University of South Carolina Libraries
Following T Body Cons1 ARTICLE IX Nominations Sec. 1. All nominations except that for May Queen shall be in the hands of the president of the student body by twelve o'clock noon of the Thursday immediately preceding the first day of election. A student body meeting shall be held on or be fore Tuesday immediately preceding the first day of election for the pur pose of nominating the candidates for the following offices: all student body offices, head cheer leader, social cabinet, .athletic advisory board, and the student union board. Each class president shall, on or before the same day, hold a meeting of his respective class for the pur pose of nominating candidates for class officers. Nominations may also be made by petition signed by live (5) members of the student body. Sec. 2. There shall be an annual beauty pageant of junior and senior co-eds for the purpose of selecting candidates for May Queen. No one other than those selected at the pageant shall be eligible for election to this office. The pageant shall be under the supervision of the Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity unless the student council, by a two-thirds vote, (eens it advisable to delegate this authority to sonic other organi zation. Surplus funds shall be de posited with the Treasurer of the University of South Carolina in a special student body fund. All or ders of disbursement shall be signed by the president of the student body upon being so authorized by a two thirds vote of the student council, and by the president of Kappa Sig ma Kappa upon a recommendation by a two-thirds vote of Kappa Sig- 1 ma Kappa. In case any other or ganization has charge of a pageant similar arrangements for surplus funds shall be made with such or ganization with re;pect to the sur plus from the pageant it supervised. Elections Sec. 1. All elections shall be con ducted under the supervision and control of the student council and all elections shall be conducted bv secret b.tllvt. The siudent wuni Ci shall have final jurisdictioin in all contested elections and shall have power to call special elections, sub ject to the provisions contained in this constitution. Sec. h. The election shall begin the first Monday in April, subject to change by a two-thirds vote of the student council if holidays in- - terfere. Notice if such change shall he given four (i) w%eeks prior to the date set by the change. Sec. l. The student body, cheer leader, May Queen. Garnet and Elack, athletic advisory board, social cabinct, and acadenne c lass elee t ions shall he held withlin a pleriod( ot t wo coniecultive wecek'. Sec'. 4. F.lections shall he heldl in the follow infg o rder: studnent body' oti ice rs and' ch eci lea der in Momn day', and M ay Queein. Garinet and1( Black, andt studen'lit union hoard on Tluesdlay of the first week; athletic adlvisory board anid social cabinmet on Mdoiiday anid class elections on Tlues dlay of the second we ek. If second( LEARN TI COPELA 1409 Main Street Men's Fines HATS - SHOES Ab BOOKS :-: OFFICE At THE R. L. I 1440 MAIN STREET ANY THING NEEDED CENTRAL DRUG CO. * 5197-PHONES-51 98 1204 Main Street he Student itution . ... races arc necessary, they shall be on Vednesday or Thursday in the same order. If a third race is neces sary, the student council shall choose the most suitable (lay, ob serving Section 3 of this Article. On the first Tuesday of elections there shall be chosen a student union board whose duties shall be to su pervise the activities of the Student Union building, the Carnegie Music Set, and other activities of a similar nature that may fall within its su pervision. This board shall be com posed of four student members, one of whom must he a female, two fac ulty tembers chosen frot the fac ulty, and one member from both the alumni and alunmae associations. One of the four student members hall be chosen from each of the fol lowing groups; rising sophomore class, rising junior class, rising senior class, and law school. Section 5. Freshmen academic elections shall be conducted under the supervision of the student coun cil within the first two months of the first semester. At least four (4) weeks' notice of such election shall be given. Sec. 6. Class elections in the School of Law shall be under the supervision and control of the Law Federation. Sec. 7. the editor, managing edi or, and business manager of the l ]amecock and the Garnet and Black shall be chosen according to the specifications of the respective con ititutions of those organizations. Sec. 8. To be elected a candidate ust receive a majority of the votes ast except as would be necessary .o comply with Section 4 regarding lie required minimum of one female )n the Student Union Board. If no emale receives a majority in the tudent union board election, the )tie receiving the highest number of tes shal automatically be clccted. 