The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 04, 1941, Page Page Two, Image 3
Class
Class Election
Primaries Held
First Of Week
Chief Interest Will Be
Centered On Presidency
Of Rising Senior Class
First primaries in class elections
and the election of Social Cabinet
members will be held Monday
morning. The polls will be opened
from nine until one at ODK circle.
Chief interest will be focused on
the race for president of the senior
class. Bob Browne of Hickory
Grove, Bob Clark of Due West, and
Walter Taylor of Gaffney are the
candidates announced for the of
fice.
Bob Browne of Columbia and
Dick Young of Sumter entered the
vice-presidential race.
For president of the rising junior
class, Jimmy Funderhurke of Lan
chester, Jimmy Bell of McCormick
and John Martin of Columbia an
nounced in the days immediately
preceding the political rally last
Thursday.
In the Minor offices other candi
dates have come into the field. For
the social cabinet positions the fol
lowing are candidates: Harry
Woodhurst, Abbeville; Ham De
Pass, Rock Hill; and Ray Kramer,
Asbury Park, N. J.
Buster Coleman and Steve Net
tles, both of Columbia, have an
nounced for the athletic advisory
board. Bobby George of Greens
boro, N. C. made the first announce
nient for the vice-presidency of the
rising junior class.
Sophomore officers and other
candidates who are announced to
the official ballot for the various of
fices were not reported to the Game
ceck at press time Thursday.
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50 Carolina Sophs
Achieve Honor Roll
For Lost Semester
32 Boys, 18 Girls Make
B to B-plus Average To
Join Ranks of Honorees
Fifty Carolina students made the
sophomore honor roll for the first
semester, W. Flinn Gilland, assis
tant registrar, has announced. To
be eligible for the honor roll a soph
omore must have an average med
way between a B and a B-plus on
all courses.
Thirty-two boys and eighteen
girls made the list. They are:
Elizabeth Crawford Adams,
York; Mary Elizabeth Baldwin, Co
lumbia; George Cullem Battle, State
Park; Louise Ayer Bradley, Lex
ington, Va.; Marjorie Gertrude
Brown, Barnwell; Kate Senora Bull,
Rowesville; Preston Callison, Lex
ington; Alfred Giles Chevous, Al
lendale; Charles Franklin Crews,
Oxford, N. C.; Sumantha Frances
Cupstid, Swansea; Dorothy Derrick,
Columbia; George Frank Doukas,
Columbia.
Also, Kathryn Salley Edgerton,
Orangeburg; Frances Irene Ed
wards, Columbia; Albert Sydney
Eggerton, Columbia; Albert Cline
Flora, Jr., Columbia; Laura Lee
Green, Columbia; George Tillman
Gregory, Jr., Chester; Melvin Je
rorne Herman, Newark, N. J.; Phyl
lis Waite Holman, Columbia; Law
rence Victor Jowers, Columbia;
Alex Theodore Kerhulas, Charles
ton; William Langfan, New York
City.
Also, Ramsey Garrison Latimer,
West Columbia; John Charles Law
rence, Effingham; Mary Frances
Lide, Marion; Athalie Louise Lind
ler, Columbia; Clarence Cross
Lyles, Columbia; James Alexander
UicLeod, Florence; Betty Jane Mer
cer, Columbia; Oscar McLendon
Mims, Florence; Herbert Maurice
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WM. LYKES. JR.. VICE-PRESIDENT
Y. SECRETARY-TREAsuRER
DAIRIES
ucts
e Canteen
tions
jMaid Of Honor
Jane Cox
Moody, Columbia; Cyril Ray Par
rott, Timmonsville; Robert Earl
Quinn, Columbia.
Also, Arthur Haun Roberts, Co'
lumbia; Charlotte Rubin, Columbia;
Patricia Claire Rutledge, Asheville,
N. C.; Julius Robert Schroder,
Charleston; Ray Moody Seigler,
Aiken; Frank Keenan Sloan, Colum
bia; Francis Burris Smith, Pied
mont; Frank Page Smith, Easley;
Leroy Strasburger, Columbia;
George Van Swearingen, Colum
bia; Mary. Constance Thompson,
Ninety Six; Augustus Massenburg
Trotter, Camden; Lionelle Dudley
Wells, Jr., Holly Hill; Barbara
Louise Wiedeman, North Augusta;
James Thomson Wilds, Jr., Co
lumbia, and Janet Marie Winder,
Columbia.
Dr. Thomas Cooper, second pres
ident of Carolina, was tried for
sedition. He was considered one
of America's foremost thinkers.
His free-thinking, however, lead to
complications with staunch church
men.
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Committee Asks Dates
Be In Absence Petitions
The absence committee can
not pass on petitions unless stu
dents turn in the dates of their
absences, Dr. Wyman Williams,
chairman, announced yesterday.
Doctor Williams urges stu
dents who have to appear be
fore the committee to . secure
the dates of their absences
either from the professor con
cerned or from the registrar's
office.
133 High Schools
Will Participate
In Spring Program
10,224 Individual Tests
To Be Given; 19 Mental
Contests Have Entries
Students from 133 high schools
in the State will participate in the
mental contests of the South Caro
lina High School League this
spring.
