TWIGLETS Two ■ ’ fi ^blished Di'Weekly as the Official Organ of the Student Body of Meredith College Mae CAMPnELL......... Editor Dobothy Merritt—Editor Sallie CoUNaz.— .^..Associate Editor Eliza Bniccs-... ^.^-Biuiness Manoger Emily Miller Managing Editor Mary Florence Cumuincs Managing Editor Nancye Viccbllio Managing Editor Mary Lois Parker Asst. Bus. Mgr. Cornelia Atkins Asst. Bus, Mgr, REPORTERS Jane Parker Mary Laura Vauciian Louise Cobrell Mary Allen Lewis Entrred a* Kornnd-Hns* mutter October 11 1023, n( FoKtnniee At RaleiRh, K. C., uoder Act of MAreli 3, J«7n. Ar'-pptnnra fur tnnilinc nt spefUl ruto of (Mfitftce prorMM for in Sfi*t'nn 1103, Aft «f OrtoW n. ini7. »tithnrisii'l OntoWr 11. Ht2fl iSK&scrfp(ion PHce. $1.25 ELFXTIONS “Some thcrofore cried one tiling and some tinotlier, for the whole asscmbla|Tc was confuscd, and tlie more part knew not wherefore they were come to gether.” This excellently de scribes the state of the Meredith student body and any average college group, wlien there arc elections in progress. This week the Student Government presi dent for 1933-34 is the exciting topic for discussion. After that the B. S. U., publications, classes, societies, and other organizations will hold their respective places in the limelight for a brief mo ment of glory. We would like to urge this year, as every other year, that we as students not be carried away by personal prej udices—friendships or enmities —not by the habit of following the crowd, and not by the enthu siastic excitement of the moment. This sounds Utopian; but it is not impossible, if our assembly will give due considei'ation and really know for wlmt purpose they have come together. Is pop ularity to be placed above real ability.^ Are flattering election speeciics by friends of tlie candi dates to be allowed to influence votes for a person who i.s not best fitted for olfice.^ Any one has supporters who can find nice things to say. Are we going to be led into confusion or arc m'c going to be independent and think for ourselves? Mereditli faculty and student body are grateful that tliey wore- able to hoar Dr. S. J). Goixlon during the week of deeper spirit ual tliinking. Jlis calm and sim ple manner of approach to his subject impressed all those who heard him. Wc congratulate Mary Flor ence Cummings and Isabel Mor gan on becoming members of the Kappa Nu Sigma Honor Society. PERHAPS YOUVE HEARD That Dr. Charles Austin Beard, distinguished author and historian was at Carolina past week delivering the Weil lec tures. He stated emphatically that lie favors absolute, inde pendence for the Philippines and Porto Rico, pointing outj^ that thousands of Porto Ricans have been pouring into the United States only to find them selves unemployed amid the miseries of our great cities. “Im perialism,” he added, “is up a blind alley and doomed. Inter national commercial rivalry will not permit it.” Zangara’s fate has been hang ing in tlie balance along with that of Mayor Cermack. Reads a Nc7os and Observer para graphic: “If Mr. Cermack dies, Zangara’s sentence will be ma terially shortened.” By these tokens, then are we to under stand that while Ccrmack was the unfortunate victim of cir cumstances, Zangara will be the victim of a technicality.^ As guilty as the would-be assassin admittedly is, will the physical resistance of the mayor increase or lessen the degree of this guilt? That practically every Chi nese university has requested IJernard Shaw to make a speech during his tour of the Far East. Several days ago one of our lo cal newspapers imparted the fol lowing bit of information: “Yes terday he (Shaw) addressed the students of Hong Kong Uni versity denouncing university training and receiving an huge ovation.” The Chinese students reception seems to have provetl Shaw’s point admirably. But lest we speak in our haste—per haps the noted dramatist would liave received the “huge ova- tioti” anyway. The “Cotton Bill” recently introduced in Congress and ad vocated by Senator Bailey of North Carolina has for its ob ject the reduction by one-third of the acreage of cotton to be planted. Only those farmers who reduce their acreage that amount would reteive national aid. To plant or not to plant— it remains to be seen. Salem College .students seem to liave taken a great deal of inter est in the recen t Ping Pong Tour nament. The Salcviitc says of tlie contest; “It was a contest inter-mural, inter-faculty, inter- vidual, inter-lectual, and intcr- t'sling in other words an all round perfect .success.” Under the auspices of the y. M. C. A. (!hi!i Meng of China, nnw associate director of the C hina Institute in America, de- livoi-cd two udflres.ses at State Collfgc last week. I’he Sou til Carolina Press As sociation recently awarded first honor to the Winthrop Journal, literary })ublication of Winthrop College. THE TWIG A ccrtain alumna who is still taking some work with us was asked lost Sunday if she’d been reading anything improving. “No,” she replied and then added as an aftertliought, “just the Bible.” She reminds us of the college student who, in filling out an application blank, wrote after the question to what denomina tion she belonged “Baptist—and Christian.” Seeing all the pussy willows re cently which thought spring had comc reminded Mrs. Wallace of the little girl who didn’t care to go out and pick “cat tails” be cause she had no cats. And speaking of cats, we hear that two children brought their dog to a famous animal liospital for treatment. He was described as being “wboly and dirty, but busy and waggish.” When the Exchanges The Lenoir-Rhyne debating season opened on Monday, Febru ary 27, W'hen the girls’ debating team met the Winthrop team in a dual debate on the question: “Resolved, that the United States should f\gree to the cancellation of inter-allied war debts.” We wish you luck, debaters! Agnes Scott College celebrated