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  • 7/25/2019 Sou'Wester

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  • 7/25/2019 Sou'Wester

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    TH3 SOU'WESTER

    Friday, October I, 9

    SOU'WESTER

    ESTABLISHED

    1919

    \\

    PUBLISHED

    WEEKLY

    By The

    OF

    SOUTHWESTERN,

    MEMPHIS,

    TENN.

    Member

    Collegiate Press

    Association

    as second-class

    matter

    at

    at Memphis, Tenn,

    the

    act of March

    3,

    1878.

    MEADOW...Editor-in-Chief

    304

    Calvin

    Hall-Phone

    7-9279

    or

    7-3110

    SHAFFER. ......Feature

    Editor

    QUANT'HY ...

    FULLER ..........-..

    SportsEdito

    WATKINS. ...........

    News

    Editor

    WARDEN....................Society

    Editor

    News

    Staff

    Alexander,

    Asst. News Editor

    Cobb

    Margaret

    Leuck

    Olga Hartmann

    Walls

    Richard

    Thomas

    Taylor

    Elizabeth

    Robinson

    Flowers

    Savllla Martin

    McCord Martha

    Bailey

    Buchanan

    Joe

    Bell

    Maya Jack Crosby

    Sports

    Staff

    unlap

    Murrah Gattis

    Webb

    Dan Wingo

    Feature Staff

    Ingram

    Gertrude

    Smith

    Wood Maran Kleisker

    Lynn Barnard

    Irene

    Battle

    Frances

    Cunningham

    Tully

    Margaret

    Winchester

    Special

    Features

    Heidelberg

    Louis Weeks

    Tom Jones

    TATE....

    Business Manager

    S. McLean-Phone

    7-3958

    Circulation

    Managers

    GEORGE

    WILLIS

    WALLACE

    ...... Asst. Circulation

    Mgr.

    ARMISTEAD..............Exchanges

    DUFFEE..........Advertising

    Manager

    Asst.

    Advertising

    Managers

    McCormick

    Jim

    Watson

    McCormick Wayne

    Paulus

    SANDS

    DREISBACIK.........Secretary

    Glittering

    Gold

    a copy

    of

    the

    Lenoir

    Rhyean,

    publication

    of

    Lenoir

    College,

    Hickory,

    N. C.,

    this

    editorial:

    through

    the papers

    the editor

    noticed that

    Sou'wester,

    from

    Southwestern

    in Memphis,

    Tenn.,

    carried

    about the

    fact that there

    45

    students

    who

    reported for

    on

    that

    paper. If

    there

    a tenth of

    that number to

    re-

    to

    the office

    of the

    Lenoir

    the members

    of the staff

    no

    doubt

    promptly

    go

    into

    a

    faint. What

    is

    the matter

    with

    school?

    The paper

    that was

    mentioned

    is

    no better paper

    ours can be.

    There

    is

    one main

    The students

    at South-

    are taking

    an

    interest in

    college

    publication

    as we

    should

    Editor Shue of the Lenoir

    not

    gold that

    things

    are not

    always

    they seem,

    or

    more

    spe-

    like

    the

    old lady

    in

    the

    that had so many

    chil-

    she didn't know what

    to

    you

    get

    the point.

    By DAVID

    FLOWERS

    Millsaps

    paper, PURPLE

    AND

    should be complimented

    on

    recent

    editorial,

    "The Question

    Much publicity

    has been

    to the South

    mistaking

    its

    towards

    the color

    question.

    Southerner

    has

    always

    regard-

    the colored people

    as children,

    in

    thought

    and

    action, and

    treated

    them

    as such. Racial

    are

    distinctly

    drawn

    in the

    negro

    realizes it and

    is thankful

    for it. Kindness

    colored

    race is,

    however,

    a

    whites,

    and as the PUR-

    AND

    WHITE

    says,

    "The

    true

    only raises himself when

    is

    decently

    civil to his servant.

    is stated in the

    University

    of

    CRIMSON

    AND

    that

    over

    3,500,000

    students

    unable to

    find

    jobs after

    college. The

    executives of

    raise the cry that

    the

    man should equip

    himself

    a

    specific

    job. This,

    however,

    the college man in

    the position

    wage

    slave,

    specializing

    in only

    and consequently

    adrift

    when

    the

    occupation

    or is overcrowd-

    In England

    a man is selected

    a position

    in the Diplomatic

    through

    his knowledge

    of

    rather than

    his ability to

    international

    problems.

    the University

    of South Caro-

    paper,

    THE

    GAMECOCK, one

    that

    Who's Who has

    se-

    their faculty.

    is also

    well represent-

    those

    in

    Who's

    Who

    1r.Weh~,

    Prof. Tate, Dr.

    Town-

    and

    Dr. Athlnson.

    Campus

    People

    By

    Richard

    Alexander

    It has been

    the custom of the

    Women's

    Pan-Hellenic Council for

    the past several years

    to

    entertain

    with

    a backwards

    tea

    dance

    during

    the

    first semester. It has always

    been

    a

    mystery

    as to how certain

    people

    are given dates with

    certain

    other

    people. This week

    we are

    go-

    ing

    to show you how the

    Council

    decides

    whom

    they

    are going

    to date.

    The

    scene

    is

    the Zeta house.

    The

    council is in

    session there discus-

    sing

    dates. President

    Black is seat-

    ed at

    a

    table

    looking

    over

    the

    lists

    of

    boys. She

    decides to

    say some-

    thing. Girls,

    I

    can't

    see

    how

    we

    can

    make

    all

    the

    dates

    today. What

    we will

    do, though, is

    make the dates

    for

    us girls

    on the Council.

    As I

    call

    your

    name, please

    answer

    with

    the

    name

    of

    the

    boy

    you want

    to

    take

    to the

    dance. Do

    you under-

    stand?

    Very

    well,

    I'll start

    with

    Lucile

    Woods. What

    is your choice,

    Lucile?"

    Baine

    Chosen

    "Well,

    Babe, I'd like

    awfully to

    take

    Rodney Baine.

    You know, he

    has

    a

    way with him."

    I

    object,"

    says Sally

    Griffin,

    "everyone knows

    I want to

    go with

    Rodney.

    Why, we've been friends

    for years.

