University of South Carolina Libraries
INQ1 Question: There are 5,01 House. Without the studen ter mailbox rental fee incr< was this increase made and used? Answer: Joe M. Lawrence, was made to offset the increa cost of remodeling the post o stalled in the post office to ii improve mail service for the mail truck was purchased ar Lawrence said. Question: Why can't a li; hind the mailboxes in Capsl open a box four and five ti see inside. Answer: Larry Bennett, r didn't realize this was a prob -ight on behind the boxes on f Question: Why doesn't men's lounge in the Russel order? Most of our guests i grace. This is not just an ir for two years. Answer: According to Dav dent Union, maintenance is In the past, Phillips said, t making maintenance difficult Question: If the library c of their books and they bill you can appeal their decisi< Answer: If a student is sur is billed for it, he may appeal rector of libraries. His office cisions are made according Reames said. 3 Earn T h r e e Carolina students have been designated by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foun dation as among the best future college teacher prospects on the continent. They are Parks M. Coble of Co lumbia and J o s e p h Timberlake Fellowshi p Three Carolina students nm ship designates discuss thei with President Thomas F. J S include (left to right) Jose M. Cohle and Donald R. Vik. USC Senior Wins Honor For Writing Margaret Ann Niceley, a USC senior majoring in journalism, has b'een awarded the Tad Quattlebaum Award for a woman's news story contributing most to the welfare of te'enagers. The award was presented at the winter meeting of the South Caro lina Press Association in Green ville. 11er story, "Sixteen Little Girls Fear The U nk n own - L i fe," dIepictedl life in Wilkinson Home, a Negro orphanage in Cayce. It ap peared in The Columbia Record last summer. Miss Niceley, a former employee of West Columbia-Cayce Journal, has been employed by The Colum bia Record for two and one-half years. She is an editorial assistant on The G;amecock staf f. Last year, Miss Niceley won first place in feature-writing in the state for her series on night life in columbia: JIRY 31 mailboxes in the Russell L body's consent, the semes ased by 100 per cent. Why how is the rental fee money postmaster, said the increase sed cost of operations and the ffice. Air conditioning was in nprove working conditions. To increased student body, a new d additional employees hired, ght be left on constantly be .one? It's a lot of trouble to mes a day because you can't nanager of Capstone, said he lem. He said he would leave a t trial basis. the Univei-Ity see that the I House is kept clean and in ise the louge and it is a dis icident. It has been this way a Phillips, director of the Stu ,vorking on this problem now. ere was a lack of employees, laims that you have lost one you for it, is there any way mn? e he has not lost a book and he to J. M. Reames, associate di is in McKissick Library. De to each individual situation, Wilson Foster and )onald R. Vik, both of Sunmerville. The students were among 1,124 college seniors at 309 schools in the United States and Canada selected for the honor. The Woodrow Wilson Founda tion awarded "honorable mention" Designates med Woodrow Wilson Fellow r selection during a meeting ines this week. The winners h Timberlake Foster, Parks The S Blatt: More By JOHN DAVID SPADE Staff Writer The lack of needed money from the legislature is the main reason for Carolina's failure to progress to its full potential, Rep. Solomon Blatt said Tuesday. The state Speaker of the House told alumni an(l legislators, "We don't give enough money to make the students of today the leaders of tomorrow." Speaking at the annual aluni reception for the general assembly, Blatt recalled his (lays as a stu dent at USC, beginning in 1912. lie said the most important lesson he learned at Camlina was one of democracy. Folk Group To Appear On Campus The New Folk, a group that says it sings "with a purpose." -will ap pear at 8 p.m. Friday in the Field House. The group is on tour of campuses in the United States and Canada an(l is being sponsore(d by the Caro lina Christian Fellowship. Tickets are available for students at the Russell House information d(esk. Award