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RATED SOOITE ALL-AMERICAN NA O EDGES FALL 1962 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA CROWiNC FOR A GREATER CAROUNA VOL. LV, No. 4 COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, OCTOBER 4, 1963 FOUNDED 1908 Cont Crucible J NewMaga Several changes in proced ures for USC's literary maga zine are being instituted thii year, says Crucible editor Dab Bailes. "One of the chief dissatisfac tions," says Bailes, "has beei that some of the magazine ii 'way out.' Since this is a maga zine for experimental litera ture, we will continue to be i showcase for good fiction an< poetry. We will not "write down" ti an audience. We will attemp to balance the magazine wit] humor, features, some satir and original cartoons." The objective of the nev * changes involves familiarizini the student body with what th Crucible is - attempting t put out a magazine with hu morous features as well a stimulating stories and article and finally the immediate ani personal acknowledgment o contributions. Contributions Considered Bailes goes on to say, "W Course X Policies E: Dean of Men Gives Rules With USC students enterin their fourth week of school, ther are several items in The Carolin Community that need to be em phasized, according to Dean I Eugene Cooper, dean of men. Primary in importance is the if a student wishes to withdrai from a course in which he is er rolled that he do so before Octobe 12. Withdrawing from a course dui ing the first four weeks (Octobe 12 is the deadline for this semef ter) means that a grade of "W will be recorded. After the deac line, a withdrawal will result i a grade of "WF" which is treate as a final grade of "F" in con puting grade-point averages. To withdraw from a course, student must obtain a Change c Schedule card from the Office c Admissions and Registration, an Sfollow the procedure Indicated o the card. Dean Lista Rules That students understand al tendance regulations Is anothe item of concern to the colleg ~4~administration, said Dean Coope: i'First, it should be understoc that each student Is responsibl to keep a record of his absences of Women, and Ashley Halsey, WUISC-AM rdo ebr ft studios and the netanamnlter rover Editor Sets zinePolicy can only edit and publish what is submitted. We are open to literary and artistic contribu tions from every student. Each contribution will be considered and constructively criticized by - at least three editors." These editors are: Nancye i Mace, poetry; Warren John. - son, graphics; and Evelyn God shall, copy editor. "I am very k pleased with the enthusiasm so I far," said Bailes. Deadline Announced October 24th has been an t nounced as deadline for manu scripts and copy for considera tion for publication in the first issue, to be distributed on cam i pus by November 7. This an nouncement was made at the second meeting of the year to y a group of some 20 prospective - staff members. s "If any student has a criti s cism, comment, or contribu I tion," Bailes says, "I urge him f to write to us at Box 270A, or come by our meetings, held each Tuesday in Room 209 of a the Russell House." ithdrawal mphasized both excused and unexcused - for no credit is allowed for a course in which a student fails to attend 25% of the scheduled class meet eings regardless of cause of ab sences. In regular sessTon, a maximum of four unexcused absences is per mitted. These are intended to pro t vide for unexpected contingencies which necessitate absence from v class. On the occurrence of an ad ditional unexcused absence, a stu r dent is dropped from a course with the symbol of "FA" entered r upon his academic record. Excused Absence Policies Absences may be excused for illness (when confined at home, n in the infirmary, or in a hospital); d marriage, birth, death, or serious - illness in the immediate family; and for representing the Univer a sity in an authorized activity. f Excuses for absences for the f day before or after a holiday will d be granted only in the event the n student is hospitalized or has a death in the immediate family. A request for an excused ab - ence must be in writing and must r be secured from the dean of c women or the dean of men within .three days after the last absence d atnd presented to the appropriate e instructor within five days after the absence. Body President Todri Wilson talk. wit Jr., asuistant go President Jones, duringi me administration and student leaders e na'eedlisr a drop-in to celebrate WUSC Sy Lc IS Dep't Presents Lectures Guest Lectures Link Courses The Department of Interna tional Studies has announced the 1963-64 lecture series, "Dimen sions of the Cold War." The an nual lecture program, to which the general public as well as mem bers of the University community - are invited to attend, has become an important part of the intellec tual and cultural life of Columbia. Over the past several years the Department of International Stud ies has brought outstanding schol ars, statesmen and authors to the community to share their ideas and experiences. The 1963-1964 series, "Dimen sions of the Cold War," empha sizes the complex nature of the struggle between the Communist World and the Free World led by the United States and its associ r ated Western democracies. Strategies Discussed y Among the dimensions to be discussed are the philosophical, cultural, legal and political as- I pects of the struggle and ways in t which such concepts are exploited I in the foreign policies and strate gies of