3therwise, in case no candidate hall receive a majority of the votes :ast, a special election shall be held it a date set by the student council witlt respect to Section 5 of this Ar ticle. 'The two candidates receiving tie highest number of votes in the general election shall he candidates or such otfice or offices in the special election. Sec. 9. All balb .ts shall be kept in the college 'atnit for a pen'd of live da.s following the date of elcc ion. ''hey shall then be turned over to the presidettt of the student body A ho shall itnimmediately destroy them. In case an election is contested, tot ice mut he filed w itht thle studett icoumncil within fo ur dlays after the late of election. 'Tlie sttudent cont -il shall then take charge of the hlal lots and shall investigate the barges of the persons contesting Ilie elction. TFhe cottntil shall or rletr a tnew electiotn if it deetms' wise, antd the results of the tnew election shtall he considered final. See. fit. The terms of ofTice of sutcc ess fitl canid(ates for the oftiices f thle U n iversityv of SouthI C'arolina chmall begin totL later than the third Wcdne sday immunediately foillo wintg the first \\'edntesday~ of election week. -IE WAY ND CO. Columbia, S. C. 4 Clothing ID FURNISHINGS ID SCHOOL SUPPLIES RYAN CO. - PHONE 5017 IN THE CLASSROOM WEBB'S ART STORE * PICTURE FRAMES ARTIST MATERIAL * 1431 Main t.. Phone 2-9_40a ARTICLE XI Amendments Sec. 1. Proposed amendments to this constitution and by-laws shall be submitted in writing at a student body meeting and shall be re d three times, no reading within nt interval of two days from the pre ceding reading. It shall require a majority vote of those ?resent to pass the first and second reading. It shall require a two-thirds vote of those present to pass the third and final reading, provided at least two hundred (200) members of the stu dent body are present. Proposed amendments may be contested and debated only at the second and third readings. Sec. 2. All proposed amendments to this constitution and by-laws shall be posted on the University bulletin board and.-publilehd in the Gamecock at least one week prior to the (lay set for the first reading. ARTICLE VII By-laws Sec. 1. Rules contained in Rob ert's Rules of Order shall govern the student body meetings in all cases to which they are applicable and in which they are not incon sistent with this constitution and by-laws. Sec. 2. Business may be trans acted by a majority of those pres ent in a student body meeting, pro vided that at least twenty-five (25) members of the student body are present. Sec. 3. This constitution and by laws shall be incorporated in a per manent record book of the secre tary-treasurer of the student body and shall be permanently preserved in the office of the Dean of the Col lege of Arts and Science, Dean of Women, the University Library, the ['resident of the University of South arolina, the Director of Student Activities, the Dean of Administra tion, and the Euphradian and Clariosophic Society halls. It shall he the duty of the secretary-treas urer of the student body to keep these copies up-to-date with respect to amecndmient See. 4. This constitution shall be published in the Gamecock each semester. Sec. h. This constitution shall go into effect as soon as it has been ratilied. Adopted by Faculty Novemher 5, 1940 Ad,.pted by Bloard of Trustees )eeentbcr 11, 1940 Ratilied ly Student Council Fcbruarr 1. 