A total of 10,224 individual tests
will be administered during the
preliminary testing, 160 per cent
more than in 1940 when 3,931 tests
were given.
The program will culminate in
annual High School Week at the
University of South Carolina April
30 to May 2, when final winners
are determined.
In previous years, students have
been sent from the participating
schools to district centers to par
ticipate in the district eliminations.
This year, preliminary test are
being administered in the high
schools themselves. Scores of the
five best contestants in each sub
ject in each school participating in
the program will be examined, and
the five, best students in each sub
ject will be determined in each of
the League's 13 districts. These
district winners will participate in
the finals in Columbia.
Nineteen mental contests are in
cluded in the League's testing
program. In all of them except
one, senior Latin, district winners
will be determined before the final
contests.
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SENATOR JAMES F. BYRNES
Musical Comedy In
Offing For Players
Next Effort Is Satire;
Cast Is Already Chosen
Two Carolina students, Bob
Quinn and Frank Sloan, are the co
authors of the University Players
next offering, a musical comedy
satire entitled "The Perpetual
Emotion."
This play, which the two dashed
off in odd moments last semester,
was submitted to Prof. .M. G. Chris
tophersen for criticism and com
ment. He showed it to his dra
matics class who decided that it
would make a good play to produce,
especially since it was Ithe first
musical that the Players had ever
tried.
Casting got under way immedi
ately with the following winning
places in the roster for the play:
Jane Loyal, Prescott Jumper,- Al
b)ert Eggerton, Bill Tennant, Mary
Crow, Dick Anderson, Laura Lee
Green, Frog Green, Bob Quinn,
Kathryn Edgerton, Evelyn Con
nor, Sarah Flinn and Leo Kroto.
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ANYTHING NEEDED IN THE CL.ASSROOM
Today and Tomorrow
HENRY FONDA
in "THE RETURN OF
FRANK JAMES"
Monday and Tuesday
Anne Sheridan and
Humphrey Bogart
in "IT ALL CAME TRUE"
Wednesday and Thursday
Kay Keyser and Orchestra
in "THAT'S RIGHT:
YOU'RE W RONG"
3AC.K in a
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WDUL THE BULBUL AMEER
-Cartoon
News
ATE SHOW SAT. 10:45
ELSO STARTING MON.
Next
Allied Aid Group
Gives Barn Dance
To Increase Funds
Musical Millers Lead
"Swing Your Partner"
Rhythm For Frolickers
Amidst straggled hay and be
tween two basketball backboards
approximately 65 couples of Caro
lina students swung-it high, wide,
and handsome to the music of the
Musical Millers and barn-danced it
for Aid to the Allies last Tuesday
nigl)t in the gymnasium.
The "Swing-your-partners" and
"grab your dwn honey doll" were
voiced by James MacDonald and
diminuitive Beryl Kerns while a
Dixie Lens photographer scooped
the return to rusticity of the Caro
lina scholars.
Various girls -reverted to child
hood pigtails while boys aped the
tillers of the soil by wearing denim
overalls. Even the most staid law
students unbent for the hillbilly
jamboree and shuffled to the tune
of the Virginia Reel and Turkey in
the Straw.
The committee in charge were
Torn McCutcheon, Dave Baker,
John Mullen, George Coleman, and
Maude Burns Chisholm.
New Bell System
Is Anathmatized
"Condemned by the American So
ciety of E. E.'s"
John A Chase and the University
administration may be satisfied with
their system of bells on the campus,
but at least one group on the cam
pus in one building is dissatisfied
with the way the alarm system
works.
The wiring for the system in
Sloan College runs all over the
steps, and is exposed to the hand
ling of passersby in several places.
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Week-'
Women Outrank
Men In Grades,
Survey Reveals
All Sorority Average
Rates Highest On The
Campus Last Semester
Women generally rated better in
scholarship at Carolina than did
men during the first semester of
the current year, according to a
survey released today by John A.
Chase, Jr., clean of administration.
The all-sorority average was the
highest group average on the
campus, with the all-women's av
erage and the non-sorority average
following next in line. The three
averages mentioned and the aver
age for fraternities and sororities
combined, exceeded the student
body average.
Falling below the student body
average were the all-fraternity av
erage, the non-fraternity and non
sorority combined average, the
all-men's average and the non-fra
ternity average, in that order.
Delta Delta Delta sorority and
Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity led all
social sororities and fraternities in
scholarship. Next in line were
Alpha Delta Pi and Chi Omega
among sororities and Alpha Tau
Omega and Sign& Alpha Epsilon
among fraternitie
Relative rating of other sorori
ties, listed in order, were: Pi Beta
Phi, Sigma Delta, Delta Zeta,
Kappa Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha.
Other fraternities, listed in the
order of their scholastic standing,
are: Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi,
Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Sigma, Pi
Kappa Alpha, Pi Kappa Phi, 'Phi
Sigma Kappa and Kappa Alpha.
A total of 18 scholarships, medals
and other awards are given each
year at Ca.olina.
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