Communist states. Current manifestations of Communist 4 strategy and tactics will also be t discussed as they apply to specific areas in the Western Hemisphere. Lectures, Courses Linked The guest lecture series of the Department is linked to an in- e troductory full-year course de signed for all students, no matter what their major field of concen tration at the University. This t course, "The United States and World Problems," aims at making an awareness of global political problems and the forces creating them part of the general educa tion of our future leaders. Introduced into the curriculum of the University when Governor Donald S. Russell was President of the University, its basic prem ise is that our national security and the fate of our civilizatior requires responsible citizens who .1 are aware of the great issues at stake in a rapidly changing world. The schedule of lectures, to be held in Drayton Hall, School of Education, includes: October 10 William Y. Elliott, University Professor of Philosophy and Government, American Uni. versityc "Constitutionalism and the Communist Challenge" ( -,Saj/ Phsoao by CamepbeU h Dean Elizabeth Clotworthy, dean ' an informal drop-in sponsord by crer given a tour of the renovated I loms Trustee Chairman Osborne . .. defends Walker 1Tew Team Starts. Debaters ' K.entucky Faced with the problem of: ers of last year's squad, the aring for the University of I 8-20. "The top 18 debate scho nvited, and the contest is the Treets," said Dr. Christophers Frank Cantrell, finalist in last ear's National Tournament, and horne Compton are entered. Some 32 new debaters have dis layed tournament abilities. In ended in the lineup are a num er of former high school debat rs. Two veteran squad members, ohn Wertz and John Taylor, are ntered in the Dixie Tournament his month at Merc Universisity. Other pairs are Garrett Van ktters with Toby Van Buren and vloria Smith and Tom Southard. oth pairs are showing potential trength, according to Christoph rsen. Christohersen added that other nembers of the squad showing romise are Dale Bailes, Joe Car er, Jimmie Cothran, Allen Goud, trthur Hartzog, Bill Medhin, eter Stephens, and Philip Antley. 'ryouts for the team are now in rogress. ewman Head Wins Top Spot ot Convention Thsepeieto.teUCNw eChto fNewmn clubs thtouhr utbrso the su atud sha ong rotion aele BCailes,toe. r Inth officeg, BilreDin, oph., Stlepes vitnd Phlubs Antly .C.youtss foteming unity in hecus,ecangn ideaad W-rdting aTivitiS po ATso naedn ofere USCi eser anolub was ChaletdRonAli-n 'iector, ofNan lobs Lteraouagn uthe Ctate, Sumr ataroct eonmiteld iCharle . Othercolleges ftring unitylina heclubs,Ji excaningdas, ands )iecTomralt, and Le man, 4rs. Louis Baker. A picnic, the first project this rear, will be held Sat. by the 4ewman Club at Lake Murray. jars will leave Thomas More 3enter at 3:30 p.m. and all are ordially Invited to attend. The club meets every Wed nes lay night at 7 p.m. in Room 101, tussell House. Ifalina, Dancers r?pen Art Series rGn USC's Campus The USC Artists Series will pen its season on Wednesday, )ctober 18, at 8 p.m. in the Field louse with Jose Malina and his panish dance group. Special Invitations are being ient to faculty members permit ng them and their guests to be idmitted without charge. The series Is free to all Caro ina students who present valid ID Ovei IS Chairman Walker ... defends book ['o Face Tourney replacing eight or nine mem varsity Debate team is pre mntucky Tournament October ls east of the Mississippi are toughest of the early season n, debate coach. [lolidays Extension Proposed Bill to Permit Angle Parking A bill to allow either parallel parking on both sides or angle parking on one side of Blossom Street between Fraternity Row md University T e r r a c e was passed by Student Senate. Student Senate also voted to :hange its meeting time from donday to Wednesday afternoons it 5 p.m. In a desultory session, sparked )nly by occasional exchanges, Student Senate sent to committee ibill proposed by Perry Moses to engthen Christmas Holidays from Fanuary 4 to January 6. During the recall session, Moses' >ill was recalled from the comn mittee to which Student Body President Todd Wilson had sent ~t. Moses, speaking in favor of his ,ill, said that the lengthening of ~he holidays was to avoid return ng to school on a Friday. By extending the holidays unti! Yanuary 6, he said, students would have an extra weekend r'here was some confusion in the' Senate as to the effect this woulu aave on the total number of days required by State Law concerning USC attendance, and the Senate roted 37 to five to send the bill back to the committee for further study. A motion by Vice-President Ben Boyd to have an inside tele phone installed on the first floor f Russell House for student use was passed. SC Educators Drop-Outs At Educators from all sections of South Carolina will meet in Co lumbia for the Fifth Governor's Conference on Business, Industry, Education, Agriculture and Gov ernment October 8. The conference theme will be "Drop-outs - a Major concern of all South Carolinians." Governor Donald S. Russell will address the all-day conference at the luncheon break. Dr. Thomas F. Jones, USC nresidant. and Dr. William W. sSyll IS Dep 't Ur Walker DeJ BY DENNI; Edit 1963 by "Th In an exclusive interview w Loyd Wright, former presiden ;ociation, labeled a controveri ive USC professors as "a poo vork . . ." and, "a tragic mist Committee To Review Fall Fees Campus Groups Submit Budgets The USC