    This isn't

    a fair way to

    make dates."

    "Girls, girls,

    we can't

    have this.

    Let's not

    be ugly about this.

    Rod-

    ney isn't the

    only

    boy in school.

    There's

    "Big Mac.

    "He's for me, adds

    Thelma

    Worthington.

    "Annie

    Laurie

    Pente-

    cost said ould

    have him for this

    dance.

    And

    what she says

    about

    'Big Mac'

    goes."

    Sally saw

    that

    the two

    best boys

    in

    school had

    already,

    been

    chosen

    so she decided

    to take next

    best

    "Put me down for Cy

    Williams."

    "All right, Sally," says

    Babe.

    You

    and

    Cy will make

    a nice pair. Next

    girl

    on the

    list

    is Lib

    Pearce. Who

    do you

    want,

    Lib?"

    What

    About

    Wallace

    "I've noticed Young Wallace look-

    ing my way

    lately.

    Could

    it be

    fixed

    up for me

    to go with

    him?"

    "Absolutely not.

    Martha

    Shaffer

    spoke

    for Mr.

    Wallace fully

    three

    months

    ago.

    We

    can't

    disappoint

    a

    girl who has

    been

    waiting

    three

    months."

    "Poor

    me I

    guess I'll have to take

    Dicke Thomas. But

    I'll get

    even

    with

    you, Martha

    Shaffer."

    "What

    about

    you, Sarah

    Eliza-

    beth?"

    I haven't

    much heart in this.

    Last

    year,

    I

    wanted

    Scudder

    Smith

    but

    couldn't

    get

    him,

    and

    this year

    he

    isn't in school.

    I

    suppose I'll

    have

    to be content

    with Red Davis."

    "Content?

    My

    dear,

    you should

    be

    flattered.

    Now who do

    you want,

    Teresa?"

    Sowell

    Comes Through

    I'll

    take

    Jesse Sowell any

    time.

    "That's fine. You

    see, girls, Miss

    Lilly lost no

    time

    in making

    her de-

    cision.

    Helen Gordon

    is next.

    I

    just

    can't

    be

    so quick

    about my

    decision.

    There are

    so few

    boys left.

    Let me

    see,

    I

    expect

    you

    should put

    me with Herbert

    Cain."

    Just as

    you say.

    Olga, have

    you

    made your

    choice ?

    I

    won't

    let Helen Gordon

    out do

    me.

    I'll

    take Walter

    Cain."

    Everybody

    here

    then

    has

    a

    date

    except

    me," laments

    Babe.

    I

    guess

    I'll

    have to stag. I

    always

    get left

    out

    on these things.

    The Council

    will

    meet

    again tomorrow

    afternoon

    to

    discuss

    other

    dates.

    Be sure

    that

    all

    of you girls are

    there.

    Now,

    and Then

    1934:

    Dorsey Barefield got

    a letter the

    other

    day. His

    best girl

    wrote

    to

    tell

    him of her wedding

    in

    which

    Dorsey

    took no part. He

    tried to

    laugh

    it

    off

    by saying,

    Oh, she

    was

    just the

    girl next

    door;

    I knew all

    about

    her.

    Harry

    Webb

    can entertain

    two

    girls

    at the

    same time

    very

    well.

    But

    can he

    do

    as

    well with

    the

    girls

    one

    at a

    time?

    1933:

    Alvan

    Tate

    said:

    The United

    States

    will be forced

    into

    war by

    her

    commercial

    ties.

    Yet the

    bal-

    ance

    of power

    rests with

    Italy

    and

    not

    this country.

    But

    Lapsley and

    Ned Wright

    promise

    ready support

    to

    their

    country.

    Didjever

    see

    Hiram

    Todd'not

    mer-

    rily doing

    a

    Bing

    Crosby

    down

    the

    halls

    of

    Palmer?

    The finals

    of

    The

    Sou'wester

    chess

    tournament

    have

    been

    reached

    and

    we

    find the

    student

    body

    reprenet-

    An

    old

    American

    institution

    is

    the

    privilege of free speech, and

    with

    Scientist

    William

    O. Puckett there

    are

    few

    fetters

    to the art

    of

    con-

    versation as

    well.

    Unlike small-fry

    academicians

    who

    summarily refuse

    to talk with

    reporters in jealous

    fear that their

    learned opinions

    may not appear

    so

    learned

    in

    print,

    Professor

    Puckett

    knows life

    better than to consider

    newsmen

    amoebas.

    Reared

    in

    the vicinity of Davidson,

    North

    Carolina,

    he has been in or

    near

    colleges most

    of his life.

    His

    bachelor's degree

    was conferred

    at

    Davidson

    College.

    Continuing

    his

    graduate

    work in the University

    at

    Chapel Hill

    for

    two

    years,

    he

    re-

    turned to his

    alma mater to

    teach

    for

    three summer

    schools and

    two

    regular sessions.

    In

    explaining

    the

    excellent

    financial condition of the

    Presbyterian

    Davidson

    College,

    he

    said. "The Duke fund brings

    an in-

    come of

    over eighty

    thousand

    dol-

    lars

    a

    year,

    while a

    large alumni

    endowment

    is possible

    with

    such

    graduates

    as the Richardson

    broth-

    ers of the

    Vicks

    Company

    and the

    Cannons

    of

    the

    textile industry."

    Had Princeton

    Fellowship

    Probably

    some

    of his most illum-

    inating

    experiences were

    at Prince-

    ton, where

    he held the

    "Class of

    1887

    Fellowship."

    There

    he

    did

    work

    in experimental

    embryology,

    and

    the

    effects of

    radiation,

    as X-rays

    and ultra-violet

    rays,

    on

    the

    devel-

    opment

    and growth

    of organism.

    In speaking

    of that

    university

    he

    emphasized,

    "There

    is no factory-

    like

    system of education.

    With three

    thousand

    men there

    are about five

    hundred

    on

    the faculty,

    which makes

    for small

    classes and

    more

    individ-

    ual

    attention. An

    interesting

    plan

    in use

    there,

    comparable to our

    read-

    ing

    system,

    is the student's

    election

    of a department

    in

    which

    he does

    in-

    tensive

    outside

    reading his junior

    year

    and prepares

    a thesis the next;

    then

    he

    is given

    a

    comprehensive

    ed

    by Rodney

    Baine

    challenging

    Prof. Haden.

