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District 11 To Con Release Names Of Participants In High School Week, Al Below are listed the district winner.i who are to compete in the final contests .in Columbia during high school week, April 29, 30 and May 1, according to a statement by W. C. McCall, director of the preliminary testing program: District 1 English-507 Darby, Mary Estal, R-3, lonea Path;'519 Leverette, Sarah Eliza beth, Iva; 516 McKenzie, Florence Marie, Abbeville; 517 Rosenberg, Cecile Vir ginia, Abbeville; 518 Thomas, Edward Hlill, Abbeville. French-113 Darby, Mary Estal, R-3, -Ionea Path; 124 Garrett, Preston Tobe, R-2, Fountain Inn; 110 Leverette, Sarah * Elizabeth, Iva; 123 Prince, George Alex ander, Easley; 105 Walker, William liar old, Belton. Short Story-5 Richardson, Mary An na, Williamston. District 2 English-580 Brooks, Lillian Estelle, Newberry; 552 Garner, Mary Klugh, Union; 571 Jones, Nancy Ferguson, Lau rens; 577 Kibler, Bernice Ruth, R-1, Newberry; 572 Metzger, Marie Cath crinc, Union. French-142 Hall, Lawrence Earle, Clinton; 139 Hill, Amelia Barbara, Lau rens; 143 Kibler, Bernice Ruth, R-1, Newberry; 157 Leopard Evelyn, New berry; 164 Spinx, Jack Carlisle, Laurens. Short Slory-9 Stone, Elbert Maxcy, Newberry. District 3 English-630 Battle, Sadie Jenkins, State Park ; 625 Donny, Anne Elizabeth, Columbia ; 628 Gibson, Lorna Faith, Co lumbia; 606 Toole, Margery, Aiken; 634 Weber, Betty Rose, Box 2, College Place. French-195 Page, Eloise Randolph, Columbia; 204 Rice, Edna Lucille, Co lumbia; 177 Toole, Margery, Aiken; 205 Traynor, Leo Mario, Columbia; 196 Weber, Betty Rose, Box 2, College Place. Short Story-18 Self, Susan Moore, Ninety Six. District 4 English-692 Bennett, Mary IHelen, Lancaster; 678 Campbell, Margaret Lou ict, Chester; 656 lood, Eugene, Rock Hill; 659,McDoAwell, George Lewis, Rock Hill; 661 Westmoreland, D. A., Jr., Clo ver. French--210 Boyd, Martha Ann, R-1, Pineville, N. C. 2!3 Clark, I larold Cuth ARTIST MATERIAL for the r Professional and Student ROSE-TALBERT PAINT Co. .1223 Taylor Street Phone No. 6269 *REMARK Ilk Bauifullyprisd eu /ue Comie Wrepped in Celiopha, oltOME AND JUL.IET A,Williams chau.pe The edition inces the eoseme by e.utnm.t Shekespearesm echoias. a RUBAJYAT OF OMAR KCHAYYAM ire aI.nd...w. Tresuat Isby Hee. Dl.c wabseuud Psaker ad eritcal cona.at by V..eat 4THE I.GHT OPERAS OF W.S. GIL.BERT leidi aThe Piss of Pessa . sll.hby a.el STATE M S1224 MaIn Street Oolumbia, S. 0. r" inners spete Here Final Contests To Be Held During iril 29, 30, And May 1 bert, Rock Hill; 244 Dobson, Alice Inde pendence, Lancaster; 214 Dunlap, Mar garet Evelyn, Rock Hill; 217 Strait, Lid; Isabel, Rock Hill. Short Story-27 Hollis, Alice Eloisc Rock Hill. District 5 English-Funderburke, Mary Lou, Dar lington; 695 Parker, Blanche Dixot Bishopville; 706 Sansbury, Paul Andrew Darlington; 707 Shepard, Margaret, Dar lington; 741 Ward, Helen Alma, Lugoff. French-245 Beasley, Marion Rollim Bishopville; 260 Graham, Irving Wil!ard Davis Station; 254 Howell, Ruth Lugen uia, R-2, Darlington; 246 Jones, Ev Mae, Bishopville; 263 Slater, Anni Louise, Manning. Short Story-41 Josey, Sydney Mc Kelvey, Lydia. Distict 6 English-757 Carmichael, Agnes Le< Bennettsville; 787 Gaddy, Robert larolc Latta; 771 Mathis, Mary, Marion; 77 McCall, Eloise Bethea, Marion; Smitl Charles Foster, Conway. French-292 Carmichael, Agness Le< Bennettsville; 319 Gaddy, Robert Harok Latta; 321 Kornblut, Esther Louise, Lat ta; 318 Manning, Sara Gertrude, Latta 406 McCall, Eloise Bethea, Marion. Short Story-55 Humphries, France Villiamson, Latta. District 7 English-809 Gourdin, Virginia Brock itgton, Kingstree; 800 1-lardee, Williar Covington, Florence; 803 Nettles, Juli Ray, Leo; 794 Rogers, Elizabeth Anr Florence; 