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BLUE KEY FRATERNITY ELECTS EIGT SUDNTS TO MEMBERSHIP Presbyterian College's Grand Old Man mas...... ............. r14 $1~~* r .$ Er{igh Stuent Elce oBueKy ain Conayh Wal er nity {P. , Wie ey tues osvit ce a tha institution have m':$:}d:}::, }i the$: mos colrfu figu re in Pamtto ports B bqet omorrow Nghe Johnson a'er th ri batle of th e Blue Stockings and R eocise at Lif e asnoLobby Op suens Goup MoeUnve Inoro Un"ler pervson of Dttegir teo W.Bu S.toodins.adGmccs Week-ing-treaner-Lines Eight Students Elected to Blue Key, Nationa Honorary Fraternity, Will Be Guests at Annua Banquet Tomorrow Night. Carolina-P. C. Grid Battle Will Honor Waltei Johnson of the Blue Stockings, Recognized a Dean of South Carolina Coaches. Student Union Building Takes On Aspect o Life as Lobby Opens, Groups Move In Under Su" pervision of Director W. S. Woods. Omicron Delta Kappa Announces 1937-38 Poinl System Without Change. New Members Will B( Elected Within Six Days. _______ Feature Of Prize-Winning Exhibit Volume XXXI, No. 8 Johnson Day Features Gair Carolina Students Honor Dean Of State Coaches Honoring the most esteemed in South Carolina sports, the a body of the University will ton express appreciation of the p Walter Johnson, head coach at byterian College, holds in Pa athletics. The twenty-second edition of son-coached football teams wil the Gamecocks at Carolina S1 at 3 p. m. on "Walter Johnson with the student body of P. C. an school football elevens from al the state as guests of the Univ< During the intermission memi the Co-ed association will escort son to the center of the field Stokes Davis, president of th< lina student body will present silver water set as a gift from ti dents. Delegates to the first annual wide Safety Conference will be of the Standard Oil Co. of N the contest. At P. C. Since 1915 A graduate of Battle Creek c Johnson came to Presbyterian i when that institution had only 1 dents. 14 men reported for hi football practice but out of that l he molded a team that won five seven games and placed two n the all-state roll. That is a typical example work he has done in twenty-twc of service. From three sports P. C. campus, all of which he c when he first went there Coach son has seen the addition of siy sports to their calendar and c all of them at some time or of his career, until P. C. has becom< as the school in which more st (Continued on Page Three STUDEI Organizati Rooms For Meeting rooms and lobby Student Union Building are nov and ready for student use, Prc W. S. Woods, director, announce terday. The building intended center of all Carolina student ties will be open from 8 o'clock morning until 11 o'clock at nigh Furniture wvas moved into the Tuesday morning. At presenti sists of colored leather chair sofas, magazine tables, and floor The committee is endeavoring tain more furniture, miagazines tains and a radio to be placed room. Organizations may secure ments for hours to meet in the ing by calling the Student Unic lice, or communicating by letter rooms will be used for meeting main room wvill be used by the organizations of the campus ai smaller one will accommodate ten to fifteen persons. Groups for the use of the rooms are req to state the number of people ex to attendl the meetings. In addition to the lobby at (Continued on Page Three Work Begw On New La Work is rapidly going forwa Carolina's new $19,477 engineerit oratory, located behind the C adjoining the University wari and carpenter shop. The foundations have been Ia wvork on the sup)erstructure h gun. A large quiantity of sandl,< and other materials have been eredl to the building site. The structure wvill be 36 fee and 13t6 feet long. It will coin hydraulic and electrical engit laboratories. Being one of tIl laboratories of its type in the c< it will he used for research w engineering by Carolina stude that school. The building will have a c< ( Continued on Page Three University of COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLII Special Train e Takes Students To Washington Rate For Round 'turn Trip Excursion orrow Is $14.70 )sition Pres- Special railroad excursion rates ha Imetto been arranged to take University South Carolina students to the Car John- lina-Catholic University grid game I meet Washington on Thanksgiving day, :adium was announced by Scruggs Hope Day" the Carolina pressing club yesterday. d high A Southern railway train will lea 1 over Columbia on November 24 at 5 p. n rsity. arriving in Washington at 6:30 a. n November 25. Round trip rates ha iers of been set at $14.70. The round tr John- tickets have a 10 day return limit. where The