    1932:

    Vernon

    "Torchy"

    Pettit is this

    column's

    nomination

    for

    the model

    student.

    He got so interested in his

    lab work

    that

    he forgot to

    go

    to

    the dance Saturday night.

    Dickie

    Dunlap

    defeated

    Dan Ross

    in the

    finals

    of the annual fall

    ten-

    nis tournament

    at Southwestern

    Wednesday.

    Charlie Ledsinger

    threatens to

    go

    into seclusion.

    What

    will all the

    fair maids of this school do if

    he

    carries

    out

    this drastic

    threat?

    examination

    over

    the

    two years'

    work.

    He added,

    I

    was especially

    impressed

    by

    the intimacy of the

    faculty

    and

    students, although the

    House plan is

    in

    use only

    at

    the

    Graduate School.

    Dr.

    Puckett agreed

    that

    Prince-

    ton's famed academic

    freedom

    is dis-

    tinctly that.

    Church Has

    No

    Control

    When

    questioned as to

    the

    influ-

    ence

    of

    the

    Presbyterian Church

    on

    the administration he replied, "The

    church has no control

    whatsoever

    over the University, and

    the The-

    ological

    Seminary

    in the

    city has no

    official

    connection with 'The College

    of the State of New Jersey,'

    which

    is

    Princeton's official title.

    "The Flexner-directed institute

    endowed by

    the Bamberger Depart-

    ment Store millions

    is

    established

    there for the

    purpose of encouraging

    advanced

    study,"

    he

    declared

    in ex-

    plaining

    Einstein's residence at

    Princeton.

    "Others, including the

    English scientist, Weyl,

    are

    doing

    work

    in mathematics, although

    the

    field of economics

    has been added

    now.

    About sixty scholars

    are

    re-

    ceiving very

    comfortable salaries,

    going about their

    works

    with few

    diverting worries."

    Well-Dressed Men

    Speaking of the "well-dressed

    col-

    lege man, Professor Puckett

    said,

    "It

    is

    the fashionable thing to dress

    poorly. The men leave

    their

    cordu-

    roys and sweaters for an occasional

    week-end in New York or

    a

    house-

    party. However, there

    are surpris-

    ingly

    few

    entertainments

    at

    the Uni-

    versity. Also,

    it is required

    that

    the

    men

    attend church

    every

    Sunday."

    "The local

    clubs

    at Princeton," he

    suggested, "are thought

    more suc-

    cessful

    than

    national

    fraternities.

    For instance,

    the men

    aren't trou-

    bled with unknown

    Brother So-and-

    so from Brooklyn Eta

    blowing in

    to guest for the

    evening."

    Remembering a lab-ful

    of charges,

    the

    genial

    young prof

    without

    fur-

    ther ado

    was off

    to more

    familiar

    work.

    -from the

    House of Brod-

    nax

    are of

    unquestionable

    value.

    They are

    pieces

    that young men

    and

    young

    women

    will admire

    for

    beauty

    and

    cherish

    for

    Interviewing The Faculty

    By HARVEY HEIDELBERG

    quality. Come and see

    what

    Brodnax has

    to offer

    before

    you make

    your

    selection.

    The price range

    is exceed-

    ingly

    wide and the variety

    of items

    unequaled

    in

    Mem-

    phis.

    GEO.

    T

    BRODNAX,

    Inc.

    Main

    at Monroe

    Memphis,

    Tenn.

    Ili J__

    ll

    Sger Rough

    Cut

    glad live

    in a

    country

    w here a d me

    is

    ina

    common -

    sense

    package

    10c

    money

    -and

    where

    I

    can

    get

    good

    pipe

    tobacco

    THE

    tobacco

    which we

    believe

    is

    best

    suited

    for pipes

    is

    used

    in

    making

    Granger

    Rough

    Cut.

    It

    is made

    by the

    Wellman

    Process,

    and

    we

    believe

    that

    it will

    compare favorably

    with

    higher

    priced

    tobaccos.

    We wish

    in some way

    we

    couldget

    every man

    who smokes

    a

    pipe

    to just

    try

    Granger.

    LIGGTrT

    & MYERS

    TOBACCO

    CO

    the pipe

    tobacco

    that's

    MILD

    the pipe

    tobacco

    that s COOL

    ,~A WI nnb~ei

    2931 Ia rr

    mi

    Tosee Co.

    Potter's Clay

    (Dirt)

    I asked a young

    lady

    if me

    she

    would wed,

    In

    answer

    to my

    query, 'tis this that

    she said

    Go

    ask

    father.

    Now

    she

    knew

    that I knew that

    her

    father was dead

    nd

    she

    knew

    that I

    knew what

    a

    life he had led;

    So,

    she

    knew

    that I knew

    what she

    meant when she said,

    Go

    ask father."

    How's

    that for an answer to an

    unwanted proposition?

    Here's

    hop-

    ing our loveless ladies

    won't use it

    on the ardent campus swains. From

    the

    looks

    of

    things,

    several of

    them

    will be needing an answer

    of

    this

    sort,

    or a more

    favorable

    (for them)

    one

    soon.

    Truly Southwestern is place for

    romance, as is attested

    to by

    the

    numerous

    couples cantering

    hand

    and hand through the stately clois-

    tered halls and

    around

    the historic

    "lover's lanes" of the institution.

    The

    KD's

    never

    fail to use

    this

    point

    in

    rushing,

    but from

    the looks

    of things,

    they'll experience more

    trouble in fulfilling that promise

    of

    quick matrimony this year than

    ever

    before. Only

    Margaret Lueck

    of

    the

    present crop has

    anything

    to

    show

    for pre-pledging

    promises, and after

    all, an ATO pin is not stamped

    on

    marriage licenses.

    Now

    for the romances; Helen

    Gor-

    don is being seen

    with

    that up and

    coming

    Dr.

    Paullus so often that

    even reporters who never

    got a name

    wrong

    before

    are

    calling

    him

    "Gor-

    don now (Reference:

    The

    Sou'-

    wester,"

    Oct.

