The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 01, 1943, Page Page Two, Image 3
Robert Mobi
Music Schc
Student To Use Fun
Studies Under Profe
Robert C. Mohley, a senior in
the Department of Music at the
University of South Carolina, won
a $50.00 Piano Scholarship awarded
by the Afternoon Music Club of
Columbia. This is the second time
that Mr. Mobley has been given
this scholarship, having appeared
in contests in 1941 and 1943. No
scholarship contest was held in
1942.
Robert has been very active in
the musical life of Columbia and
the University. ie has been a
pupil of Hugh \Villiamson. Director
of Music, for the past three years.
He has appeared often in the re
citals of the Department of Music
and was soloist with the Men's
Glee Club on their tour in 194I and
the accompanist for that organia
tion last year. Robert is now
organist and choir director of the
Green Street Methodist Church of
Columbia.
Mr. Mohley will use his scholar
ship to continue his study n ith Di
rector \V illiatmson during the com
ing year. He w%ill give his Senior
Piano Recital in the spring of 1914.
Robert's many friends wvill he
pleased to hear of this honor which
ha; come to him through his fine
talent and hard work.
Things To Come
For Week Of Oc
SATURDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch. Baptis
1:40 P. M.-Noon Devotions, Baptist
SUNDAY
10:00 A. M.-Church Services for Pre
7:30 P. M.-Vespers, Chapel.
7:00 P. M.-Conference of Orientatic
MONDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch, Baptis
1:30 P. M.-YWCA Cabinet Sims, 2r
1:40 P. M.-Noon Devotions, Baptist
5:00 P. M.-Men and Women's Glee
7:00 P. M.-University Bond, Drayton
7:00 P. M.-Indcpendcnts. Sims, ,hir
TUESDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch, Baptis
1:40 P. M.-Noon Devotions, Baptist
7:00 P. M.-Sophomnre YMCA, Flinn
7:00 P. M.-Euphradion Literary Soci
WEDNESDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch, Baptis
1:30 P. M.-Noon Devotions, Baptist
5:00 P. M.-Men and Women's Giec
7:00 P. M.-Corolina Christian Serv
THURSDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch, Bapis
1 30 P. M.-Noan Devotions. Baptist
7:00 P M --University Band, Drayton
7:15 P. M.-Kappa Sigma Kappa, Ab
FRIDAY
7:30 A. M.-Morning Watch, Boptis
1-00 P. M.--Junor-Senior YMCA Cal
1:40 P. M..---Noon Devotions, Baptist
5:00 P. M.--Men and Women's Glee
7:00 P. M.--Happy Hour, Chapel.
Lucy Dade To
Speak On_Nursing
Representative Of Nurse
Corps To Visit Campus
NI Lir' D ''e. repr e-ritatie
of the it id Mates Cadet Nuir~e
verwy' ramri:< bintesn Orb,ber t:s
*and 5. acco 'dog . to infon mation re
rei':d~ 'n D)ea, \rner F- (Ce-ln
\\'h-e here .\l :0 Dadle i i meet
with grouips of student= intercited
in enmering ithe Cadet .\tines Corps,
and will talk with individual; w'ho
arrange for definite appointmnent -.
The United States t ade.t Nu'rses
Corps was established t'y Act of
BOOKS :-: OFFICE A
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1440 Main Street
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ey Receives
Iarship
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ssor Williamson
ROBERT MOBLEY
Happy Hour Gives
Way To Pep Rally
Happe Hour this F'ida.y night
will he largely taken up and i ii
lighted by a pep rall. at whirh
timle the R oters C'lubh inid the
cheerleatleadrs will take \ mer ac Joint
directors. 'ntil then the happy
At Carolina
tober 2-8
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
flights, Chapel.
n Teachers, Sims F.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
d Floor Study.
Student Union, Clariosophie Hall.
Club, Chapel.
Hoil.
F!oor Study.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
Student Union, Cloriosophic Hall.
Hall.
ty.
Student Union. C4tritrsenh,e Hall.
Stud4ent Union. Clariosophie Hall.
Club, Chapel.
e Club, Fh,nn Hall.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
Hall
1ey Law Library.
Student Union, Clarnosophic Hall.
mnet, Fhinn Hall.
Student Union, Clariosophic Hall.
Club, Chapel,
4 ' -' free tuition. m-flE lte nc .
Yin''il4.e lini:orm!: a:'.l a n itntisi' : .
I jp4an 24raduan inn 'E'4,l'et
Nee to, fnte' enh,: thle :nnt or
th nax ' ; - ;a nur4 -e. T h p; ..,:n2 of
4in \rt inrh;eate 44, imputn e
.\M [mde' visit i' parit of a na
tion-w ide tour of roleur anid 44n1
ersities mtadte by ne ~l quah6 ed
nuirses who aie coIle,e griaduate;
t hem elves to mntere;t college girl;
in eniterinig the Corp.
