -younger. Men are marrying at verage age of 24.8 and women at 21.7. don't know what this proves. Yes, statistics show that Vassar graduates three-quarters of a baby each. he oracles say that in 19%0 the popu *n of the United States will be stable, twice as many people 60 years of and youth definite)y in the Adendant Nine Initiated Into Society Last Thursday Night Boykin, Dukes, Hill, Shiver, Wil son, Thomas, Zimmerman, Wil lis and Tomlinson Taken In The American Society of Civil Engi neers initiated nine men into member ship last Thursday evening, the men hav ing been elected into membership at a previous meeting. The new members were interrogated by members of the faculty who are con nected with the society. Informal initi ation by the old members of the organiza tion followed. Those initiated were: C. D. Boykin, D. F. Dukes, J. R. S. Hill, W. J. Shiver, N. 0. Thomas, H. C. Wil son, S. H. Zimmerman, E. L. \Villis and C. A. Tomlinson. Faculty Writes Book Chapters Several members of the University faculty are writing chapters for "Co lumbia, the Capital City," a volume pub lished in connection with the sesquicen tenniel celebration of the founding of Columbia. Included in the book will be chap ters by J. Rion McKissick, dean of the school of journalism, on newspapers; by S. M. Derrick, professor of economics, on commerce and transportation; by Mrs. A. R. Childs, dean of women, on private schools; and by E. L. Green, professor of ancient languages, on high er education. The remainder of the volume will be written by prominent Columbians who are especially fitted for writing on their various subjects. Miss Bess Glenn, head librarian of the South Carolina room at the University, will make the index. --.US. O. Matteson' Gives Address To Augusta Rotary Club Professor Maurice Matteson, head of the Department of Music, delivered his lecture on "Ballad Bagging" before the Rotary Club of Augusta last Tuesday. This lecture will also be delivered be fore a meeting of the South Carolina Music Teacher's Association in Spartan burg next week. Dr. James L. Tryon Will Lecture Here Dr. James L. Tryon, director of Ad mission of Massachusetts Institution of Technology will visit the University Campus Wednesday, December 11, to conduct a series of lectures to prospec tive engineers. Dr. Tryon will be a guest of Professor Robert L. Sumwalt, of the engineering school. -U. R. U. Seismologists at Canisius College, Buf falo, N. Y., were accused of causing an earthquake the other (lay. One irate householder threatened suit for damages. Send Your BAGGAGE Home by R AILW No need to burdeny baggange and perbon all home by Railwa: STUNE IN ON Here's the way... EXPRSS EWS we'll call for the shi; P A RA DE Evety snger train, swiftly week reu he train home with peac WEm . worn * W H ome almoet a mo0o W receiptse at eeci 1)xx15 01er0eEMO After vaeation, we n a t ing all worry, tro .m.eemce.ienIa Por service or inf< 1151 MAIN STRI BRANCH OFFICE: UNIl BRANCH OFFICE: 8. A. L. PA COLUMBIA, 84 RAILW NATION.WI Price Upholds Golden Rule Speaks In Chapel Gives Relations Between U. S. And China; Advises Friend ship Between Two Nations One of the: main troubles with the world today is failure on the part of the nations to practice the Golden Rule, asserted Dr. Frank Price, missionary to China, in freshman chapel Monday morning. Dr. Price gave an interesting lecture on the relations between the United States and China, a nation with one of the oldest civilizations in the world. He advised that even though the East and West differ greatly in speech and habits, they should be neighborly. All the con servation needed in the world today conies from the Bible. The reason the Chinese are so harsh on missionaries is due to the maltreat ment they receive from Americans, Dr. Price said. He looks forward to the day when there will be an international convention and an international anthem will be sung. --. ". o. Princeton students can now cut as much 'as they like, so long as their "standing re mains unimpaired." Ourb Service A Specialty WE SERVE BEER Pick -Wick 1240 Hampton Street CAROLINA STUDENTS ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT CAPITOL CAFE COLUMBIA'S OLDEST ARTIST MATERIAL for the Professional and Student ROSE-TALBERT PAINT CO. 1223 Taylor Street Phone No. 6269 AY EXPRESS ourself with the transportation of trunka, al effects at vacation time. ..eend them Riprees. merely telephone Railway Express and pments-whisk them away on fast pa and safely to destination. You take your e of mind, knowing your baggage will be as you are. Ratee surprisingly low; two i end-insure erafe handling and delivery. 11 bring your baggage back again, eUmd. nblv.nd unneceesary expie.a >rmation telephone EET. PHONE IllS 3N STATION. PHONE '1W? 88ENGER STAtION. PHONE 33m WUTH CAROL.INA ALY EXPRESS. AGENCY INQ, DE RAIL-AIR SERVICE