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Editor Disappi Footl Why Not Buy A Team" Finances And Spirit Of College Would Be Greatly Improved By Purchasing Good Gridsters Louisville, Ky. (ACP)-H o n e s t, straightforward-and astounding-i s the solution of athletic worries pro $' posed by The Cardinal of the Univer sity of Louisville: "Why Don't We Buy a Good Football Team?" Instead of joining in the charges of professionalism broadcast this year as every year by college editors, instead of adding their moans to the cries of defeat that surround every losing team, the edi tors of The Cardinal offer what is to them the only answer: "Why Don't We Buy a Good Football Team?" "It is apparent to all followers of the game that college football is perhaps the leading commercial investment of institu tions of higher learning," says The Cardi nal. "There are fewer and fewer schools which, like the University (of Louisville) cherish the fond illusion that gridiron stars dash forth on the field after gruel ling hours of practice to do or die for love of dear old Alma Mater, with the dollars that trickle into the University's coffers only an incidental consideration. Football where it is played hardest and best is frankly a business proposition. "Football revenues are the mainstay of elaborate gymnasiums, spacious and beau tiful stadiums and playing fields, the whole program of minor athletics, and student unions and other campus buildings in universities that are materialistic enough and realistic enough to recognize the fact that you've got to have money. And sad as it may seem it is football as often as it is academic standing that brings fat en dowments from wealthy friends and alumni and spreads the fame of the in stitution far and wide. "We want the administration of the University to cast all the lace trimmings from the football situation and shave it down to a core of hard facts. We need on the campus of the University of Louis Business Training is Essential to Everyone, Par ticularly College Men and Women. Day, Night, and Special Classes. Draughon's Business College 1218 Sumter Street Telepbones 5951 and 6317 Central Drug Co. FOR DELICIOUS 25c-PLATE LUNCHES-25c -Served at all hours DELI VERED TO YOUR DOOR Consists of Potato salad, chicken salad, lettuce, tomatoes, cold slaw, pickle and choice of one meat Phone 5197 I METROPOLJ I ~"THE OLD: I THE STUDENTS' .0 MAIN STREET The Gamecocks are ( COLUMBIA DAIRIES I Phone 3171 CORo With] Can]1 CORONA STERLING CORONA SILENT - - - - CORONA BTANDARD - - (Prices Include GBBES TYPE 1238 Hamj roves all Hypocrisy Green Talks On Traditions Facts About Presidents Believes Negroes Keep Up Old Traditions Better Than Any Other Race Negroes keep up old traditions better than.any other race, according to Dr. E. L. Green, who gave the fourth of a series of talks on the history of the university in freshman chapel Wednes day. Dr. Green gave some interesting facts about some great men who have served the University as presidents and professors. Among them were Jonathanis Maxcy who was the University's first president, and Thomas Cooper who was ranked among the most learned men that this nation has every boasted by Thomas Jefferson. He was a man who's mind took in nearly every subject and he could speak on almost any phrase. R. W. Barnwell came to the Univer sity and spent the rest of his life here, the speaker pointed out, add;g that "he was one of the greatest speakers the. United States ever produced." Dr. James Woodrow was president after the Civil War. lIe served from 1891 to 1897. Dr. Crane Sends Letter Of Thanks To Bell "Your characteristically generous hospitality, and the many thoughtful courtesies, in addition to the superb opportunity which you afforded me in making it possible for me to speak to the students of the two colleges makes me most sincerely apprecia tive and grateful," Dr. Henry H. Crane, conductor of the recent Re ligious Emphasis week here, wrote to R. C. Bell this week. -. a. o. ville new buildings, especially a student union building. We'd like a swimming pool in a new gymnasium, plenty of new courses and equipment of one or an other, and so on and so on. And we'd like a good football team that could meet outstanding competition successfully, first because it will make