    12);

    Eugene Stewart

    keeps

    on

    trying to

    be a gentleman

    by preferring

    blondes and Spencer;

    Frances Smith

    is

    still trying to hold

    McKay

    for

    campus duty and

    "Snake-

    bit" Pierce for that

    "one

    night

    out";

    Sally "Pertelote"

    Griffin (ask

    Dr.

    Monk

    what

    that

    means) continues

    with John Perry Gaither,

    while

    his

    brother,

    Duff, emits sighs and con-

    sumes juleps

    over Grace Waring

    (isnt it appropriate

    that

    she

    should

    No

    Doubt You

    Know

    By

    Loui

    Weeks

    II

    I

    Poet

    Scorner

    Mr.

    President: Since

    the country's

    going to

    blazes,

    Put

    this in your N.

    R.

    A.

    Give

    a job to

    all the

    Mayses,

    And let the rest of us

    loaf all

    day.

    be

    a Colonel's daughter?

    Now Duff

    won't

    have

    to feel that

    he's not do-

    ing

    right

    by dear

    ole

    KA);

    "Horsey"

    Knowlton

    now

    spends her

    time

    imi-

    tating

    Minnie

    Mouse for

    the

    benefit

    of

    Lee "Little

    powerhouse"

    McCor-

    mick;

    Breytspraak

    expects to

    kill

    two birds

    with one

    stone through

    his attentions

    to

    the Coach's

    daugh-

    ter and the

    basketball

    he'll

    receive

    for them; Jane

    Belcher

    is

    still

    the

    "panel-pusher's"

    delight despite those

    off-hours

    spent

    with

    Ann Sledge;

    the Matthews

    stick

    to their

    "med"

    students;

    Lib Pearce still

    thinks that

    the

    advertising

    business has

    a great

    future

    (we

    never

    heard

    him

    called

    that

    before), and Maxey

    says that

    he's

    like Ed Wynne-the

    only

    differ-

    ence

    being

    that he'll

    take Savilla.

    So

    "Fare Thee

    Well."

    THE COLLEGE

    RENDEZVOUS

    COUVERT

    REFRESHMENTS

    1

    AND ENTERTAINMENT

    R JON

    HOTEL

    CL RIDGE

    Watches, Rings

    and Jewelry

    mom

    - -

    -that Southwestern's

    eleven weighs

    one ton and that ton is going

    out

    to

    get Mississippi

    State

    100%.

    that

    it

    took

    54

    miles of

    adhesive

    tape

    to bind

    and bandage the 1930

    University of

    California

    football

    team.

    -that

    Howard

    University

    has

    an

    en-

    dowment of $108,087,433.

    that

    the

    following

    are

    excerpts

    from

    Southwestern

    catalogues

    ranging

    from 1871 to 1895:

    Students

    are not

    permitted

    to

    visit saloons.

    pool-rooms, or to

    board at

    hotels.

    Card

    playing is

    strictly forbidden and

    any

    stu-

    dent known

    to engage

    in it will

    be subject to discipline.

    Eighty-eight

    of

    the

    192 Rhodes

    Scholars

    that wer

    selected

    last

    year

    were from the

    United States.

    Iail

    11

    i

    1

    i

    s

    e

    f

    S

    r

    f

    e

    f

    0

    9

    Y

    d

    a

    C

    f

    D

    e

    r.

    H

  • 7/25/2019 Sou'Wester

    3/4

    Fa Ocoe iS

    153 aIO ESE Page

    Dr.

    Norman G.

    Patterson,

    medical missionary

    to

    China, related

    some

    of

    his

    experiences

    in that

    to the

    members of the

    Ministerial

    Club

    last

    Monday night

    in

    the

    Bell room.

    He

    also had

    with him

    a few photographs

    of

    some of

    the

    eases

    that he had treated.

    Most

    of

    my

    experiences

    In China are with the

    soldiers.

    Soon after

    I arrived in

    China

    in

    1927,

    the

    Chinese

    soldiers

    occupied our hospital.

    They

    remained

    there

    as long as

    they saw fit.

    During

    the past three years

    our hospital

    has not

    been

    molested by them.

    However, I have had to treat

    obb

    Hall

    the Robb rails:

    Baine

    rushing

    in

    and out

    the door in

    a

    feverish

    search for

    other. . . . Reed

    Brock

    waiting

    for the

    mailman, there

    be

    money

    ...

    Professor Coop-

    doing

    handstands

    ... Bobo

    rak-

    leaves

    stops to

    gape and utter

    inevitable Arigst ...

    Leon

    moaning over

    his

    tire

    trou-

    they become

    flat every evening

    dusk . . .

    Lapsicy walking

    up

    with

    perspiration

    on

    brow ... Maybe

    it is the

    bas-

    he

    and Strickland

    become so

    fond

    of recently.

    you

    know (apologies to Louis

    that

    Professor Cooper

    was

    of

    being

    a little boy wile

    Dean

    of Southwestern?

    Back

    an

    earlier

    year

    he

    was

    perform-

    the difficult

    task

    of walking

    on

    from Robb

    to the stone

    As

    he

    approached

    the

    wall a

    in

    a

    big

    car drove up and

    said,

    boy,

    can

    you tell me where

    Dean is? To

    this Professor

    replied,

    Yes

    Ma'am, I'll

    find

    and tell

    him to meet

    you

    at his

    With

    that

    he immediately

    to

    his

    suite and

    changed

    his

    Clothes

    make the man,

    you

    Baine's ten

    thirty

    coffee

    is gaining

    in memhership.

    the host's

    embarrassment

    his cookery

    blew

    the fuse.

    Feiderling

    gathered

    himself

    a table for

    fear

    of a police

    will

    be no

    travelling

    done

    week-end

    because

    Robb Hall is

    everything

    they

    have

    on

    the

    Lynx for

    Saturday.

    One evening

    a prominent

    socie-

    woman

    stepped

    up to a Chinese

    had been lecturing

    on his

    na-

    country

    under

    the

    auspices

    of

    Y. M.

    C.

    A.

    Chao,

    I hear

    that you

    Chinese

    rats.

    Chao looked at

    her for

    a mo-

    then

    he replied, "Madam,

    I

    that

    you

    Americans

    eat

    hot

    bald,

    a

    very optimistic

    went

    to

    a drugstore

    and

    asked

    a bottle

    of

    hair restorer.