University has already cc Car- tracted with the railroad for the tra: him a portation of the football team and t le stu- band, and ofTicials of the road ha promised to try to obtain chair ca state- for the students who wish to go guests Washington, Hope said. He explain J. at that as many as 25 students must ma the trip if the low rates are to be c tamed. Tickets will be on saic at t ollege, pressing club the Monday precedi n 1915 Thanksgiving day. 65 stu- Students Given Dance s first While in Washington, the team a group band will be the guests of the Caroli of its club, a Washington organization coi ien on posed of Carolinians living in t nation's capital. The club plans of the sponsor a dance for the team, t years band, and members of the Caroli on the student body who go to Washingt< ached Johnnie Campbell and his Big Apple John- will be on hand to enliven the occasic other The dance will be held at Fifteen ached and L street, Northwest in Washin her in ton. noted Hope announced that he was ma udents ing arrangements for Carolina studer ) (Continued on Page Three) IT UNIOn Dns Secure Meetings ftheH pen Harmon Gives d yes actiutlineeFor an U SC Ana amps. Theme for this year's Garnet ai ,cur- Black will be a "Year at Carolina," ithe was announced by Newt Harmon, e< tor of the annual this week. The a Lssign- nual will be ready for distributii buil- about May 1 if work continues at ti Twvo present rate. s. The The theme is to be based on the ge large eral activities of the Carolina campt from Politics, class work, social affairs ai asking sports will be among the activiti uested stressed on the pages introducingt pected sections of the year-book. Contrary d( the the custom of previous years the ther will be delineated not by art work b by photographs. The snap)shot section of the book 7 planned to be one of informality. TI wi,ll be a cross-section of the studle b, body and will concentrate on no o group). Pictures of students as they a rd on naturally, not "posed" pictures, are g lab- sired by the editor. anteen Students having action shots of cai ,house pus life, especially those of baseb and track are asked to hand them dabnd to the office as soon as possible. enment A satire section to be placed int deliv- midst of the adlvertising is planned. The staff of the yearbook, which wide this year volume 40, is as follow tai a Newt Harmon, editor-in-chief; Max efew Harrelson, business manager; Dougl iuntry, McKay, Jr., associate editor; Alfr ork in Browning, assistant business manag< nts in Harold Prince, sports editor; Jet Hughes, assistant sports editor; Fra mncrete ces Morgan, senior editor; F'ran< Hart, sorority editor; and Her D Iargann fraternity editor. South Carolina (A, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1937 MEMBERI SATU RDA Eight men were elected to the cal South Carolina chapter of Blue Key, ter national honorary fraternity, this week, announces Jim Dixon, president of the ' group. sch Those elected were: Laurin Currie Ka oe MacArthur, Bennettsville; Ralph Lee fo< D l)earth, Portsmouth, Ohio; Maxcy C. sit ?Harrelson, Mullins; Harold Bailey it Prince, Easley; William Simpson, Co ilumbia; Osborne Hardwick Rhodes, ma Estill; Banjo Williams, Orangeburg; phi and James Goggans, Columbia. ma eCTen Men Elected Ka The following is a list of the men La * elected and their major honors: fra p Cr Currie MacArthur fre Currie MacArthur, junior in the leg school of arts and sciences, secretary s of Kappa Sigma Kappa, member of h Euphradian Literary Society, Honor of ve Council, University Band, Y. Cabinet, va rs editor of Y's Bird, debating council, pa to Garnet and Black stal. De ed Ralph Dearth ke Ralph Lee Dearth, junior in school 1)- of arts and sciences, Sigma Chi fra- of he ternity, Lanpad Society, football, scl Block "C" Club, secretary and treasur- sis er of sophomore class. ass Maxcy Harrelson an Maxcy C. Harrelson, junior in the Sif d school of arts and sciences, Clario- ph na sophic Literary Society, Pi Kappa Phi Y fraternity, business manager Garnet E he and Black, chairman of dance commit- be to tee, German Club, Pan-hellenic repre- of ha sentative, secretary Pi Kappa Phi, at na Harold Prince tha n. Harold Bailey Prince, junior in rs school of journalism, Clariosophic Lit- he erary Society, Kappa Sigma Kappa, bo Y.M.C.A., president Freshman Y prc g- Council, president Sophomore Coun- Jo k cil, vice-president Y.M.C.A., Y board, of - sports editor Gamecock, sports editor loc is Garnet and Black, sports editor Y's ho Bird, managing editor the Gamecock, ph LOBBY Art Department F Receives Honors ( Placing first in the group exhibitions at the recent state fair, students