A goal of no less thian tiO.Annit new
dudinent ttnrss e expectedl to het
ND SCHOOL SUPPLIES
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D IN THE: C''LASSROOM
Weinges And Jones
Named On Student
Faculty Committee
McKissick Appoints
New Student Members
For Coming Semester
Othneil Wienges. NROTC jun
ior, and William I. Jones, senior,
have been appointed student niern
hers of the Student-Faculty com
mittee on Student Activities by
President MlcKissick.
The committee had its beginning
with the reallocation committee.
Organizations on the student ac
tivities fee were given only that
amount of money which was neces
sary for them to function and carry
out their purpose. In doing this
the appropriation of many organi-I
zations was cut, leaving an amount
in the activities fee which was to
he set ip as a contingent fund.
This fund is to provide for
worthy organizations the nece
sary mloney for any worthwhile
protect that they would otherwise
he unable to do. In determining the
worthines. of the project and. in
tur"n. the legitinacy of giving them
this money, the president of the
l niversity each year appoints mem
hers of the ciuldent body and faculty
on the Student-Faculty Committee
on Student Acti itieC.
Chairman each \ ear is rusiness
\lanal:er of the I'ni\ersity. At
present. Mr. Roy Garrett holds this
position.
Hlour committee headed by Maurice
hrallev will take care of the en
Ierta II mIIe t tnder the able and
I() ial general-hi1p of Rob Katz.
w ho i the new vice-president of
the Hillel Societc. and will act as
ma5ter of ceremoies for the night.
The program w hich, of necessity,
wjll be short n'ith only t\\o per
forncrs. Ivans Hart, magician w\ho
has appeared previolsly before
H app IIour audiences and received
+ naninloius, and thunderous ap
...!. !:. , . . - t appea
ance. has acquired a brand new
epertoire of special and fancy
,lght of hand tricks that arc
guaranteed to please and haftle the
public. 'ctite MIorita Cry nies, a
Ireshnan hailing from Easley will
comlprisc the other half of the pro
;ram w ith a group of popular se
le ictin . on the p ric accor iiol, at
wihichc she- i-s verv ialented.
The main cctnt of the night how
ci er is to he the pep raltY i\ hich
\w ill also be held in the chapel. A
large crowd is expectcd to raise a
rou1in ug tribtie to the victorious
aridiron heroes and also raise their
morale with the assurance that the
w\ hole campus is behind their every
effort.
-Waves
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
'i'date, ha\ e little or no pare time.
"Hardly even time for a smoke. Buit
then everyone elke is in the same
boait, and thiey don't expect a girl
t-'o daimre t han is hiataly pos
ablce"
Aliss Gane 'aidl that -he noticed
'' li ttle rhlereenice in the attitudre
n'~ men tonard hieri -ince -lie donneild
4 uniform"i e\cerpt that every one
ha, een~ espe(ial ly nice to al of
ui- especial the Naval ofticeers
'I l ii u m11 n mmm lsal as.eormate.
-lhe could not answere conccering
thie attitude ocf ciihanct meni because.
a- -he aptly put it, "W\hat civtlian
\\ earmng a tunifoerm at all times
dees niot bother the klnsign as th
a- erage girl might 'muppose. In fact
-he sais it's -rometimtes a relhef toe
Ita-e the crobetdn of aihat to wtear
ob'edl for iou Chce- as muchi at
home now in the trim Navy tigging
nowt at a dlance a. at the office.
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MEH LMAN'S
1427 M(
Major Cooper Will
Speak At Y Lunch
Subject Of Talk To Be
Ideas And Plans Of "Y"
Major Roy Cooper will speak
at the YMCA luncheon today at
1:00 p. in. in Flinn Hall. Major
Cooper, who has been making a
tour of southern colleges with
Army-Navy training units, has
taken as. his subject the ideas,and
plans of work he has formulated
from the tour.
After graduating from Clemson
in i9'^7 he attended the YMCA
Graduate College at Nashville and
received his degree there in 1930.
While at Clemson, Major Cooper
w%as president of the student YM
CA.
In 1927 he was commissioned in
the army, called to active duty in
194n, and released in 1943 as a
Major in the Signal Corps.
All members of the junior-Senior
Y cabinet are invited to attend the
dutch luncheon today at 1 o'clock
at Flinn Hall.