status to three other USC students. They are Van Everette Edwards 111, a history major from Johns ton; Mary El i z a be t h Culp, an English major from Columbia; and John H. Harvey from McKinney. Tex., who is majoring in psy chology. Both lists - Woodrow Wilson Designates an(l the 980 Honorable Mention Winners --- are now in the hands of gra(luate school (leans an(d departmental chairmen for fellowship consi(leration. This marks a c h a n g e in the Foundations program. In the last 10 years, with funds from the Ford Foundation amounting to $52 mil lion, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation was able to make dlirect grants to approxi mately 1,000 American andl Cana dian students annually to support their first year of graduate study. Coble, a senior majoring in Far Eastern history, is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron D)elta Kappa and the USC Debate Team. Foster, holder of a USC Aca domflic Scholarship andl member of Phi Eta Sigma and Blue Key hon orary societies, is also a history major. Vik is majoring in international studies wvith an emphasis on Rus sian studiies. He was vice president of the Georgia Southern Young D)emocrats, a former University rep)resentative at a national studlent conference on U. S. affairs at West Point, N. Y., and is a member of the international and executive committees of the USC Student Union. hommn USC State "We hear a lot about what i. wrong with students. In the 13,00( .tudents at Carolina, there may b) 100 sinners. You can go into anN town or community in South Caro lina and find ten times that num. her," said Blatt. In closing, Blatt cautioned th( legislators, "Don't measure the dol lars we give to USC in normal terms, hut consider them in termf of the needs of an institution mak. ing more progress than any othei in the Southeast." Also speaking at the reception was Gov. Robert E. McNair. The c1iief executive told of his "pride in the young people is South Caro lina." Many of the speakers mentione< the growing physical aspects o the University, including the Coli seum. Basketball Coach Frank Mc Guire, unable to attend because o the Furman game, tape(d a shor1 speech which was p I a y e d h Athl-itic Director Paul Dietzel. McGuire said that the Coliseury would become the most importani building in South Carolina. Witt the recruiting of god)(I students an( good players, McGuire said, Colun bia may one day he the "basketbal capital" of the nation. Dietzel said that as long as he is at Carolina, the athletic depart ment will not run the school. "Witning and king will take care of itself. My inain job is to keep my department in its place aid try to keep up with the progress of the rest of the school," he added. Rutledge L. Osborne, Chairmar of the Board of Trustees, said thal Carolina is not just a facade oi brick and mortar, but an academi< community of which all South Car olinians should be proud. He sait that years ago 50 per cent of th< student body could be housed or campus, and that today, with thou sands more students, the percent Poll SayS Pick LBJ President Lyndlon B. Johnsor andl former vice-president Richar< M. Nixon ledl presidential hopeful of their respective parties in pol1l conductedi rece'ntly by the Car olina Young Republicans. Students cast their ballots ir the preference pol1l last week al Seniors Get Contributions Contributions continue to comi in for the senior class scholarship fund, accordling to class p)residlent Pat Naylor. A luncheon was schedluledl foi Tlhursday to help sp)eedi along lans for raising the $5,000 needled t< establish a permanent endiowment of $250 per year. D)onations may be sent to Class of '68, Box 2890, USC. Showmen Scheduled For Dance Thie Showmuen a n dI Rufus Thlomuas 'will he feat ured next Frid ay night at a dlatnce spomsored by Student iunon. Tlhe diantce, from 8-12, will he at the National Gutatrd Armuory on Blluff ickets at 5(0 cents per student are ont sale at the Russell Ilouse informia tioni desk. One 11) per couple will bw required. The Showmtuen are a widely known singing group who have cut a numbler of records, while Rufus Thuomas has popu-t larized such songs as Needs Funds i age is still only 50 per cent. "All of the institutions in the state need money. We need $49, 600,000 as