possible the fulfill ment of our other wants, and secondly because we like good football. "To get a good football team, one pays for it. One offers good jobs with satis factory salary and not too much work to local high school graduates who other wise accept good jobs at Alabama, Michi gan, Ohio State, Kentucky, or other uni versities which have already fallen from the heights of blissful idealism. One goes out of one's way to do all sorts of nice things for potential football timber, wav ing scholarships temptingly in the air at banquets and prep schools. And one in vests rather heavily in a leading football coach, who usually brings along a flock of clear-eyed youngsters wvho know some thing about football. "This is just wvhat The Cardinal pro poses that the University of Louisville do. Perhaps wve're too brutally frank [TAN CAFE RELIABLE" MEETING PLACE PHONE 7849 lame because they use 1llK AND ICE CREAM 917 Main St. NA TYPEWRITERS i'amous Floating Shift 3e Financed As Low Ls $1.00 A Week -- -- -- ----$62.50 --- -- -- -- --$67.50 --- -- -- -- --$49.60 Carrying Case) WRITER SHOP ton Avenue ,Ghost Theory Not Ridku led Spooks Possibly Exist Dr. Carrel Says He Is AJ Least Unwilling To 1 Deny It New York (ACP)-There may be ghosts. Perhaps there aren't, maybe it's all superstition, but Dr. Alexis Carrel, the Nobel prize biologist who has kept a chicken's heart beating in a bottle since 1912, says that he at least is unwilling to deny it. Thought transference, intuition and clairvoyance are logically provable phenomena, says Dr. Carrel, and may be, after all, there are ghosts, and may be little people in the trees in the full of the moon. "The existence of telepathic phenom ena, as well as other metaphysic phenomena, is not accepted by most biologists and physicians. They are hidden in the enormous mass of super stitions, lies and illusions accumulated for centuries by mankind... it is nevertheless a fact that they are a normal, although rare, activity of the human being." Only persistent laboratory experi mentation can tell us, Dr. Carrel be lieves, whether there are ghosts and "little people in the trees," or not. "No one can say there aren't. No one can say anything until he can prove it." "-Ur. s. o. Cadets Hold Y Vespers In Chapel Sunday Clemson Students Brought Here By Campus Y. M. C. A. A group of ten Clemson students will have charge of the program Sun day night at 7 o'clock in the chapel. Immediately following the service an informal gathering will be held in honor of the cadets in Flinn Hall. Re freshmeits will be served. This program is brought to the Uni versity through the efforts of the Y. W. C. A. Vesper committee, of which Mary Sutton is chairman. Nathalie Fitzsimmons, chairman of the social committee, has charge of the refrcshmcnts. The cadets will arrive tomorrow afternoon. RECTOR MAKES FRIENDSHIP TALK "Friendship is a thing that each of us in this room has," declared Miss Sara -Rector, University co-ed, in her devotional at the Carolina Christian Service club which met in Flinn Hall last Wednesday night. "The deCfinition of friendship is a sacred trust, unselfish love, and purity at its best. It is confidence unlimited wherein joys andl sorrowvs are shared alike. Friendship is strength and stim ulation to the starved soul." The speaker named the type of friends one should have, pointing out that the bonds of friendship are sym pathy, sincerity, respect for the feel ings of each other, and a mutual trust and love. Misses Katie Lou Craft and Mabel Lyon joined the club. There were 27 miemblers present at the meeting. Bailey Publishes Story Along With Roy Morse Thomas L. Bailey, University alum nus, in collaboration with Roy R. Morse has published an article in the bulletin of the Geological Survey of America, "Geological Observations in the Petaluma District, California," (dealing with the oil peology of that region. Mr. Bailey, who is now with the Shell Oil Company, has taught geology at Sewanee, received a Ph. D from the University of California and worked with the Texas Geological Survey, since graduating from the University of South Carolina. about the sordid facts of it all, but the athletic situation as it now exists makes us feel too frankly brutal to be gentle. We don't care a hoot whether the Uni versity goes