795 Rutledge, Ann Kenned) Florence. Frentch-326 Boyd, Mamie Lee, Lane 340 Hardee, William Covington, Flor ence ; 328 Herring, Virginia Lon, An drews; 337 Moyc, Mildred Leonora, Lak City; 342 Small, Janie Watson, Slaters. Short Story-56 Rogers, Elizabetl Ann, Florence. District 8 Einglish-873 Fairey, Glynn IHopt \Valtcrboro; 879 Horne, Elizabeth Gar% St. George; 867 Klauber, Vivian Drusili: St. George ; 860 Mappus, William Amm< R-2, Charleston; 869 Westbury, 11. Ra mona, St. George. French-377 i lorne, Elizabeth Gar3 St. George; 345 Kemp, Mary Elizahetl Denmark; 381 Langdale, Nellie Eliza beth, Green Pond :375 Mcl)ougal, Eliza beth 1 ouise, Summervi!!e; 372 Mirmon\ Muriel Leah. Summerville. Short Story-70 Buchanan, Mary Mac I)onald, \Valterboro. Central Drug Co. FOR DELiCIOUS 25c-PLATE LUNCHES-25c -Ser-ved at all hours DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR Consists of Potato salad, chicken salad, lettuce, tomatoes, cold slaw, pickle and choice of one meat Phone 5197 ABLE VALUE IN BOOKS. LUXE BINDINGS laid paper, b.Je Ia DeLuxe Cloth b.h Rubessed Cause. Set/. lue frw ener. ne 5)% m 3% inches eanmd Pocked in Beautiful Slip Sones e THE TAMING OF THE SHREW., Wkhbthe famous Tlespi. ms, aprfc v * TUE ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHIAUSEN / Ded. ..EAvS FROM -THE DIARY OF' . SAMUEL. FEPYS CAD3B . . .. . ,7sa. a- u a- C as~ mu * A SHaOFSIR,AD.7pAE I Don't miiss them -a- 59c |rUndefeated Evelyn Baker 5 Sarah Rector CO-ED DEB, Mrs. Hawkins Lauds AAUW In Literary Society Endeavors To Raise Carolina Tc First Rating In Asso ciation "To those who wish to continue study - beyond college years and live broadei lives, membership in the American As sociation of University Women will be most valuable." declared Mrs. Maude M. lawkins in an address to the Euphro synean Literary Society Wednesday afternoon. - Mrs. Hawkins told of her recent tril to Washington to interview the presideni of the A.A.U. in the organizations $79, 000 national headquarters. It is her de sire to have Carolina put on the Associa. tions List I, moving it up fronm its pres ent position on List 2, so that all womei gradluates of the University will be eligi. ble for Emerson the A.A.U. instead of only those with master's dlegrees. Coker WVinthrop, and Converse Colleges are all on List 1. A petition to have the University of South Carolina moved tip to the list of first rank school from wvhich it was re - movedl ten years ago will be presentedl to a National Committee on Standardls this May, and if approved by that group wvil probably be passed on by the National Convention of the A.A.U. in 1937. Four newv members wvere initiatedl into the Euphrosynean Society fol lowving Mrs. I lawkins' talk. They wvere: Rosemary Giriffin, Julia I lyatt, D)uma H arris, and Beth Hlerzog. STRING QUARTET GIVES CONCERT In Chapel__May 7 Group Of Accomplished Musicians Will Give Repertoire Of Chamber Music The South Carolina String Quartet will give a concert of chamber music Thurs (lay, May 7, at 8 :30 p. m. in the chapel. The quartet will b)e assistedl by Mrs. Richard Lane, who wvill be guest soloist. The concert is sponsored by the Violin Club of Columbia. The quartet was organized this winter to meet the need felt by music lovers of the state for chamber music. The mem bers are as follows: Professor H arry Feldl, first violin, D)orothy Byrd Taylor, second violin, Madame Felice dle Hlor vath, viola, and Allen Taylor, cello. Pro fessor Feld is head of the violin depart ment of Newberry College; Madame de H orvath is head of the department of violin at the university and director of the University Symphony Orchestra. Tickets to the concert may be obtained from Rice Music Co. or from members of the Violin Club. Admission will be twenty-five