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G Dowling Presid( At Recent Meeting " Wesley Walker And Bob Hemp hill Will Pil Other Offices G. G. Dowliag, a freshman in the law school,'was elected president of O. D. K. at a recent meeting of the fraternity. Ed Sallenger was the out-going president. Among the prominent speakers who addressed the members were Dr. L. T. Baker, Dr. Henry D. Phillips, rector of Trinity Episcopal church, and J. Gordon Hughes of Union. The last two were elected honorary members at the meet ing. Wesley Walker was made vice-presi dent, succeeding the new president, and Bob Hemphill succeeded Haarold Mauney as secretary and treasurer. New members who were tapped at chapel exercises Tuesday morning are: Bernard James, Werber Bryan, Samuel Moyle, Wilmot Brown, Bob McLaughlin, Larkin Jennings, An<rew Hill, and Pete Coggeshall. Doctor Baker pointed out during his speech that when he came to the Univer sity 30 years ago, the entire enrollment was not as large as the last freshman class. He declared that the new mem bers should be cautious about stressing too much their loyalty to an institution as merely an institution, but that they should look upon loyalty as an expres sion of one's desire to serve. "The prime objective of the Univer sity," Dr. Baker asserted, "is to train men for leadership. This does not mean high political standing, but rather means the placing of men and women in strategic positions, men and women who can think and form public opinion by good example. As students of this University, you are well prepared to serve the people." Jim Black, who was formerly the edi tor of The Carolinian, gave a highly humorous account of his recent "vagabond trip to Europe." His description of the 'laborious adventure" was the high spot on the program. -U. .. o. In a single year, the central earthquake reporting bureau at Oxford University reported 7,000 tomblors, of varying severity, occurring in all quarters of the globe. COLUMBIA OffMERCIAL OLLEGE OFFERS COURSES IN Shorthand, Bookkeeping, Typing, Comptometer, Burrough's Calculator, Filing, Etc. C. B. SUTTON, Pres. Ph. 2-3288 1556 Main ARTIST MATERIAL for the Professional ar'd Student ROSE-TALBERT PAINT CO. 1223 Taylor Street Phone No. 6269 TOW19 AUDITORIUI ad Mute A JA SRARLEISGILDERT, AIORIE TRABERT, AND 53 ( Deeultfu Crl- Cargeous Casta AREN, $A4,$1. Made at Of O. D. K. Will Present New Concert By Symphony Orchestra Madame de Horvath To Conduct Christmas Music 'On Decem ber 15 "The University Symphony Orthestra will give its Christmas concert Decem ber 15 at Washington Street Methodist church," Madame Felice de Horvath an announced Wednesday. "The orchestra has had a most suc cessful season so far and is preparing for a full schedule for the coming months," Madame de Horvath said. "I consider the orchestra in better form this year than it has ever been. This is probably due to the fact that the personnel is largely com posed of musicians who have played with us before." The orchestra has given three concerts this year. The first was played at Dray ton hall November 21. On Sunday No vember 24, the orchestra assisted at the Federation Day program of the Afternoon Music Club. Last Sunday it played at the Carolina theater for the Elk's memo rial service. " -a. ". 0. University Band Goes To Florida For Game In Tampa Forty Boys Will Make Trip Which Will Last Until Sunday The University band, 40 strong, will travel this week-end to Tampa, Florida to attend the Carolina-Florida football game. Direcior George E. Olson an nounced that the boys will leave Colum bia this morning at 6 o'clock and will re turn some time Sunday. The University is paying the transportation expenses of the trip, which will be made by bus. The occasion will be a gala celebra tion with four bands furnishing the fire works. Another game, the Tampa Uni versity-Louisiana Tech game is being played on Saturday morning and the band will probably attend this game also. The new .uniforms, which the boys wear, add greatly to the appearance of the formations. Though few of the boys have had military training of any kind, they have practiced military maneuvers so faithfully that in appearance it is a real military band. A special feature of the program Saturday will be the forma tion of the letter C. After the football season ends, the band will spend its time on a repertoire of standard