Allocations Committee held its first meeting Wednesday to review the budgets that have been turned in so far by various campus groups. Chairman of the Allocations Committee is Dean of Women Elizabeth M. Clotworthy. Mem bers are: Dr. W. T. Batson of the Biology Department. Dean of Men L. Eugene Cooper; Dr. Ada Thompson of the Business Admin istration School; Student Body President Todd Wilson; Student Senators Chuck Simons; Johnny lite; and Susan Mathews. This committee of four students and three faculty members will study carefully each of these bud gets during the coming weeks. They then plan to make recom mendations for the percentage of allocations fees alloted to each group. Some of the organizations which have received allocations in the past include: Student Union; Garnet and Black; Student Union Dance Committee; The Gaiecock, WUSC-AM; Student Government; Intramurals; The Crucible; and the Debate Team. These allocations are taken from an $8 fee paid by each stu dent during registration. New Society To Feature Recordings Mendelssohn and Tchaikovsky will come to Carolina via hi fidelity recordings on Monday at Russell House auditorium, arriv ing at 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Carolina So ciety for the Musical Classics, the free concert will feature Mendels sohn's "Italian" Symphony, and Tchaikovsky's first piano concerts. The society, new at USC this year, was organized to foster the appreciation of good music on the Carolina campus. A second concert, to be pre sented at a date to be announced later, will be devoted entirely to Benjamin Britten's "War Re quiem," a new work which few people have heard. "I feel that these concerts will bring to Carolina good music, well produced by the finest of equip ment," states A. C. Lunney, an organizer of the group. To Discuss Conference Savage, Dean of the College of Education, are scheduled to lead two of the 14 discussion groups at the conference. Delegates to the conference are composed of leaders in the five major fields in the state: Business, Industry, Education, Agriculture and Gov e rnment. Dr. Charles S. Davis, Winthrop College president, will also lead a discussion group. The 14 groups will review and comment on pro grams outlined at earlier sessions of the conference. abus der Fire; ends Book 3 MYERS Dr e Gamecock" ith The Gamecock this week, t of the American Bar As ial publication compiled by rly done, inaccurate piece of Lke." Speaking to The Gamecock from Delano, Calif., Wright said he was 'disgusted" with the publication, k syllabus to aid high school eachers in instructing t h e i r lasses on communism, and again alled the guide "a preachment of Fabian Socialism," as he did this summer before the House of Delegates of the American Bar Associtaion. He stated the guide was "based upon a faulty prem se - the premise that socialism was the enemy of communism," snd charged that the publication "was full of errors and advocated the miserable co-existence philoso phy. . Under Revision The controversial paperback, )emocracy and Communism in World Affairs, was published last May in an advanced provisional edition for evaluation and com ment. It is presently under revi sion and is expected to be pub lished in a regular edition soon. The syllabus is under the sponsor ship of the American Bar Associa tion's standing committee on ed ucation against communism. It was prepared by four Carolina professors: Maxwell Flapan, Pau W. Blackstock, J. George Long worth, and James H. Wolfe, under the supervision of Dr. Richard L Walker, head of the USC Institutt of International Studies. Spokesmen for the ABA said the guidebook seeks to answei three needs: (1) Alerting the na tion to the threat of the interna tional communist movement, (2' Preparing teachers to give re sponsible answers to questions be ing posed by high school students. and (3) Heading off irresponsible anti-communist indoctrination. The 260-page document will be distributed nation-wide to educa tors, school officials and members of the public who are concerned with the acute lack of knowledge about the threat and growth of Marxism-Lenninism. Selection One of the reasons Carolina's Institute of International Studies was selected to prepare the train ing guide was because it had con ducted a teacher training program on the subject, and it was consid ered by the American Bar As sociation and a number of na tional educational groups to be one of the most successful teacher training programs in the field. This week the syllabus was criticized by a member of the University Board of Trustees, Hugh 0. Hanna, who called the m a n u a I "damanable." Hanna's main complaint was, "it doesn't explain enough about commun ism." He said he will bring the matter b c f o r e the University Board of Trustees meeting sched uled October 12, because, "I just want to protect the University." Rutledge L. Osborne, USC Board chairman, in a statement this week to the press, said Dr. Walker, who directed the prepara tion of the syllabus, "is a very outstanding man and we are fortu nate to have a man of his caliber connected with the University." "What We Want" Admiral William C. Mott, a member of the ABA's standing committee on education against communism, who is scheduled to address students of the Institute of International Studies on cam pus in the near future, said in Washington he had the utmost confidence in Dr. Walker. "He will come out with the product we want him to," stated Mdott. Walter E. Craig, president of (Contianed em page 5)