cents. / This Season 9| Alice Huitt Mary Sutton ATING TEAM VFW Spread To 60 Schools Criticism Divided 50-5C Ladies Auxiliary Also Grows Ox Many Campuses Through out Nation New York (ACP)-Reperccussions o a quiet remark dropped in a Princetol bull-session swept the country last weel as the latest of the bonus-seeking organi zations, the Veterans of Future Wars established chapters on more than sixt, campuses and embarked on a progran variously hailed as delight ful, valuabl and "unpatriotic." "Because it is customary to pay bonuse: before they are dcue," said the manifest< announcing the birth of the organization "the Veterans of Future WTars deman< immediate payment plus three per cen interest compounded annually from Jluni 1, 1965, backward to June 1, 1935." Pay ment now, the mani festo emphiasized w~ould( "lift the country out of the deC pression" and enable beneficiaries to en joy the money before they lost theit lives.. Ilardly had the future veterans electe< officers when the first chapter of an aux iliary society, the Association of Golk Star Mothers of Veterans of Futur< Wars was formed at Vassar. Indignani outbursts followed, and the name was changed to the "Ladies Auxiliary of Future Veterans." Lotudest in denunci ation, of course, were the other veterans groups. "Had the students confined their in suIting remarks to the veterans, we would have laughed it off," said Joe E. Murray, former national chaplain of the Disabled American Veterans of the World WVar, "but they have brought in the name of ai group of women we hold sacredl !" No satire or disrespect was intended, replied Louis J. Gorin, Jr., national commander Gorin w~as unperturbed by American Legion threats of vigorous complaint to Princeton authorities, kept three secre taries busy sendling instructions to new chapters. Criticism and approbation were divided about fifty-fifty, with most support com ing from students, faculty members and outside liberals, charges of Communism andl "tun-Americanism" from the Ameri can Legion and other veterans' organi zat ions. Mrs. Mathilda Burling, president of the New York State Chapter of Gold Star Mothers, called the movement "uin patriotic and ill-mannered," and James E. Van Zandt, commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said the students were "too yellow to go to war." The future veterans replied that Mr. Van Zandt was a Red, challenged him to debate. A self-appointed strong-arm squad of athletes attempted to prevent formation of a VFW chapter at Rice Institute, Texas, with a barrage of mud-balls and Qries of "Communists I", but were suc cessfully repulsed. City College of New York annonced Literary Socied Open . Next Monday Night Candidates For Office Will Be Given Opportunity To Out line Political Platforms Campus politicians will he given an opportunity to plead their cause on the stump next Monday night, according to plans formulated by the Clario ophic So ciety Tuesday night. Complete with the old-time stump, water pitchers, and mod ern amplifying, and the everpresent hand shakers and baby-kissers, the rally should be a good imitation of the real thing. The meeting will begin proomptly at 7 o'clock, and candidates for all offices are expected to participate. They are urged to immediately turn in thrir names to Dinky Williams, who has charge of the allocation of time on the program. A committee to make arrangements for the rally was appointed by the Clario sophic president, and consists of : Presi dent IHarper Welborn, James Cothran, Richard Foster, Keith \Volfe, and John Turnbull. Clarence Taylor was appointed as head technician to install his amplify ig system, with Freshmans Cothran, Bell, and Greene as assistants. A public meeting of this kind will force any existing political machines