    The

    said,

    Here

    is

    a preparation

    is

    sure to

    make your

    hair

    grow.

    All

    right,

    replied

    the

    optimist,

    take

    a

    bottle.

    And

    please

    wrap

    a

    comb and brush

    with

    it."

    NE W

    STRAND

    SAT.,

    OCT. 20TH

    The

    Glorious

    Successor

    to

    Lady

    For A

    Day

    LADY

    BY

    CHOICE

    with

    CAROLE

    LOMBARD

    MAY ROBSON

    WALTER

    CONNOLLY

    ROGER PRYOR

    COMING

    Gene

    Stratton

    Porter's

    "A Girl

    of the

    Limberlost"

    a great many

    wounded

    men who are in the

    army,

    Dr. Patterson

    began.

    The former Davidson

    College

    student

    went on

    to say that the majority

    of

    the

    soldiers in the

    Chinese army

    was

    made up of boys between the

    ages of 17 and 20. Also he said

    that

    every time

    a band of

    outlaws

    became

    too

    large

    for

    the

    army

    to fight,

    the bandits

    were

    automatically made

    soldiers

    in

    the

    army.

    The

    Chinese army,

    he

    said, contains about

    ten million

    soldiers.

    The Ministerial

    Club

    members asked Dr. Pat-

    terson questions

    about his

    work.

    He

    gave them

    some

    of

    his

    own experiences for answers.

    His

    station

    is

    situated

    about 60 miles from Shanghai.

    (Continued

    from

    Page Four)

    hack Dr. Swan.

    Heck,

    says

    Pitts,

    I thought them

    things was

    worth

    more'n two-bits.

    Hi Lumpkin, who twisted

    his knee

    in

    the early

    part

    of the season,

    will

    be

    back in

    uniform

    Monday.

    Hi

    is

    the hardest shoulder

    blocker on

    the

    team; and he can hold down

    the

    center with the

    best

    of

    them.

    After being idle for two weeks,

    the Bobcats will take

    on

    Freed-

    Hardemann here Friday.

    Miss.

    State will

    use a complicated

    formation with either single

    or dou-

    ble wingback.

    The single wing

    is

    used mostly with the

    back

    man do-

    ing

    the

    passing. This man

    will be

    Armstrong,

    a

    sophomore, who

    is

    probably

    the

    best

    passer the

    Ma-

    roons

    ever

    had.

    JOHN QUANTHY.

    What's

    this talk

    about

    Intramural

    football?

    Sounds

    like

    good

    stuff-

    let's have some nore

    of it. This

    would indeed promote

    more interest

    in intra-frat athletic

    programs and

    also give more boy

    s who

    haven't the

    time to go out for

    football

    a

    chance

    to

    enjoy the game;

    the tough part

    of

    it

    would

    not detract from the

    interest

    to any large extent.

    It is noted

    from Bob Pigue's

    col-

    umn in the

    Press-Scimitar that

    our

    next foot-hall

    opponents

    are

    sport-

    The Pause

    That Refreshes

    PHONE

    6-5600

    Factory at

    Fourth

    at Washington

    New

    Fall Fashions Demand

    BAKER'S

    SMART

    SHOES

    FOR

    SCHOOL

    AND

    DRESS

    WEAR

    VISIT

    BAKER'S

    SHOE

    STORE

    63

    North Main

    Ing a

    pretty

    good

    pair

    of ends, both

    hailing

    from

    the same

    place.

    This

    column happens to know that these

    boys, Fred

    Waters

    and Bert Red-

    doch

    to be

    exact, have

    played seven

    years

    of

    football

    together and

    know

    what

    they're

    doing.

    Also,

    the Arm-

    strong

    to

    Walters

    passing combina-

    tion

    is nothing

    to be

    thrifled

    with.

    They're at it again-and much to

    delight of the various charity asso-

    ciations and

    grid

    fans. Plans are

    in the making for

    another fast

    game

    between

    the Bobcats and

    All-Mem-

    phis seniors.

    The

    Bobolysx

    game,

    as

    it

    was called last year,

    was

    a

    suc-

    cess in every

    way, including the fi-

    nancial end

    of

    it,

    and should

    by all

    means be continued if possible. The

    aid it

    rendered

    last

    year to the

    poor

    children

    was

    invaluable.

    May

    the

    Lions Club be successful

    again

    this

    year in arranging

    a contest.

    As a freshman,

    Red Davis

    played

    tackle; with

    the varsity, Red has

    been

    used

    as

    an end. The

    thing

    is

    that Red looks so

    good in any

    posi-

    tion you put him

    that

    he may be

    in for

    another change

    very

    soon.

    Both Tennessee and

    Mississippi

    State

    are slated

    to

    lose their

    coaches

    next year.

    The

    former

    loss coming

    as the result

    of an

    Army order

    while

    the latter

    is contributed

    to unknown

    reasons. Capt.

    Mackecknie and

    Major

    Neyland

    have done

    well with

    their

    charges.

    Goat

    Hale, now Freshman

    coach

    at Mississippi

    State, is

    slated for

    Coach Mackechnie's position.

    Hale

    is

    one

    of the smartest men in

    the

    game

    and is

    bound to go places with

    his

    teams.

    This can he illustrated

    by the '33 edition

    of

    State's

    Fresh-

    men.

    Professor

    Tate says the finest

    lit-

    erary

    criticism

    being written

    today

    is in

    The Criterion,

    edited

    by

    T.

    S.

    Eliot, The

    Symposium,

    New Re-

    public,

    The Nation,

    and

    Hound

    and Horn, an

    English

    journal whose

    publication

    was

    suspended

    this sum-

    mer. The

    library

    is

    planning

    to sub-

    scribe

    to these magazines.

    The following is

    a

    list

    of books

    recently received

    in

    the library:

    Bauer:

    Permanent Prosperity

    and

    How

    to

    Get It.

    Bernays:

    Special

    Correspondent.

    Bennet:

    German

    Short Stories.

    Bloomfield: William Morris.

    Booneville:

    Organizing

    and

    Finan-

    cing

    Business.

    Boucke: Laissez

    Faire

    and After.

    Campbell:

    Strindberg.

    Chapman:

    Fiscal

    Functions

    of

    Federal Reserve

    Banks.