of now," he said. "When you appropriate money for education, you are not spend ing dollars, but making an in vetment which will reap many benefits," said Osborne. Entertainment was provided by the USC band and chorus. Coach l Dietzel said that he had heard the chorus last year and it had sounded like any other chorus. This year though, in trend with the progress of Carolina in many other areas, he said the band and chorus were the best in the South. America' Brings M By SUSAN TANNER Staff Writer "The world situation is grave. Humanity with fearful faltering steps walks a knife edge . . . be tween corm pl ete chaos and the Golden Age." With this admonition the Peace Pilgrim interrupted her march for peace this week to pause at the Carolina campus and present her views. Self-described as "a silver-haired woman dressed in navy blue slacks and a shirt, and a short tunic with pockets around the bottom in which she carries her only worldly pos sessions," the Peace Pilgrim feels her philosophy is the solution to the problems of mankind. 25,000 MILES She has walked 25,000 m i I e s in all the 48 states, for a personal cause of world peace. Her credo is, "I shall remain a w a n d e r e r until mankind has learned the way of peace, walking - until I am given shelter and fasting I until I am given food." She has a ready solution for i Vietnam: "Stop the hombing, al - low neutrals to enter the country - and supervise free elections, elec Voters Nixon Russell House. Nixon led all candidates by poli ng slightly more than 311 per cent of the vote. .Johnson received 1:3 per cent of the ballots. Following the President as the choice of Democratic Party voters were R o b e r t Kennedy (8.6 p)er cent) andl Eugene McCarthy (7.4 Per cent). Ronald Reagan polled 13: per cent of the votes to secondl Nixon as the Republican choice. Nelson Rockefeller receivedl 11 per cent, Charles Percy 3. per c'ent, and George Romney 2.6 per cent. George Wallace polled approx i mately nine per cent of the votes. In the poll1, voters were asked to name the party they would support if elections were held now. They were then asked to vote for the candlida te of that party they would he moost inclined to support for the P residency. AWAY WITH UNWANTED HAIR WI TH ELECTROLYSIS Itsesy to be completely I feminine wilhout a hair to cloud your loveliness. Quker. than you dream possible, our advanced Kree Method of Eleetrolysis will remove every unwant ed hair.., forever'! Person I a consullotion without charge. Beauty Salon The 'P The Peace Pilgrim, who ha a personal crusade for world Carolina this week, urging i Goldei Rule and offering a s4 'Peace Iarch To ions w-hich have been promisedk ;inee 1956, thus allowing the dvmo ratic process and peace to entt,r lietnam. "Set up a Peace )epartment in he Cabinet in Washington," she -ontinues, "which woul coordinate, ftudy and act on the cause of eace, and develop a world lan ruage to serve as a second lan ruage for all the peoples of the Vold."1 GOI.DEN Itil. Of utmost iimportance to her >hilosophy is the Golden Rule, vhich she belleves is the basis for ill human conduct which is to be uled by the "higher nature (of nan's being." Ultimately all must hgin withI Undercover Movement Afoot Agilon. Panty Stocking Un,derneath your sho skirts and open shoes. there's never a seam, sng, or a welt with 1 ion's smooth panty sto ings of long wearing A lon. Vision ...the 1b undercover agent a ever hadi New S pr i colors, 2.95. Downtown. Street Floor Tapp's Twig of Trenholh Staff Photo by Bob Benson rlgrim1 4 walked m er 25,)(K) miles in p-ace, brought her qut-st it) ndiiduals to lihe lip to the ilition for the Vietiam War. Pilgrim' Carolina the individual. she states. If the individual is most r,ecvptive to actions, lie should act in accoldance with the Gol(en Rule anid his thoughts will follow. 'onf -rSely, i f a person is most pr*one to thugIt, he should think in acc,jrlance wvth the (;oden Rule and his actions will f-llow, she adds. It is in this line of thinking that the Peace Pilgrim says si Ie de plor-es training situations where sohlwis ar*e taught to "kill, kill," for she feels this can only carry o)VIr into weeivdav life and affect all the actions of the individual, and thereffore of the woId omn I u n t v. Ny is-i ek ngg I