Newspapers / Elon University Student Newspaper / Nov. 18, 1925, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two MAROON AND GOLD November i8 ’92jl fl^aroon and 6olti Published Weekly by the Students of Elon College Members of the North Carolina Colle giate Press Association Entered at the Post-Olfice at Elon Col lege, N. C., as second-class matter. Two Dollars Per College Year H. Eichardson Editor Henry Peel Managing Editor B. L. Green Business Manager A. B. Johnson Humorous Editor J. A. Walker ....Ass’t. Bus. Manager A. B. Fogleman Adv. Manager D. W. Jones Ass’t Adv. Manager E. W. Auman ....Circulation Manager Paul Braxton Ass’t. Cir. Manager Wiley Stout Ass’t Cir. Manager 8. D. Woody Ass’t Cir. Manager Sallie K. Ingram.. .Ass’t Cir. Manager W. J. Gotten Faculty Advisor equal terms. Give him his just deserts and expect of him your just part. You can’t take the four years spent in college out of your life. What you are and what you do here will be what you are and what you do after you leave col lege. Live here as you expect to live after you get out of college. And remember that the yell of the school of experience is “ouch.^' That school is your alma mater and it will be appropriate for you to learn that yell and know its significance. X Green Onions i Advertising Kates Upon Request Don’t quit, die young. You had better We suggest that the skin you love to touch is the pigskin and not the feminine skin. Emory and Henry has beaten Elon once. Shall they do it again? The team that we meet Satur day will be one of the very few teams we have met this year and had an equal chance to beat. Some men seem to be success ful because they didn’t have an equal opportunity to succeed. LEARN TO LIVE As we near the end of the first semester this year, it is well that we take inventory of our achieve ments for the past weeks. Every student here has now been in col lege long enough to realize that it is not supposed to be a great funnel. We should all be able to see by now that there is no such thing as having knowledge pour ed into our heads. As far as pure knowledge is concerned w'e have all discovered that it must be dug out. We must add to our own brain power, it can’t be increased from the outside. So much for the acquiring of pure knowledge. All of us have learned something this year from that standpoint. We will learn a little if only we attend classes. But in looking back over the time we have spent here in college we begin to realize that the ultimate aim of a college course is not mere learning of the content of books. W e are now in a position to see that the aim of college, and of all learning is to teach us to live. Though we learned to speak with the tongues of men and of angels and have not learn ed to live with our fellow-man, we have accomplished nothing. Af ter carefully looking the matter over we can easily see that this one thing is the aim of the field of education. Then if we are to learn to live with our fellow-man, how are we to get this from our college course. First of all we must make ourselves realize that this is the aim of our education. Then we must practice living. Let this statement cover a wide range. Do you create disturbances in the buildings and around the campus because it adds anything to your education, or do you do it be cause you have never fully realiz ed that you are in college to learn to live with your fellow-man? Do you take the letter of the law as your own, or do you consider that may be a trifling condescen sion on your part will aid some one else more than it will you? This “ Laugh this off,” cried the chimp- is what we mean by learning to aiizee as he tied a can to the hyena’s live. Meet vour neighbor on tail. Alas! the Cryines and Wicker case grows worse. They go off on the Boosters’ Club and while enjoying sup per Mr. Wicker liappens to' think of Henry Crymes’ old nickname. It seems as if supper will break up. I will not mention the afore-mentioned nickname for I value my life to be at least worth 2c. —Pussyfoot Jr. « * * He kissed her on the rosy cheek It was a pleasing smack; And quick she turned and frow’ned on him With—“Now Sir, take that back, * * * With our team losing so much, it is time for all good lemons to come to the ade of their team. * * * Good-lookin’ Polks alluis ’spects too much—en gin’ally gits it! ! * « « I kissed her as the lights w’ere out Ye Gods! I pulled, a bone; For I found when tliey came on again I liad kissed the chaperone. # # News Item: Convict Escapes Dressed as Girl. Well, if they don’t catch him pneu monia will. * # » Keep sniiliug ‘tis better than looking sore; The pestilent fretter is always a bore. He wearies his neighbors w’ith Carrie and Kick They pause in their labors to hand him a brick. Keep smiling for knocking won’t help you along And pessimist talking will get you in wrong. A bushel of curses won’t help you co'me back, If ills or reverses loom up in your track, Keep smiling, insisting that things are all right, And mating and wisting that joy is in dight. Thus you will be wielding an influence fine; It’s better than yielding to sorrow and brine. The people admiring your sun-shiny curses, Will say, ‘‘He’s inspiring—a crow’n he deserves!” # ■» * Jokes: ‘‘Uli-liuh, do you?’