    Clare: Sketches

    in the

    Life

    of

    John

    Clare.

    Clark:

    Readings

    in Marketing.

    Cohen:

    Find Yourself.

    Cole:

    Manuel

    of Thesis Writing.

    Daggett:

    Principles of

    Inland

    Transportation.

    Darlington:

    Sheridan.

    Dowell:

    American Farmer

    and the

    Exports Market.

    Easton: Youth Immortal.

    Education of American

    Ministers.

    Eschet: Flying.

    WARNER

    THEATRE

    Preview Friday

    Week Starts

    Saturday

    JOE E.

    BROWN

    In

    is atest

    laugh

    riot

    Six

    Day

    Bike

    Rider

    ADDED:

    Hail

    Columbia"

    Second of:

    'SEE

    AMERICA

    FIRST SERIES

    and VITAPHONE

    VARIETIES

    Einzig: Germany's

    Default.

    Fillpowcz: Poland,

    Past

    and

    Pres-

    ent.

    Graham: Security Analysis.

    Graves: I, Claudius.

    Holcombe: New Party

    Politics.

    Home Missions

    Today and Tomor-

    row.

    Lansdowne: Queeney Letters.

    La Roche: Sophie

    in London.

    Lutz: Pra ctical Engraving and

    Etching.

    Mirsky:

    History

    of Russian Litera-

    ture.

    Odum: Introduction

    to Social

    Re-

    search.

    Owens:

    Business Organization and

    Combination.

    Pack: Forestry;

    an Economic

    Challenge.

    Platt: Book

    of

    Opportunities.

    Read:

    Profession

    of Forestry.

    Saliers:

    Handbook of Corporate

    Management and Procedure.

    Scherer: Japan-Whither?

    Schwartz: French Romantic

    Poe-

    try.

    Silius

    Italicus: Punica.

    LOEW'S STATE

    Starting

    Saturday

    JACKIE

    COOPER

    IN

    PECK'S

    BAD

    BOY

    WITH

    THOMAS

    MEIGHAN

    Stall: Art and

    Artifice in

    Shakes-

    peare.

    Strachey:

    Coming Struggle

    for

    Power.

    Symons:

    Art of Aubrey Beardsley.

    Tatum:

    Disloyalty in the Confed-

    eracy.

    The New

    Dealers.

    Tilley:

    Foreign Office.

    Tristan: Le Roman de Tristan et

    Iset.

    Vaile: Economics

    of Advertising.

    Whitlock: French Eloquence.

    Willey:

    Seventeenth

    Century

    Background.

    II

    Yale Alumni

    Weekly:

    Yale Resi-

    dental

    Colleges.

    Among

    the

    best

    iving rvicwcrs

    Professor Tate would

    include Mal-

    colm Crowley,

    Lawrence Leighton,

    Philip Wheelwright,

    Theodore

    Spen-

    cer,

    Robert Penn Warren,

    Stark

    Young,

    and

    Lincoln

    Kirstein.

    VISIT

    Gilmore Barber

    1857 Shop HAIRCUTS

    MADISON r

    NAT and

    ELEC

    Nat and Elec are our

    symbols of team-work

    in

    service, representing

    the combined

    services

    of Gas and Electricity

    rendered by

    this

    Com-

    pany.

    This Company considers itself as

    partners

    with the people and

    continually strives

    to

    labor

    as

    a

    team-mate

    with the

    public in

    com-

    munity progress.

    MEMPHIS POWER LIGHT

    CO

    Electricity u:cd for lighting and appliance

    operation;

    end natural gas

    used

    for

    cooking water heating

    and

    house

    heating

    in the homes in

    Memphis cost

    our customers less

    than electricity

    used

    alone for

    the

    same purposes under

    any known electric rate.

    TOMMY

    FULLER.

    I

    I1IL

    Ii

    Good

    Taste

    firm, Luckies

    are

    fully packed

    with only the clean center

    leaves

    these

    are

    the

    It'stoasted

    mildest

    leaves-

    they cost more- they

    taste better.

    gre. .rw

    - .u n~r .

    u h i

    I ~ n: ::

    :i

    : _Il~_::::. :--

    ll--

    _ -.. .-

    :.-;i.

    :..-:~:;: :

    ;_-:.:;: .,:

    -;~.:..~i. .

    :

    : ::1

    Luckies are round,

    Luckies are

    Pop sa

    EE SOU'WESBTER

    ctober

    It.

    1934

    r

    t

  • 7/25/2019 Sou'Wester

    4/4

    TH3

    OU'WSTERFW~RT,

    ctobr

    iS

    1U

    COLLEGE

    LYNX

    suffered her

    second

    defeat

    Saturday

    in Jack-

    the hands

    of

    the

    Mississippi

    20-7, before

    a crowd

    of

    Lynx,

    unable to threaten

    the

    more

    than once,

    were

    out-played

    for three

    quar-

    of

    the

    game. Southwestern's

    csme as the result

    of

    a 57-

    run

    by Rudy

    Gartside

    in

    the

    quarter.

    Choctaw half-back, scored

    of

    the

    Mississippians

    touch-

    and was

    ntrumental

    in the

    by

    tossing

    a short

    pass to

    who stepped

    over the mark-

    Mississippi

    College's

    best

    in years, tallied

    once in

    and later

    in the third

    Pe-

    on

    straight

    running

    plays.

    by the

    Lynx

    in

    quarter

    were futile and

    net-

    the Memphians

    nothing,

    the

    ending with the

    ball

    deep in

    territory.

    Elder, and MCollum

    the best that

    Southwestern

    offer,

    while Baker,

    Davis,

    and Toler

    were

    outstanding

    Choctaws.

    Williams,

    Lynx

    suffered

    injuries

    and

    will not

    this

    week.

    Position

    Miss. C

    ............

    L.E...................Bal

    ........

    L.. ..........To

    ............ L.G....................

    Ya

    ............

    C. .. Fortenbe

    ................

    R.G ..........

    H

    .......... R.TT...............

    Gord

    ............

    R.E...................

    Da

    ..................

    Q.B...........

    Pries

    ............ L.H.......... Cr

    .......

    R.H............. AnPeep

    ............ F.B........Andera

    by quarters:

    ........

    7

    Col.....