and classical pieces in prepa ration for concerts in the spring. De mands for the band from various Civic and Community organizations have been great, and they have alwvays been readily responded to. ATHLETIC SUPPLIES AND SPORTING GOODS S. B. McMaSter, Inc. 1223 Hampton St. Discount to Schools W--DEC. 13 BAnunFU. BaIuaNj - UEU@RMLE mie Ime Story of Faran. Schiamn HI. Own. Imnmorta Mus. Fepted bySguund Reomber, kbDrhyDonhelly RE8NOW to NELE ARNOLD, ROBERT LEE ALLEN mThERS I; DRESS CIRCLE, p1*, $1.23 RhodesApplicants Tkiinned_To 15 For South Carolina Personal Interviews With 0ow testants Scheduled In December The list of South Carolina applicants for Rhodes Scholarships has been re duced to 15 men, according to Professor J. E. Norwood, secretary of the State Committee of Selection. The first meet ing of the Committee of Selection will be held in the Hotel Columbia Decem ber 11 at 8:30 p. m., at which time per sonal interviews will be given the appli cants. Another meeting for the same purpose will be held in Petigru College December 12 at 10 a. m. From the following 15 applicants, two will be selected to represent South Caro lina at the District Meeting to be held in Atlanta the first of the year: Edward K. IHardin, Wofford College; Jacques Yost, Furman; Colin Judson, Presbyterian College; Hope Henry Lumpkin, Sewanee; William M. Connor, \Vest Point; Wil liam Geer, Citadel; Julian H. Bradsher, Howard L. Burns, and Herbert Schrei ber, University of South Carolina. Members of the Committee of Selec tion are General Charles P. Summerall, Citadel, chairman; Professor J. E. Nor wood, Carolina, secretary; Robertson Paul, Charleston; J. A. Spruill, Jr., Cam den, and Judge J. L. Glenn, Chester. -v. a. a. Cold Students Build Fire At Last Home Game Policemen Stamp Out Blaze Started By Shivering Spectators A group of enthusiastic Carolina stu dents sat shivering in the stands at the Carolina-Warhington and Lee game the other day. The cold was intense, and the students were miserable, when one bright boy conceived the brilliant scheme of building a fire in the stands to offset the cold. Eager hands quickly supplied paper cups, peanut bags, and newspapers, until a creditable blaze was started. Not satis fied with this, one boy scouted around and secured some tarpaper. This was thrust upon the flickering blaze and it soon be came a healthy fire. Black smoke filled the sky and all eyes were turned upon the group warming their hands before the blaze. Finally an angry policeman intervened and wrought destruction to their efforts. With wails of "all policemen have big feet" the boys settled down once more and resumed their interrupted shivering. Penn. State Students Train Hunting Birds State College, Pa.--(ACP)-Devotees of one of the most unusual of all sports -the ancient art of falconry-are Frank and John Craighead, twin brothers who are freshmen at Penn State. They have been training and hunting falcons since b)oyhoodl, and they brought "Ulysses," peregrine hawk wvho is their present star performer, to school wvith them this fall. Ulysses, although now living in comn parative d!Omesticity, has the same blood in his veins as the falcons of four and five centuries ago, wvhen the birds were so highly prized that only a noble could own one. The brothers would match uim against any falcon that ever lived, hey say. "What do you feed him, seed and things ike that ?" the twins were asked. "Meat, beef," they said. "It makes im stro'ig." It isn't merely a matter )f putting the meat in the birdhouse, laced in the yard where the boys can <eep an eye on the falcon from their room, filled with photographs of former >et hawvks. UJlysses has to wvork for his Food. One of the boys stands some dlis ance from the perch, holding the meat n a gloved hand, and Ulysses takes to the uir to make a dash for it. IHe must do his every time lhe's fed. It's good train ng for the business of "Coming to the ure" when he goes afield. Ulysses does hir hunting at a speed that would take him past a lot of air planes, according to the bhrothers. Be ginning to drop, or "stoop" on his prey from several hundred feet above, the hawk may be moving 180 miles an hour by the time lhe strikes, sends it tumbling :lead to the ground with a blow from his balled talons. The game down, he flies back to his gloved master for his eward, a bit of meat. Dr. Joseph Remenyl, lecturer in com parative