^ Mother Ring pulled down the swicth in the Y. W. C. A. last Sunday after noon, but the lights weren’t on, so the socializing” continued in peace while it was raining. —Bob Gatewood. LYNCHBURG DOWNS ELON TO TUNE OF TWELVE TO NOTHING IN SLOW GAME (Continued from Page 1) Lynchburg’s SOM STU >; J , by j 5: SOM STUDE '$■ ■ >■ —SOM— —STUDE— AT REST! from beginning to end. forward passing attack troubled the Elon defense during the first half. Out side of this the Lynchburg eleven did not show’ any powerful offense. On the other hand the Elon backs seemed to have little trouble in getting through the Lynchburg line. Carpenter and McMains were the outstanding men on the Lynchbur team, while Kirkland, Raub, and Bock showed up well in the Elon backfield Rountree at center played a very con sistent game and was very successful in breaking up the enemy plays before they got started good. Lynchburg gained 311 yards for 11 first downs and Elon gained 78 yards for four first dowms. The lineup: Lynchburg Position Elon Perry Byerly Left End G-ivens Alexander Left Tackle Suttenfield (c) Parkerson Left Guard Riley Rountree Center Allen Jones Right Guard West Brawley Right Tackle C*'ant Brown Right End ilcMaijis Kirkland (e) Quarterback Barber Coggins Left Halfback Carpenter Raub Right Halfback Thomas Harrell Pullback Scoring tounchdowns—Barber and Carpenter, Substitutions: For Lynchburg— Shank for Suttenfielii, Smith for Bar ber, Newcomber for Givens, Ross far Smith, Gerald for Ross, Suttenfield for Allen, Ross for Gerald, Rairden for Newcomer, Douglas for Suttenfield, Rairden for Newcomber, Carroll for Ross, Barber for McMains. For Elon— Bock for Coggins, Byart for Brown, McCauley for Parkerson, Kelly for Har rell. I Referee, Sampton, St. Albans; Um pire, Epes, Virginia Tech; Linesman, Wright, Wofford; Time, 15 minute periods. With their standards of living they will undermine our institutions. Furthei, suppose Great Britain should bring the prohibition controversy before the Court. If the Court should decide tliat British and Canadian liquor must be allow’ed to come into our country, what are w'e to do? “Again, if the Court is not to have compulsory jurisdiction, where are we any better off than we were before? What is the. use of having the Court if nations are not to be forced to come before it?” Mr. Peel rejoined to Prof. Barney’s questions. He attacked the two con ceptions of the Court as inconsistent. The World Court can not be a spine less ornament with no power, and at the same time have such pow'er as to endanger America. Wliile the Court is not a i:)anacea for world evils, and -vshile it can not have jurisdiction over all international controversies, yet it has proved itself a vital working force for w’orld peace and furnishes a satis factory basis for promoting interna tional law'. The immigration and pro hibition questions could never come be fore the Court. We would not agree to it, and although these questions have international significance, they do not constitute international controversies, which are the only disputes concern ing w’hicli the Court has jurisdiction. Tlie debate then turned into a battle between Prof. Barney and Mr. Peel, in which one refuted and the other re-refuted. It seemed that the Professor’s fears of European domination triumphed over Mr. Moore’s optimistic idealism and Mr. Peel’s legalistic conception of the issues involved. The vote of the audi ence on the proposals was: No. 1—120. No. 2— 23. No. 3— 4. No. 4—138. NOTICE All Students Wanting Flowers Any Occasion, See Brown Fogleman, Representing Trollingers, Florist, Burlington, N. C. Burlington, N. C, D 'N aNaw ■ano no iuai.i AaaAa no aaonaaa saom aot- ‘aaNNia Hvqnoaa jauuja Aepuns aejnSag 3^63 uotBujqsejii Taxi Service 7 Passenger Hudson, Cadillac YOU DRIVE IT FORD CLINTON TEA Prompt Service City Phone 700 Residence Phone 377 Burlington, N. C. The Sample’s The Thing Two gentlemen of Hebrew extraction were shipw’recked, and for two days floated about on a life raft. Near the end of the second day one of them cried, “Ikey, I see a sail!” “Vat good does that do’ us?” replied Ikey. “Ve ain’t got no samples.” ELON IS DIVIDED ON THE WORLD COURT QUESTION (Continued from 1) Kissing a girl just because she wants you to, is like scratching a place that doesn’t itch. tlieir blood in Flanders Fields in a w'ar to end war. Yet today America s a nation has taken no steps to bring the world nearer to permanent peace than it was before America entered the conflict. There are these W’^ho would argue for isolation from w’orld affairs. We must realize that our days of isola tion are over, and that America must take her rightful place among the civilized nations of the world in work ing out permanent peace. Mr. Peel argued that a means for substituting law and reason fo'r w^ar is essential in the world today, that the World Court furnishes a satisfactory medium for this, that it is an impartial tribunal, that it is established upon sound basis, and that America runs no great risk of becoming entangled in Europe by entering, since it is main- a question of placing our prestige behind the Court. He expressed the opinion that entering the Court on the Harding-Hughes-Coolidge terms furnish ed the most satisfactory step at present open to America. Volunteers were called for. Prof. Barney arose to declare that the nega tive side of the question had not been fairly represented. “Suppose,” he said, “some southern European nations or Japan should bring the question of America’s immigration laws before the Court, and that the Court should de cide that our immigration laws were unjust, and that immigrants must be allowed to swarm into our country. “JUNIORS JUNIORS” —SEE— ALLEN WALKER About Your Rings. City Barber Shop Good Hair Cuts—Ladies 'Welcom* HERITAGE AND BOWMAN, Prop, Main Street, Burlington, N. C.i Fall Suits Fof VOUNG JVIEIN GOOD SWEATERS AND SPORTING GOODS FOR CHRISTMAS Remember “Sport Gifts Are Health Gifts.’ Buy At ©3jeIL6 Where Quality Tells Greensboro, N. C. i! Schiffman*s f SUITS IN THE BETTER STYLES FOR FALL AND WINTER. Made of the new style fabrics and are expertly tailored by best makers—one and two Pants. $25.00 and up. B. A. Sellars & Sons Style Headquarters, BURLINGTON, N. C. Leading Jewelers, GREENSBORO Your Class Jewelery Gifts of The Kind That Make Giving A Pleasure >! >; h Mid City Cafei A GOOD PLACE TO EAT Burlington, N. C. PATRONIZE AD. MGR.
Elon University Student Newspaper
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Nov. 18, 1925, edition 1
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