    7

    0 0 0-

    o 13

    0-

    'ol.

    ker

    ler

    tes

    rry

    u

    ion

    vis

    ter

    aft

    les

    ion

    -7

    -20

    Southwestern-

    L.E.;

    Jones, R.H.; McDonald,

    L.G.;

    May,

    Q.B.; Weeks,

    Dunlap,

    F.B.;

    Benton, L.G.;

    R.E.;

    Medaris,

    L.T.;

    Huckabee,

    College-Kelly,

    L.E.;

    L.T.;

    Edmenson,

    Q.13.;

    L.H.;

    Dickson,

    L.G.;

    Kyzar

    Parks,

    R.H.; Thigpen, Q.B.

    Scoring-Touchdown,

    Point

    After Touchdown-

    (placement

    kick).

    College Scoring-Touch-

    Craft 2,

    Baker.

    Points

    After

    2

    (placement

    Bob Shelton

    umpire, Kenneth

    Haxton

    Miss);

    head

    linesman.

    James

    (Milisapa);

    field judge,

    Bobo

    (Mississippi

    State).

    THE

    TALK

    THE TOWN

    Those

    PIg'N

    Whistle

    Barbecue

    Sandwiches

    BY

    FOR

    LUNCH

    -

    BY AFTER THE

    SHOW

    PIQ'NWHISTLE

    FOOD-SODA

    1579

    Union

    Ave.

    Herbert

    Hood,

    Jr.,

    Mgr.

    Right Tackle

    C

    I

    i

    I.

    1

    I:

    II

    b

    ORPHEUM

    NOW

    Gala

    Stage

    Show

    Memphis'

    Own

    Ernie

    Young

    1935

    REVUE

    Cast

    of 60

    and on the

    screen

    "DANGEROUS

    CORNER"

    with

    CONRAD NAGEL

    and

    VIRGINIA BRUCE

    GRID

    PICK CONTEST

    Place an

    (X)

    beside the

    team

    you

    pick to

    win, cut

    out the

    list

    and

    the grid pick box In the Supply Store. Each person is allowed

    of

    guesses. Everyone is

    eligible except The Sou'wester staff.

    All

    guesses must

    be in not later than 12

    o'clock, Saturday

    after-

    1 (

    .... _.....

    _.............__.. ............

    Tech......

    (

    .~......

    C

    -..... __........_~^

    -

    Tech

    ....... _ _ _

    Arkansas

    C

    .--..~.~~- ..

    State . C

    C

    -

    C

    A&M

    ....

    II ___

    . .

    A&M

    abama

    I

    C

    _

    (

    ) vs. Miss. State ._...--..---..

    ) vs. Sewanee

    ..........

    ...._...._.....

    ) vs.

    Vanderbilt..........C

    ) vs. Notre Dame .

    )vs.

    Texas

    ..... __............. .....

    -

    ) vs. Davidson .................

    ) vs.

    Michigan

    .................-..-

    Svs. L S U

    -..--

    I-......l

    )

    vs.

    Columbia

    . ...... .... C

    )

    vs.

    Colgate .....-...--..-..

    Svs.

    W t L _..._

    _...._...___

    )

    vs. Purdue... . . . . . . . . . .C

    ) vs. S.

    M .

    U

    _..._..._..._.---.........

    ) vs. U. San

    Francisco .- (

    Svs. T.

    C.

    U...~......-.........__

    )

    vs. Tulane

    _..... . ... C

    )

    vs.

    Tennessee

    .

    .- .

    C

    )

    vs.

    N.

    C.

    State

    .. 1

    )

    vs.

    No. Carolina........

    ) vs. Mississippi

    ) vs. U. Minn.

    )vs.

    Brown

    BOBCATS

    PLAY

    F. H.

    TIGERS

    Southwestern

    Bobcats

    will

    play

    the

    Freed-Hardemann

    Tigers next

    Friday

    on

    Fargason

    Field

    at 2:30

    P.M.

    The

    date

    has

    been

    moved

    up

    a

    week

    so

    the

    game

    can

    be

    played

    while

    the

    Lynx are

    in Chattanooga.

    The

    Franklin,

    Ten.

    boys have a

    strong

    team and

    are pointing

    for

    the

    Bobcats

    as the result

    of the

    un-

    e

    v

    e n

    Jonesboro

    -- Bobcat

    score.

    Freed-Hardeman

    is considered

    a

    much better

    team than

    the local's

    first

    opponents

    and will

    give the

    freshmen

    a

    hattie.

    Driesback: Men

    are

    all

    alike.

    Weddington:

    In

    your eyes?

    Driesback:

    No,

    in my arms.

    Wn

    0 tl. t

    asrr

    Su

    Tama*

    Co

    /IYNX

    GOLF

    TEAMI [

    MEETS OLE

    MISS

    K

    E:Q4 i

    Statistics:

    Yards gained from scrimmage:

    Southwestern,

    137 in 28;

    Missis-

    sippi

    College, 205 in 43.

    Yards gained

    on passes: South-

    western, 65 in six passes; Missis-

    sippi College,

    78

    on

    seven passes.

    Punts: Southwestern,

    11

    for

    370,

    average 34; Mississippi

    Col-

    lege, 10 for 362,

    average

    36.5.

    Returned punts: Southwestern,

    six for 52; Mississippi College,

    four for

    56.

    Passes

    completed: Southwest-

    ern, five for

    64;

    Mississippi

    Col-

    lege,

    three for 47.

    Incomplete passes:

    Southwest-

    ern,

    15; Mississippi

    College, seven.

    Passes intercepted:

    Southwest-

    ern, one;

    Mississippi College,

    four.

    Penalties: Southwestern,

    10;

    Mississippi

    College, 15.

    First

    downs: Southwestern,

    six;

    Mississippi

    College,

    eight.

    Fumbles:

    Southwestern, four

    (recovered

    three); Mississippi

    College,

    two (recovered

    three).

    Yards

    lost

    from scrimmage:

    Southwestern,

    3 2 ;

    Mississippi

    College, 17.

    Left Tackle

    Southwestern

    golfers will

    have

    a

    fall

    match

    with Ole

    Miss

    within

    the next two weeks, in

    Memphis.