literature at Cleveland College, s completing his latest book, "Series of American Literary Portraits of Nine eenth Century American Writers." The >ook Is written In Hungarian and will be iublished In Buapen. v-- Vs-LII !I Moot Court Held Soon Case Being Planned suit This Year Will Arise Out Of Automobile Accident The Law Federation will present the first Moot Court of the year within the next few days. The case is now in the hands of the federation and attornvs for the plaintiff and defendant will be ap pointed to-day, according to S. B. Moyle, president of the federation. The case is a suit arising out of an automobile accident, involving several legal points. Two seniors and one junior will make up the counsel for each side' the jury will consist of two seniors, four juniors and six freshmen. The other members of the court will be selected from the senior class with the exception of the judge about whom no decision has been made. -U. U. 0. Bill Owens Pilots Students Over University Campus From Two 'Till Four This After noon; Fifty Cents Charged University students will have an op portunity to see the campus from the air this afternoon from 2 until 4 o'clock. Bill Owens, sophomore at the Univer sity, better known as "Stunt" Owens, will pilot the plane. Students will be charged 50 cents per ride, each trip extending from Owen's Field to the campus and back to the same field. The proceeds will be used to send a Carolina student as a delegate to the Student Volunteer Conference in India napolis. Members of the Freshman Y. M. C. A. Council are selling tickets. Students will be carried from the campus to the airport in the "Y" bus, the first load being carried out at 2 and the last at 4 o'clock. Owens is a licensed pilot and has worked at the airport at the State Fair. I-le will be assisted by Henry Martin. -U. t. 0. Students ToAttend Methodist Meet This Month In Memphis Bob Penland, Frank Jordan And James Walsh Will Make Trip The Methodist Young People's Con ference will be held in Memphis, Tenn. from December 27 to 31, wit! several University students attending. These are Frank Jordon, Columbia; Robert L. Pen land, Columbia, and James F. Walsh, North. The Con ferencc is church-wide in scope, the anticipated 5,000 delegates coming from the Atlantic to the Pacific nd from Maryland to Texas. Among the speakers for the occasion are: Y. C. Yang, president of Soochow Univergity; Toyohiko Kagawa of Japan; Allan K. Chalmers; Mrs. Induk Pak, of Korea; Kirby Page; Senator Gerald P. Nye; Regina Westcott Wieman; Willis A. Sutton; Mordecai Johnson; E. Mc Neill Poteat, Jr.; Charles W. Gilkey; Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, and many others of outstanding ability. The South Carolina delegates will go in a body by bus, except a few who are going in private automobiles. -U. U. C. Social Science Society Honors New Members Pi Gamma Nu, Social Science society, recently initiated seven new members and honored them with a banquet at the H-otel Columbia. Judge C. J. Ramage, the guest speaker, told of his experiences at college and used them as a basis for ad vice to those present. .The new members initiated were: Prof. F. C. Erickson, Prof. Carlisle Roberts, Morgan Arant, C. M. Ellisqn, C. E. Simons, Charlotte Stevenson and Betty Wrenshall. College Students Rally In Peace Demonstration New York-(ACP,)-College stu dents all over the country rallied last .week to give the most impressive peace demonstration in American collegiate history. Gathered in groups ranging from one or two hundred to well into the thousands, the men and women who would be asked to bear the brunt of "the next war" reaffirmed their inten tion to do everything within their power to prevent armed conflict be tween the nations, and to stay out of it If they cannot prevent It. The demonstratIons were quIet, free Ancient Bibles On Display At University Library Old Editions Exhibited In Com memoration Of First Printing Of Bible As a part of the program in com memoration of the 400th anniversary of the printed Bible there has been placed on display in the University Library many famous old Bibles and illustrations taken from the early editions. The dis play is, free and students are encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity of seeing the greatest display of its kind ever held in Columbia. The most famous of the many editions on display are "The