Stephan Returns;
Takes Post As
French Professor
Professor R. M. Stephan, the ad
ministration has announced, will
return to his post in the modern
languages department at the begin
ninc of fall semester. Stephan.
profe,sor of French from 192 until
last October, will resume teaching
French,
L.eave of absence was given
Stephan to enter the Air Corps. He
received basic training at Miami
Beach. Florida, and from there he
wa- sent to Harrisburg, Pa., where
he studied in an army intelligence
school. From there I.ieutenant
*iephan was ordered to Barksdale,
\i i-i-ippi and to dut: Ron
haciicr on the Mtarauder, B-26.
which he declares to he "the best
plane of the lot. After staying in
larksdalc for only a short time,
professor Stephan was ordered to
De Ridder, I.ouisiana with the 31
homber group. Later lie returned
to Barksdale.
From there, the language profes
sor who at different periods in 'is
career taught at Johns Illoplns
and \\'illiamt a; ntd aMarx's, describe'
iimself as hav iug "various en
tang!emnents with the hospital." He
has been returned to a reserve
status by the Air Corps.
Miss Gasser has the distinction of
being one of twenty-six out of one
hundred WA\'ES in the Supply
Corps who have independent johs.
That is. as dishtirsing officer of the
Na%al 'T'raining t'nit at 'S', she
has the goodl fortuine not to he un
der somiebody' wsho is muder some
body else. Asked if blhe had found1(
that menmbers of thle regular Navy'
and in particular the men wsho wvork
unider her, heldl any~ resentmeunt to
wsard a woman in "'the grand old
sri c." NIi- <a'-er replied, "'In
ti- ottiee 5e a ;ll wsork together', and
it anysone ha', a better idea than I,
why i\ s idlea goes."( Oe Of the' mn
in 'jiuest ion adlded very fallantly,
"Buthi that ha" 'y mt to ha-ppeni."
-Literary
(CONTINUED F'ROM PAGE 1)
eration was costly' andl impractical.
l)in-mnoor, in the closing speech of
the affair pointed out that the nega
tiv es. who hadno't dictuted the need
for a chiange in peace patterns.
seemmgls- agreed that there w;e a
need for a rchange. HeI said that
they should base, iln this case pro.
po-ed a counterplan to suppor t their
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'5~ " i.
BOB ALLEN
Bob Allen, whose orchestra
comes to the Carolina Campus
from the Roosevelt lintel in New
Orleans, has been leading his own
hand since late in 1910, when Hal
Kemp's death ended his career as
a vocalist with Kemp's organiza
tion.
Allen was chosen to succeed
Glen Miller at the lintel Pennsvl
vania's Cafe Rouge when Miller
went into the army. He also re
placed Miller on the Victor Record
label.
Having been Kemp's featured
vocalist for eight years. Allen
styled his singing personality. Nier
rie Lane shares the vocals with
him. She comes from Washing
ton, D. C., and has sung with Al
len's hand over the National net
works.
-Library
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
poloist of the Smithsonian Insti
tute, tells of his travels in Alaska.
The hook is full of information on
Indians, Eskimo natives, their ens
toms and their traditions. "Fifty
Years of Public Life" by Daniel C.
Roper. Thi s an aitnbiography of
Danial C. Roper, one of South Car
olina's own great men.
The . .rc ...~w of the most typ
ical of the tanv hooks that the Ii
brarv has to offer to the students.
Th I *'i'er"ity I.ihrary has also
recently received a letter from Miss
l':izabeth l'orcher, former head of
the circulation and i eserves, who
volunteered as a Red Cross hospital
visitor for overseas dutv. '[his let
ris ,;. te Aimet itcan Red t ross in
\\'ashington and was mailed from
.\frica on September 5th. In her
letter .\ i"s Porcher tells of the in
porttance that books play in the part
of a soldier. "I have charge of a Ii
brarv of some tso thousand hooks,
Niost of them are the twentv-fve
cent pocket edition books with fairly
good titles in the more recent
copies, and some hundred or more
well-hound fiction, nn -tiction. ntVs
teries and others. Of course. we
should he very glad if we could gel
ht.Id of sote of the newer and
miore nip-tO-d(ate tic tion. Thley
clamoicr, too, for more we-Itrns an.d
more advle niture . . . in thle li bra r
we have w elI tilled bo okca se- , table,
antd cabli iets con ta imtng gamties
tool,, wseaiving and hianidcraft ma
terials andi lots of gamies."
motntetntionis,
1ol lowiniig tli, lie J ttdge-, (9og
Grceory, Tom Pitt, anid Ralpil
I.ewsis of thle utniversitv law ischou
d ciided thaiit thle C lariosoph iantis hat
wson the debate.
Bill HIunlIey, president of thi
Euphradians presided over th<t
meetinug, as the mieeting wsashe
in the Clario Hall.
The ClIariosophuian. previous tc
tins tmeetinig bad imittated the follow,
ing tieni into the organiization
Charle'. NI c.\ tia. I .om, i.ockahhv
nme Aih~tord-, E-dward H-iender.oni
Pat Patrick. and Earl Fetnders.