Founder’s Day on February 22, with the usual banquet and dance. A very attractive red, white and blue color scheme was carried out, and the seniors wore colonial cos tumes. I’he Old Gold and Black tells us that at last a method has been found of bringing faculty and students to chapel; simply, have Rudy Vallee to appear on the program. Wake Forest was the only college visited by Vallee during his N. C. itinerary. He was brought to the college by Dr. Isbell, professor of chemistry and director of the college band. The Government Relief work-, ers are busy on the Converse cam pus. Plans have been made for the construction of an amphi theatre, which will be one of the most beautiful spots on the cam pus. A new front gate will be begun as soon as the weather per mits. An early Coker College hand book contained the following “don’ts”: “Don’t be overawed by the Sophomores. They are only last year’s Freshmen.” “Don’t forget that education is like the measles. Having been to college doesn’t prove that you’ve caught it, but only that you’ve been exposed to it. “Any student wishing to leave the campus before two o’clock must consult the president. attendant asked what his trou ble was, they told him, “he can’t sleep.” And so even dogs have insomnia! We’d like to recommend this little poem by Dorothy Parker to a certain student of ours who once wanted to order a book called “Twenty-one Delightful Ways of Committing Suicide”— “Razors pain you; Rivers arc damp; Acids stain you, And drugs cause cramp; Guns aren’t lawful; .Nooses give; Gas smells awful; You might as well live.” And did you you see this piece of philosophy in one of our pa pers? “Life is a horse With a bridle and bit— It will drive you If you don’t drive it.” At The Theatres STATE THEATRE “State Fair,” with Janet Gay- nor, Will Rogers, Lew Ayres, Sally Eilers, Norman Foster, Louise Dresser, Frank Craven and Victor Jory portraying the principal roles, comes to the State Theatre on Monday for an engagement of four days. Based on the Literary Guild prize novel by Phil Stong, a newspaperman w’ho was born and raised on a farm, the picture is said to give a true and sympa thetic insight into tlie characters of the men and women who live close to the soil. A Talkai*toon and Sound News complete this program. PALACE THEATRE Motion picture devotees who are demanding the return of screen musicals will find enough music and dancing in the comedy, “Hot Pepper,” to meet their de sires. It is the attraction at the Palace Theatre Monday, Tues day and Wednesday. This pic ture depicts the latest adventures of the immortal Quirt and Flagg, the fighting and loving Marines portrayed by Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen. “Doubling in the Quickest,” Mack Sennett Comedy, and Sound News completes the pro gram. There was a long, long trail a’winding behind tliat far-flung front in France. And, in The Big Drive, great est of all pictures of the World War because of its very authen ticity, which will play at the Pal ace Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday one realizes just what that long, long trail could mean. “Babe O’ Mine,” Musical Act, “Bosko’s Dizzy Date,” Cartoon, and Sound News completes the program. March 4, 1933 Excerpts From Address By Dr. W. L Poteol From In Defense of BcholaraMp delivered at Meredith College, Febru* ary 3. There has been a request that Dr. Poteat’s entire address be published in the Twig. This is impossible on account of the lim ited space of this paper. A few quotations, however, which have been taken from the address fol low here: “Acquaintance with the best is scholarship, the fruit of it ripen ing into refinement, elevation, senstiveness, courage, and wis dom is culture. This acquaint ance with tlie best may be but a speaking acquaintance, able merely to recognize and locate against any future need of ex pansion. Or it may be ultimate and free and happy. It may also vary from field to field. But the scholar may be at home in every province of the intellectual realm, certainly able to read its symbols and interpret its significance.” [ . . . “This is culture in process and result.] It authenticates it self by what you are, not by what you have; by the way you feel, not by what you know; by the felloM'ships of your spirit, not by the work of your hands. It is inward wealth w’hich accountants cannot inventory, which time, the pilferer, cannot reach.” “It dreadfully needs to be re membered that what is new in our civilization is in the externals of it, the machinery of it. The fundamental interests and needs of human life remain the same.” “However satisfying and charming it may be, culture is not an end in itself. The first motive which ought to compel us to study may be, as Montequieu said, to augment tlie excellence of our nature and to make an in telligent being yet more intelli gent, but it is not the last motive. An enriched and trained intelli gence, a moral sense enlightened and discijjlined, refinement of manners, tastes, and feelings, generosity onto tolerance of spirit, are the badges of culture wherever they appear, and they adorn any life. But culture is not ornament. . , . Removable beauty is not beauty. It is affec tation. Culture is rather a cer tain quality of the tissue of the organism itself. It is not orna ment, but equipment. And if pure learning is to survive as one of the purposes of universities, as Mr, Bertrand Russell says, it must be brought into the service of the community as a whole, and not merely provide refined de lights for a few gentlemen of leisure. A barren intellectualism wants justification. And my word to you women of capacity and distinction in Meredith Col lege must be Browning’s, himself one of the scliohirs of tile time” Know, not for knowing’s sake, But to become a star to men forever. (This article was printed in full in the Biblical Recorder^ February 15, 1933.)