about shouting at the top of its lungs that good jobs are open to grid iron huskies with a high-school diploma, or whispers the facts amid a veil of secrecy-just so long as it does it. "And we venture to predict that when a few new buildings are erected on the campus, and more instructors and co'urses are added, and other improvements come into being nd TLouisville plays and bat Forrest Speaks ( To English Class Gives Life History Tells Of How He Acted With English Company And Learned Shakespeare Telling in a very interesting and in formal way how he happened to be an P actor and a director of little theatres, Belford Forrest, director of the Town P: Theatre, gave a lecture before Dr. G. A. Wauchope's English class re cently. As a boy, Mr. Forrest was brought up in the atmosphere of a typical Eng- te lish Cathedral town, his father being re Dean of Worcester Cathedral and m Chaplain to Queen Victoria. Starting out with the desire to be a b< great tragic actor, Mr. Forrest found or himself continually cast in comic rolls, T "silly-ass" parts, as he called them. B For three years he acted the part "4 of Roderigo in "Othello" with a com- 1l pany in England. During this time he o1 memorized the entire play, and con siders it the most powerful and beauti- I; ful language ever written by a human it being. He is realizing a life-long de- ta sire in producing this drama at the Town Theatre. -U..s. 0. High Taxes Keep Out Big Makers Whitesell Makes Claim S. C. Yellow Pine Among Coun- I try's Fastest Growing Trees Some of the biggest manufacturers in America are kept away from South a Carolina solely on account of high a taxes, according to Dr. W. A. White- ei sell, professor of cihenistry. B The yellow pine of South Carolina of grows much faster and is just as good b for paper making as any northern IT trees. Also abundant in South Caro- tl lina forests is the basic material for v cellophane. Dr. Whitesell pointed out P that these were only two of many possibilities which could be utilized by ti industry in the Palmetto State. 2: Quite recently, the professor de- tc clared a graduate of the University tl moved about 30 miles over the state itr border to start his manufacturing S plant. Fear of taxes had driven him fi out. N -u. s. C.- t( Changes Made For Debating Tryouts Dates for debating team tryouts have been changed to Monday Dec ember 9, for the affirmative, and Fri day December 13, for the negative, according to Frank Jordan, secretary of the debating council. h They were originally announced for 4 December 4 and 11, but wvere changed in order to allowv the contestants more time in which to prepare their de bates after mid-term quizzes.0 The national query is: Resolved that Congress should have the power ~ to override, by a two-thirds majority a vote, the decisions of the Supreme s Court declaring laws passed by con gress unconstitutional. SHARK HUNTING FAVORITE SPORT' Albuquerque, N. M.-ACP-Any d hunting that is available in America Is c fairly tame compared with the excit ing sport of hunting sharks from an b open boat, accordling to Bill Baker, Hawaiian student at the University of New Mexico. Favorite method of Hawaiian shark hunters, says Baker, is to attact a few sharks with a bait of dead pig or a cow's leg, shoot them with rifles or pistols, watch them fight arnong themselves for a while and then haul 'em aboard with harpoons. -U. 8. 0. some good football teams, we won't be so terribly sorry that we cast off the shackles of misplaced idealism and ad mitted that 'business is business.'" Psychologist Forgets His Magic Words Atlanta, Ga.--(ACP)-Charles Hud son, Emory University student, spent three days in a hypnotic trance re cently when the professor who had inadvertently hypnotized him was un able to bring him out of it. Prof. W. G. Workman of Emory's psychology department attempted to hypnotize a student for demonstration purposes during a lecture. He was un successful, and was about to give up when he noticed that Hudson, watch ing, had gone into a rigid trance. When he refused to respond to normal treat ment, Prof. Workman prescribed exer cise and normal activity, nnd for three iariosopbic S( Will N Inique Photo F Given_U.S.C. ortrays Radical Moves of ioture Shows Time When Both F Black And White Legislators Sat In Assembly t Probably the only picture in exis nce of the Radical Legislature was si cently given to the history depart- ti ent of the University-.c The Legislature was composed of th th black and white members but di ly two are named on the photograph. be [ese were Lieutenant Governor y :ozer under whose name was written sa 0 acres and a mule," and Judas sc oses who raised the Confederate flag at i Fort Sumter. tu This picture was presented by Miss ti abel Watkins, whose mother kept to show history classes when she ti tight in Columbia high school. S --or. s. C.