of the lar art school of the University took five plc first places and five seconds in compe- Al tition with other South Carolina col- D leges. Det Former students of the art depart-w muent won six fbrst places and one sec- chi mnd in the p)rofessional exhibit and c one first place among the amateurs. The students winning prizes were: w dReuben Gambrell, Jr., first prize in " it landscape rendering in water color, Q Li- secondI prize in portrait in oil andl sec-ti ondl prize in textile designi. Thisti b)rings Gambrell's total to five p)rizes >nwon on his exhibits. Claudia 1Knowl ie ton won first prize in still life in oils, cai Helen Towvnsend, first in water color ea< l)ortrait, first in textile dlesigni, and sec- als 01nd prize in decorative dlesign; D). HI. At\ s. Rucker, first prize for still life in waterst d( color; Nathalie Fitzsimons, first in hei es decorative dlesign, secondl in still life Ili in water .color; and Katherine Good- th< iing won second( prize on her excel- coi to lent poster. le In the professional class, Corrie Me uat -Callum, former University student, tec wvon first prizes for her oil and water of iscolor ortraits. second in landscape in s (Continued on P~aye Three) nt Editorial-Of i-Subsidization IS a business--a fai .contemiptible one. The Gamiecock g< "ing OPEN SUBSIDIZATION ! hi eyed freshman, imagines that the la electedi from all sections of the coun .the Alma Mater. is 's; The Southern Conference has ad(l cy laws, statutes andl resolutions to b)ani as If they want to hyp)ocriticaly state ed palymenIt for the athletes, yet und< ~r; uts step out-not gently-from the C ry Football today is a business. Th They deserve compensation. We g ,C, board. BUT, let's come out ontl Founded 1908 FET ED I NIGHT tain freshman tennis team, varsity is team. Bill Simpson Villiam Simpson, senior in the ool of arts and sciences, Sigma Chi, ppa Sigma Kappa, basketball, track, tball, president freshman class, var v football. Osbourne Rhodes )sbourne Hardwick Rhodes, fresh n in law school, treasurer Eu radian Literary Society, Kappa Sig Kappa, president and treasurer Phi ppa Sigma, treasurer John Selden w Society, secretary-treasurer inter ternity council, secretary-treasurer shman law class; Wake Forest Col e freshman debater's medal, band. Banjo Williams Banjo Williams, junior in the school commerce, president junior class, sity football, varsity baseball, Kap Sigma Kappa, Lampad fraternity, Ita Sigma Pi, Y council. James Goggans ames Goggans, senior in the school arts and sciences, senior in the rool of chemical engineering, ?s tant business manager Gamecock, istant business manager, Garnet I Black, freshman track, treasurer ;ma Nu, Sigma Alpha Zeta, Eu radian Literary Society, freshman council, i banquet in honor of the new mem -s will be given in the blue room the Columbia Hotel, Saturday night 8 o'clock. Alumni from all parts of i state are expected to attend. uest speakers of the evening will Edwin G. Seibels, chairman of the ard of trustees; Coleman Karesh, )fessor of University law school; in Crews, member of the House Representatives; James Hammond, al lawyer: Sol Blatt, speaker of the use; Charles Mercer, professor of esics at the University. SPENS ep Song Fund oes Over $200 r'wo hundred and twenty-seven dol s has been raised in cash and dges by the joint committee on ha Kappa Gamma and Omicron Ita Kappa toward the $500 goal for pep-song fund, it was announced ednesday night by Werber Bryan, nirman of the joint committee in irge. 2ne hundred dollars of the amount s contributed by the Athletic Asso tion of the Unliversity; $127 has n pledged by the Alumni Associa ni: and $10 has been given by the p)hradlian Literary society. \ll fraternities and sororities on the npus will be asked to contribute $5 h. Other camp)us organizations will o be asked to miake contrib)utions. attempt will be made to reach the dlents through these organizations ore an individual canvas is made. e Euphradlian society is the first of campus organizations to make a it ribut ion. Committee Considers Songs \fter the $500 is raised, a commit will be app)ointedl of the miemb)ers the two societies to consider songs >mitted. The money will not be C~(ontinueed on Page Three) rhe-week eone. Ilypocrisy' is a1 cloak-a its on1 r'e'ord( as heartily favor %(o one. not even the 'ground rge squiad of 40 gridl stars, se try, comec her'e for the love of >p)ted a conglomerat ion of by sh sublsidIization of the athletes. to the public that there is no rhandedly aid them, then let on ference. a players work hardl and long. v'e it to them. Tlhat is above e surface and puIblish for the Ir open snhsidlizntin!