into the open, Foster declared in introducing his 1 motion. It will also afford. the student body the opportunity of looking the can didates over and casting a more intelli gent ballot, he said. Highly enthusiastic over his proposal, Foster soon had the society equally as excited, and the motion was passed unanimously. The (late for the Clariosophic banquet has been definitely set for Friday evening May 8th, from 8 to 10 o'clock, Foster, chairman of the banquet committee, re ported. The Crystal Room of the lotel Columbia has already been engaged for the occasion. Attorney Clint Graydon of Columbia has accepted an invitation to 1 speak, and it is thought that senator larry R. IIughs of Oconee county will also be available. "Both gentlemen have some of the choicest jokes in circulation, so the han I quet should not be such' a dry afTair," Foster asserted in reply to Hob Hayes' t interrogation as to whether this will be of the conventional type at which interest diminishes with the disappearance of food. Menton lHolland of Simpsotnville won first place in the declamation cuuntest held earlier in the evening, and M fnroe Ful mer came second. Miss Southerd of the librarv, Dr. I.ewis of the Veteran- lls pital, and \\iley Brown served as Judges. Keith \o!fe was elected Sen t ale dictorian to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Al. T. Pitts last week. --L. A. C. torination of a specialized il aii:lte: an Association of Foreign Corresp.-nldents of JUST ARRIVED Li PATTE] ALL WOOL SP( --In White, Chec ALSO LATEST SHIRTS-TIES STRI At Cut-Rate Prices That C CUT-RATE I FOR ECONOMICA 1430 Maii -WHEN YO STEIN-KING BI You Are Assred Of The Eli Possible to Mai STEIN-KING IS OLDEST BREWE] --IAIIm -TRR REST 1I Page Three y Holds Air Speaking G-Men Nab Pranksters Boys Lodged In Jail 3yracuse University Students Caught In Attempt To Send Fake Bomb Syracuse, N. Y.--(ACP)-Personal, if lightly informal relations with a lot of -Men were enjoyed by twenty-five ;yracuse University students last week when the finger of the law indentified hem as the pranksters who had sent a rake bomb to Chancellor Charles \V. lint. They were charged with disorder y conduct, and the postoffice department 'ired a note of cheer from Washington, aying that Federal action might be taken. The tale begins with a group of archi ectural students sitting around trying to hink of something to do instead of ;tudying architecture. Same bright lad hought of the bomb plot, and an infernal nachine was immediately constructed From taped wires, cotton, dead dry cell >atteries, cardboard tubes filled with sugar md an old alarm clock. Addressed to 'Comrade Chancellor Charles W. Flint." t was entrusted to the U. S. Mails, wherein lay its undoing. An alert postoffice clerk, noting the orrendous "Comrade" salutation, and he ticking of the alarm clock, rushed the package to a pail of water. Postal inspectors opened it in due time, were at first convinced it was genuine. The ;ugar-soaked cotton had the same appear ance as gun-cotton, they said. The University did not concern itself with the sad plight of twenty-five prank sters when G-men had rounded them up and hustled them into cells at the city jail. "The matter is in the hands of the authorities," said Vice Chancellor Wil liam P. Graham. --'. R. c. Future Wars, with "the purpose of train ing its members in the writing of atrocity stories and garbled war dispatches." u m ma m. "DEPENDABLE" TAXI; Trucking . v.. and = 0.o Taxi . 1 P SERVICEI Telephone 3189--183 Checker Cab Co. The White Cars LTEST SELECTIVE ENS IN )RT FLANNELS :k Serge, Grey PATTERNS IN -POLO SHIRTS LWS With A Guarantee ou.nts lEN'S SHOP 1L SMARTNESS 1 Street U DRINK EER AND ALE est Quality DrIink That It Rs MADE BY THE NY IN AMERICA RON YOUR DUALRen._