- u Players Find New Method 'o Present Skit h, igenuity Saves The Day When a Several Members Fail To t Show Up C The University Players have found st ni new way of getting 30 people behind u ten foot screen. Recently the play -s presented a dramatic skit "Not By w read Alone" before the conv-ntinn Social Workers in the Senate Chain- c !r of the State House. Only four embers of the organization were at Ce presentation so by changing their h >ices and hiding behind a screen the in ay went on. rc Eliza Hunt thought that the produc- in 3n was to be given at 3:30 instead of v 30, Gladys Gaskin was confined, due c< illness, and Margaret Simpson says di at she had two bits and went to a j ovie. But the play must go on-so tim Cartledge changed his voice into ve shades and read five parts, Bufort [abry read seven, Herbert Schreiber ok eight, while Joseph Cohen (ueezed Out ten pitches. -U. s. 0. 'risoners' Grades I Surpass Students' Minneapolis, Minn.-(ACP)-Pris- g iers at Minnesota's Stillwater peni-" ntiary who are enrolled in Univer ty of Minnesota extension courses - tve a higher scholastic average than iy students taking the same courses. Although the greater number of the risoners enrolled have had only one rto years of high school training, ieir grades show that 70 per cent or Lore have a consistent mark of A or ,with the subjects studied falling )>out half and half between univer ty andl high school courses. They are allowed to study only be veen 6 and 9 p. mn., but 20 out of 28 rison students received A's and B's Lring October, and there were no l's, E's or F's recorded. --. A. c. ays Hudson was walked about the impus, taken for rides, to the mnovie. Suddenly, on the third day, he linked and asked what had happened. HIGGINS I] CROW QUI DRAWING COLUMNA BOUND AND I NOTE I K. & E. ENGINE!i STATE C4 BOOK ! >ciety At Contribute oster Vetoes Motion eated Discussion About Debt Of Society Occurs At Meeting By executive order of the president the Clariosophic Society, Richard )ster, a motion passed Tuesday night donate $15.00 to the swimming pool nd will not be carried out. Foster contended that the society ould not assume additional obliga )ns until present liabilities have been red for. He pointed out that funds e society will receive from the stu nt activities fee next semester will not sufficient to pay bills now due. hen he assumed the presidency, he id, it was his intention to get the ciety out of debt this year if possible, W id rather than approve such expendi res as this he would offer his resigna )n. Foster was out of the hall at the ine this controversy arose, and Ed nis requested that no action be taken itil his return, since Foster was so tally interested in the matter. How rer, under the leadership of Jack dens, Charles Stuckey, M. T. Pitts, id John Turnbull, the motion donat g the money was passed. When Foster learned of this action immediately came to the hall and ked that it be deferred until next eek, and then be reconsidered. Due lack of a quorum no official action uld be taken. Thereupon Foster in ructed the treasurer, L. L. Greene, :t to disburse funds for this purpose ntil present debts have been paid. Moves to reconsider the question ill be made next week. Clarence E. Taylor, Cchumbia radin ooner, was initiated into the society. --u. . . Iarvard authorities have dismissed as ghly improbable press reports concern g a new and deadly weapon reported cently invented by Guglielmp Marconi, ventor of wireless telegraphy. The de ce is said to be able to stop internal mbustion engines from a considerable stance. UU UUUEUU DEPENDABLE. yAX Trucking" pe... r and e - Taxi %* SERVICE - Telephone 3189-3183 Checker Cab Co. 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