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HORRY HERALD ?? VOL. 2, NO. 12 FACULTY ?**$** -..***** i * CALKNDAU Friday, December 5:50 I'. 31.: Last day for liamdiitK in schedule tSuiurday, December 1: Examinations Tuesday, December 7, S I'. 3L: Students' Kccita! in auditorium. Wednesday, December S, (>:.'{() r. 31. Wednesday ISvenimg Meeting, audi torium. jL. Friday, December 10, 1:15 I'. M.: j&gb Regular meeting of Cuirry Liter ary Society. H|f Friday, December 10, 5:50 I*. M.: ZlH Last day for filing pennanen schedules. V WlVI'IHtOI' WANTS $100,000 ': Winthrop College will ask the (Jen i a >jm oral Assembly at. its session in Jan uary for an extra appropriation o $100,000 for the purpose of buildiiu a mow dorinitcry. The request wil be made for $50,000 for next wintci and $.">0,000 the following year. Tin decision to ask for this extra appro print ion was reached by the boart of trustees at its meeting in Uoel Mill the other night and was occas ioned by the pressure for more roon at Winthroj) (reining from all parti of the State. Over 000 applicant} for admission were turned a\va> this year because of the lack ol rcoin and the Winthroj) trustees hav? decided to a?k the Legislature foi funds for aother dormitory. The present enrollment at Win trop is considerably over 000. This was the principal action taken by the hoard cf trustees at tboii in tM in/;. i no Jin Mill report to tli< (Ion nil Assembly nvjis Rotten in shape. Col. I). W. AleLaurin, wlir attended the meeting of the board said this mornimr that the prineipal other business, whioh they transacted, was of ;i routine 'nature.?Record KI (;iS!KAirs NOTICK All t-ehodu!os, whether complete o* inoomulete, must be filed with the Uegi liar hv r>:50 p. m. Friday, Doecinhcr JJnl. If incomplete, tin sclu flub* should be so marked and should bo accompanied by a written re'iii s{. regarding any desired change. Permanent schedules must he fi 1 ?r by Friday, December 10. No change? t ? be made after that date except on payment of $1.00?the regular charge for changes. itniw?| ROCK HILL, S. C., WINS GL : OVERWHELMS SE HARD F AH Previous Rules of the Liar |Profes When shall their glory lade? Oil, the wild game they played! Forward the Faculty! Xohle Kleven! " Theirs not to reason why Sticks might not graze the sky! Theirs but to make ball 11 y? 1 They?1 plus 7 (To make it rhyme.) m Ah! A hush falls on tho "vast e.onc'curse" of si<lo-liners, as the players take their places. Take, did we say? Why, Mr. Brown took " his place all over the field! It. was ' only after much urging and argu> ment that he was persuaded to con 1 lino his unaccountable energy to a short distance of ten feet, llis am- 1 3 hit ion to excel as "Jack of all trades'' was completely nipped in I the hud. "Jack" was right there, in [ spite of the shrill shrieking of the 1 * referee's whistle, and her stentorian 1 command, "stay in your own hack * yard,"?sadly remarking as he heat 1 * an ignominious retreat, "this is a most (1 ifilen 1L game to play!" f Mr. Colter's "vaulting ambition" * found ample opportunity for exercise whenever hall, senior, or stick approached his rightful territory, - whit h was?anywhere. Cut where is "I'a Weeks" all this * time? Just look over in the lefthan 1 corner of the field, and there 4 yen will see him, with the fortitude 1 of a Spartan, and an unmistakable > air of: I "( ome one! Come all! this rock (?) shall 11 y v From, its linn base, as soon as I!'' < I/Colt! \vitcnee oometh that mighty blow shattering down through the air? "Maggie" has seen the hall1 We stand awed into breathless sit J lenee while his stick desrihes a * gigantic are in the air! Lo! it de1 sccnds, and the hall whizzes two I feet! (we suggest that hereafter Mr. i Magginis conserve his energy, and 1 not waste his efforts "on the deserc air.'*) ! Mr. Hrini is the man of Mio hour' * With Herculean strength he drive? i he ball ever stone and over i ; grass blade,? - a fo within the hallow- t ad "striking circle.*' < HfflM DECEMBER 2, 1915 O RIO US \ lNIORS IN OUGHT BATTLE ne Annihilated By the Unruly >sors. On the hockey field, Where the sticks they wield, The Faculty, they were there, They hit the hall Without aiming at all, And it Hew right through the air! Mr. Magginis, Miss Kolb, and Miss Finch, Held down the forward line,?never a flinch! Messrs. Coker and Weeks Sent the balls back in streaks! Mr. Rrini and Miss Zimmerman's iius wore "some" freaks. Miss Mareum, she swung, At the hall her stick Hung, On Miss Tot wine's "fell strokes" we al breathlessly hung. Mr. brown's Original methods of stopping the hall, With hand, foot,?just, anything,? Outshone them all! Miss Covey was there, With her stick poised in air, While "Brim" featured so many times, We lest count. I fear! Why, we left out the seniors, And they played the game! Ilipp, Ilutaff, and Douglass, of athletic lame, raig. Chapel, and Back, Proper "spunk" did net lack, While Tennant and XVhitlock, Bore the title, "half-hack." Saito and Dwight, dot the hall there, all right. While Od'cin, as goal guard, 1 ut up a stiff fight. Twas a game worth the watching, We hope we'll have more, 'i such uo cur good luck. We've something in store. Lillian Rose, Lucy R. Wilson. Tlie President, to Speak. President Johnson win deliver an whlress before the Lancaster C'ouny Teachers' Association on Satur lay, the *1th. sinews; 5c A COPY - 50c A YEAR MCTORY !! Ex-President National Educational Association Lectures at Winthrop We have been "peculiarly fortunate" in having with us within tho past two weeks ICx-Secrctary Hryan, and Dr. David Starr Jordan?both leaders in the World Peace movement. We were especially interested in Dr. Starr Jordan because of his having formerly borne the title of President of the National LOducat.icn Association, in which ollice Dr. Johnson succeeded him. Dr. Johnson very fittingly introduced the speaker as a "great redwood from the Pacific slope." Dr. Starr-Jordan talked of tho present war and war's inevitable result. "lOvery war," he said, " is a brawl in the dark. It causes black hate, lor to lear means to hate. No war ever eomes out as it. is intended to. In the present war, ivo o-:ic triumphs ?all are defeated already. As a well-known writer has said in ono of his lucid intervals,?'a naJ.ion is like a bee; as it stings, it dies.' "Frederick the (1 reat said that in war 'any scruple is fatal.' There are no rules to the game of war, no laws, no umpire, 110 limit to the number of players. 'Tisn't a game; 'tisn't a sport. Fa< h nation's attitude toward war ?honlit l?> 'T win not lie a coward,?the coward strikes lirst; a coward strikes those who cannot strike hack; a coward strikes helow the bolt. A war is below the belt.' "We of the t'nitcd States do not want to get into war; we've nothing in tight about. We are law-abiding people, act' war-making people. Stand on the law, and when war is over, t he law is still there. The 1'nited States think for themselves; they don't lake the opinions of others. President Wilson is the most precious asset of the IVa<o Party oi' the world, he is the incarnation of the Peace Ideals of the American 1 1 /? 99 IJ y Some of the statistics cited by Dr. Starr Jordan were truly startling. ' If any cue could succeed in stopping tlio war for one day, lie would save more men than there are in I lie wlrcle of York county - men as precious to their friends as we are. "The t hrirsJ rot-to reason-why, t heirs-not-tc-make-rep;iy. theirs-but. (Continued on page 2.)