    Jack

    Crosby,

    president

    of

    the South-

    western

    golfers, announced

    yester-

    day

    that Ole

    Miss had

    written

    ask-

    ing for the match. The Lynx

    golf-

    ers defeated the

    Ole Miss golf team

    twice last spring in matches here

    and at Oxford.

    Southwestern also has a

    match

    pending

    with

    the University of

    Chattanooga

    mashie - wielders for

    Oct.

    27 in Chattanooga. The

    Mocca-

    sin

    golfers will give

    a

    definite

    an-

    swer concerning

    the match by the

    end

    of

    the

    week.

    'his is

    the

    first year

    that

    South-

    western has planned any fall

    matches for

    the golfers.

    A

    strong

    quartet can

    be

    picked

    by

    South-

    western. Ben Weddingion

    and Jack

    Crosby, both

    members

    of

    last

    year's

    team,

    are hack in college. In addi-

    tion

    to these, the

    Lynx

    have Billy

    Bethea,

    Woody

    Butler,

    Kendall Rein-

    hardt,

    Charles Ledsinger,

    and

    Louis

    Weeks

    as possible varsity golfers.

    Mr. Crawford

    reports another

    Scotchman

    in

    his bailiwick

    who

    opened

    his pocektbook last Christ-

    mas and a June bug flew out.

    Itackle.

    Sport

    Scribble

    Is there anything wrong

    with

    theIers

    will

    take

    on

    Chattanooga

    next

    Lynx? Some think that with the

    material

    out, the team should make

    a little better showing.

    Two things

    have

    been

    worrying

    the coaches:

    The blocking has

    not been what

    it

    should be; and, what's more

    impor-

    tant,

    there has been

    too much talk-

    ing

    in

    the

    huddle. Too much you

    missed

    your

    man ;

    Let me carry

    the

    ball on

    55.

    In

    a smooth work-

    ing team

    no

    one opens

    his mouth

    except the quarterback.

    His judg-

    ent

    should

    not

    be

    questioned.

    If

    he falls

    down

    on

    his

    job, then

    the

    coach

    will substitute.

    Coach Haygood

    has worked

    all

    week to clear this

    up. The Lynx

    will

    have

    a new

    punt

    formation

    to

    work from.

    Each man will have

    a

    certain

    man to

    block. If he is not

    blocked

    and

    makes

    the tackle, it

    will

    be easy

    to know

    who fell

    down

    on

    the

    job. The

    old

    double

    wingback

    formation

    has not

    been

    changed.

    Bengie Weddington and Co., Golf-

    Saturday

    in Chattanooga. "I'll win,"

    says Bengie;

    so that part

    is

    already

    settled.

    The alumni

    of

    Ole

    Miss and

    Ten-

    nessee in Memphis want

    a game

    between the two

    schools

    played

    here..

    Naturally the

    Lynx

    object.

    Why

    should Memphis football fans want

    to see

    a game

    between two schools

    that

    does not

    concern

    Memphis?South-

    western has

    succeeded

    in bringing

    such clubs as

    Kentucky and others

    equally

    as

    good. Besides that, the

    Lynx are planning to bring Tennes-

    see here

    in

    1936.

    After the Freshman

    football

    team

    had seen moving pictures

    of the var-

    sity

    playing Sewanee, Porter Chap-

    pel asked,

    How much does that

    gagget

    cost Dr.

    Swan. (he was

    speaking

    of the

    projector).

    More

    than

    you'll

    ever be

    worth,

    comes

    Continued

    on Page Three)

    SIREN

    'he

    role of

    history's most

    fa-

    mous qu n

    and

    charmer is CLAU-

    I)ETTE

    COLIIEIIT,

    in Cecil

    B. De-

    Jlille's

    CLEOPATRA ,

    which

    comes

    to Locw's

    Palace

    Saturday

    for

    a

    week's engagement.

    Also in the

    cast

    are Warren

    William and

    Henry

    Wil-

    coxon.

    LOEW'S

    PALACE

    Week Starting

    SATURDAY

    The

    Flaming

    Chapters

    of

    the Greatest

    Love Affair

    the

    World

    Has Ever Known.

    CLEOPATRA

    *-With-.

    CLAUDETTE COLBERT

    WARREN

    WILLIAM

    HENRY WILCOXON

    A PARAMOUNT

    PICTURE

    Fafr

    enoug Lh

    OM

    time

    to time

    we

    tell

    you

    facts

    about

    or

    that

    money

    can

    buy

    is used

    in

    J.

    about

    Chesterfield

    Cigarettes.

    making

    Chesterfield

    a milder,

    better-tast-

    We say

    that Chesterfields are

    different ing

    cigarette-a cigarette

    that Satisfies.

    from other

    cigarettes-that

    the

    tobaccos

    You can prove what we

    are different, the paper is different,

    and

    tell you

    about

    Chesterfield

    the way they are made is different. ay

    we

    ask

    you

    to

    try them

    Everything that modern Science knows that would

    seem

    to

    be fair enough.

    MONDAY

    WIDNSDAY

    ISATURDAY

    ROSA

    NINO

    C3T

    VONURLLU

    MARTINI

    UTUCK;CO.

    LOST= ANUTZ

    OCRU' A

    AN3CHO7I*

    8 P.

    c.

    Ta-C6LUMIA

    m2wI

    4

    ....

    ... .... ............. ...................

    ........

    ........ ... w... ......

    CECIL

    McCOLLUM,

    Hurricane

    Mills, Tenn.,

    Is rounding

    out his fourth

    ear as varsity tackle.

    I

    ridPick

    Winners

    This week's grid

    pick

    was won

    by

    Hinky

    Jones with a

    perfect

    score.

    Second place

    resulted

    in a

    four-way

    tie between

    Frank

    Mc-

    Lendon,

    Jim Merrin,

    Louis

    Grae-

    ber,

    and Jim Fisher.

    Henry

    Wat-

    kins was

    the unrivaled

    last

    place

    winner,

    missing

    ten guesses.

    Two

    passes

    will be

    given

    for first

    place

    and

    one

    to

    each

    of the

    second

    placers.

    I

    THE

    SOU'WIIESTER

    Frida, Oober

    1 1134

    i

    MOON

    WHITE,

    Lamont, Miss., senior, is Haygood's mainstay

    at

    right