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Journalists Tak
See It Througi
Journalism Student
1920-30 Gamecock )
The history of the Gamecock se,
thing else-comes the revolution;
outlined the G's stormy career thrc
we are presented with the far mot
the got-a-dime-for-a-cup-of-coffee-l
A new regime took the bird ii
hand, but they were definitely not
from the bushes. As a matter of
fact they were, of all people, new.
papermen. Consequently, in the
hands of these journalism majors
the Gamecock became a newspaper
Gone were the corny "Go Game
cocks, go!" editorials, most of the
smutty stories, and the joke
anecdote-joke columnists. These
aspiring fourth-estaters found the
old form of the paper limiting tc
the tremendous scope of their am.
hitions and inaugurated the big
better, seven column format thal
now greets your tired eyes. Thel
promised "the latest news, ac
curate in every detail;" editoriall3
they determined to "direct our un.
biased attack' wherever existinj
conditions should he improved with
a desire to serve the student bod.
and the t'niversity."
Rig words, hig purposes fot
adolescent minds, but to their ever
lasting glory, the new Gamecoc<
staff turned out a paper that re
ported capably, editorialized con
vincingly, and colunmized enter
tainingly. And, for the first time
the' seemed to be more than Caro
lina students, they were citizens
They discovered that there was
world beyond the limits defined h.
the old brick wall, a world of whici
they would soon become an un
willing part.
l'nwilling indeed, for Herber
Horn er was president, graduate
found jobs as scarce as cottor
underwear in a Russian winter of
fensive, and prosperity was arounc
some very elusive corner. 'Il
Gamecock reported one occasior
when a beggar stopped a studen
seeking alms for the love of ex.
istence till tomorrow morning. Th<
student sighed synmpathetically
"I'd like to help you, but I go tc
college and I . , "' hat's all right
.. ioe in the panhandler
"I'mn 1.trvard I.aw ':t mvself. I
know how it is. sliave a cigar.
ette?' 1lenry l'icard was at th<
time making his halloon jaunts intc
the ctratosphere and the Gamecoct.
woniercd if there was any silvel
lining on the other side of thi
clouds. Mleanwhile, up in the 1 'ni
versty of Michigan. one student
sure he was going to flunk at
exam. pinned a $5 bill on his pape
with the note. "I.et our contcienc
he your guide." ie passed. Ru
it minzht have happened at Cairo
lina. The faithfuln faculty' stuck dog
gedly despite a comiple'tely pay les
monith and a blan ket t wentyv-sever
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RIEli1
r flf
e Bird In Hand;
1 Depression
s Make Capricious
k Virile Newspaper
rms to parallel the history -of every
comes the reaction. Last week we
ugh the roaring Twenties; this week
e difficult problem of characterizing
Ied thirties.
percent salary cut.
The Great Depression depressed
more than the stock market. One
columnist bemoaned the demise of
the scintillating boom days at Caro
lina. The student body, he
claimed, were "'Meek as mice. twice
as nice, and dull as an M. A.
thesis." Back in '29
"'We lived and laughed and loved
in a fectival sublime.
\\'e gaily danced a rhapsody
in .larznocratic time."
Editor Prince, on the other hand,
thought that, "insofar as the de
pression has had the tendency of
cutting down student gayety and
pleasure with the resultant concen
tration of studies, it is a good
thing."
In 1932 came Roosevelt. and.
close on his heels, the "Colonel"
and A. Hitler. With Roosevelt
i came repeal, the New Deal, and
money. Repeal brought Carolina
no 3.2 beer. I the faculty decided it
w%ould not he served in the can
teen or in Steward's hall) only bot
ties with labels, the New Deal was
"insiduous," but the money, through
the l'\\A. hrought a swimming
pool and the New Library. The
new president of the University
brought a "square deal" for every
one, and Hitler brought new ma
terial for jokes.
By the spring of 1937, the old
parchment's columns saw a
brighter future for graduates, and
ith the new prosperity of the na
tion came the Golden Era of the
S.aniecock. 'T'he transition from the
rugged, unimaginative reign of
Sonales to the brilliant opulence
of ':Is-'It saw the Gamecock
emierge an irridcscent lively fowl,
as much a part of Carolina as Gonn
\\ilder or the .\laxcy monument.
Note
This is the third of a series of
three articles by \1 r. New dick on
:th history of The Gamecock. The
editors regret to point out that ex
igencies of time and unavoidable
staff deiciencies have forbidden the
application of the research into
hack issues and University history
that such a series requires in or
der to give the subject the atten
tion it deserve;. .\Mr. Newdick
has merely attempted to catch the
general trends of this publication
and to characterize them hv re
prniga few outstanding and
t. pical ecerpts.
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