Geneva Bible" pub lished in 1595. This edition was brought from Geneva by the Puritan Reformers. The Britannica says it is sometimes called the "Breeches" Bible from the rending of Genesis "They sewed figge tree leaves together and made themselves breeches." This Bible was presented to the library by the late Governor John Drayton. An other famous Bible is the "Polyglot Bible" written in Hebrew, Samaritan, Chaldaic, Greek, Syrian, Latin and Arabis. Written on the title-page "from the books of the Friars of the Minor Recol lects, Convent of Mont Argus, 1681." t There is another "Polyglot" Bible on dis play written in many other languages and I its publication dates back to 1657. One of the first Bibles to be published in the United States was the "Eliot's Indian Bible" published in Cambridge, Mas sachusetts in 1680. This is a translation by John Eliot, an apostle to the Indians. t Some of the other famous editions are: "New Testament" translated by Wycliffe; "Douay" Bible, or the "Roman Catholic Version;" "Jewish" Bible; "Cherokee" Bible and the Bible given Dr. Joseph Le Conte by his students at the South Caro lina College when he was leaving for the University of California in 1869. -U. e. 0. Y Frosh Plan Novel Vespers Sunday Night, Dec. 8 Ahlgren And Holman To Captain Sides In Appropriate Contest The freshman Y. W. C. A. is planning a novel program for Vesper service Sun day night, December 8, at 7 o'clock. The word "Watch," which is the club's key word, is to be the theme of this pro gram. Special music has also been ar ranged. At a meeting on November 24, the freshman Y. W. C. A. was divided into two groups and Sarah Ahlgren and Har riet Holman were selected captains. These groups will conduct a contest, and at the end of the year the winning group will be given an entertainment by the losers. "Earthly Trials as Heavenly Rewards" was the subject of a talk made by Miss Elizabeth Lindsay at the meeting Mon day afternoon, December 2. ---..U. 0. from violence or disturbance in most instances, although anti-pacifist groups did make their presence felt on some campuses. Pamphlets ridiculing the demonstrators for peace were distrib uted in some places, and counter rallies were staged. Five hundred COLUMBIA OFFICE SUPPLY CO. "EVERY OFFICE NEED" Office Furniture, Filing Cabinets, Safes Printing and Rubber Stamps 1112 Lady Street 'Phone 516s Ourb Service A Specialty WE SERVE BEER Pick -Wick 1240 Hampton Street Evans Motor Co. Dial 8103 then count the minutes 24 HOUR SERVICE "COLUMBIANS MOST UNIQUE" Opposite the Jefferson Hotel Open All Night Phone 8754 Duke Burns Writer's_Effigy A Before N. C. Game Dan Parker Of N. Y. Daily Goes Up In Smoke For Insulting Duke Durham, N. C.-(ACP)--Aroused by n article he had written, Duke Univer sity students hung Dan Parker, veteran ;portswriter for the New York Daily Miirror, in effigy and then burned the 'body." A column by Parker, entitled "North arolina Burns Up Duke," was reprinted n the Chronicle, student paper. The stu lents, already at a high pitch of excite nent over the impending North Carolina game, found the article annoying. A gallows was immediately 'erected and Parker given the lcading role in a lynch ng by proxy. Duke won the game, 25-0. ----. S. O. members of the Boston University R. 0. T. C. attended a mass' "neet ng, on orders from their command ng officers, who stated, however, it was their intention to "show that sol liers, too, seek peace." -U. a. a. The Germans act Shakespeare better han anyone else, in the judgment of Prof. Iliot of the English department at Am ierst. Announcement of the discovery of a eJ-tailed l>avk new to science was made t Cornell Universtiy recently by Dr. eorge M. Sutton, curator of birds at he university. YELLOW CAB TAXI DIAL 810 1 to 5 Passengers-25c S Printing For FRATERNITIES SORORITIES and CLUBS Stationery, Announcements, Dance Cards, Programs, All Kinds of Social Printing. DuPRE PRINTING CO. 1316 Main St. Phone 7044 Business Training is Essential to Everyone, Par ticularly College Men and Women. Day, Night, and Special Classes. Draughon's Business College 1218 Sumter Street Telephones 5951 and 8317 Where's George? -p.,..o, - gone to... MARSHALL'S "It just goes to show," says George, "that I keep posted when those fine Single or Double Breasted Tuxedos sell at MARSHALL'S for $25.00. It pays to stick around for bargains at MAR SHALL'S I" 1535 1MaIn St