1911. APPLICATIONS FOR DIPLOMAS All students who expect to graduate or receive certificates from the University in June, 1945 are asked to come by the registrar's office between April 2 and 14 to file applications for diplomas. Students will first pay their fees at the treasurer's office and then take the receipts to the registrar's office in Maxcy. Former Assistant To. Dean Of Women Is YMCA Secretary NI rs. If ugh F'erguison, thle former "Dlink"' Gaines and f'rimer assist ant dean of womlen at lie I niiver sityf Sonuth Carolina, is now the niational YWC'A(AsCc ret ary to the I 't at Monitgomeiry, Ala. Sne "D)ink" Iceft Carolina in D)e cetub er 19 52 to be married, she has; taiugh~lt schoolI in three differenitI town ii. organized G'iri Reserv'e grouips mi v'arrius localities, and wo rked fo r seve(ral dliv isions of the Corner Main and College ONLY ONE BLOCK FROM THE CAMPUS Always Open TODDLE HOUSE 1419 Gervais - CAROLJNA ENGRAVING OQ~ !Coed Associatiot Business In Dow, "Experience is the best teacher' said the stern maxim of the old fashioned copybooks, but two co-ed; at the University of South Carolina are sure that their recent experiencc taught little but gained a lot of laughs. Their question of the week al present is "Have you ever hammered on Main Street" When the girls of Carolina started stepping into men's places with their Powder Bowl girl football classic, the Co-ed Association backed them wholeheartedly. Students were ap pointed to attend to a breakfast given the players, to decorate and muake signs, and to erect a ticket booth on the Main Street of Columbia to sell tickets to the game to the towns people. The two co-eds were told to -accomplish the latter deed, but not how. And so they started. The great day began when the two wandered to breakfast, loaded down with posters and paper, paint, thumb tacks, scissors and glue. Of course the campus stared, but then almost anything can happen on a college campus. The University, it seems, had a booth available, and so was trans portation and permission from the mayor of Columbia to erect the booth. Around the campus the girls dashed, making arrangements and setting the time for their arrival on Main Street. Kind professors let them out of class a little early to carry their charge uptown. Into the back of the truck from the Marshall's Office the girls climbed, holding on to the booth which seemed in danger of slipping Carolina Granted New Scholarships Future Teachers Eligible For Pan-American Courses W. H1. Ward, Director of the Ex tension Division has announced the awarding of a grant to the Univer sity from the Office of the Co-ordi nator of Inter-American Affairs, which will be used in the summer school on a fellowship basis for te achers interested in Latin America, who wish to be better prepared to teach the students of the public schools. The unitied course will consist of a workshop in materials of instruc tion, a course in Latin American his tory, anl a course in Latin Ameri cani geography. A1! of these courses will carry graduate credit. and they will rimu during the eight week sum mer school sessin)i. Fifteen full scholarships are avail able through the co-operation of the University of South Carolina, and in adlditioni there will be io fellowships cov ering the cost of two of the courses. All teachers who desire to alpply for these fellowships may oh taini application blanks from the Ex tenisioni D ivision. "Unlique" Powder Bowl Game Impresses Life Reporter "This weekend has reminded us of our exciting college days", said Miarie Hansen and Zelda Gottlieb, Life Miagazine photographer and re porter wvho covered University of Carolina activities last weekend. The representatives were im pressedl by the beauty of the campuw and the cooperativeness of the stu dents. Mirs. Hansen, who recentl3 madle a screen test in Hollywood remarked, that Carolina was ar ideal place for a movie. "I have beer expecting someone to shout 'Lights action, take' several times this week endl", she continued. Trhere is no way to determin whether the story of the Powde Bowl game will appear as a fea ture mn Life as yet. However, both are keeping their fingers crossed hIdiss Gottlieb saidl only one wor4 could descru>e their assignment unique. CAROLYN Be( Found ex< PHONOGRA CL-ASSICAL - POPUL.AR FOREIGN - sEPI) WILSON RAC 1835MAAINt STREET Establishes ztown Columbia out as they rounded every corner. Down Main Street they went, while people stared and the Army cheered. At the selected corner they hopped off, to stop traffic while the booth was unloaded, and the work began. Then coies the question, "Have you ever hammered on Main Street?" It was impossible to decorate the booth before carrying it downtown, and the girls planned to do it later, never dreaming of the disturbance they would create. There they were, in the midst of the passers-by, obli vious to everything except the posters and streams of garnet and black which they were attaching to the booth. Help in plenty was offered, and many an obliging man hammered for a while. Or exactly when one girl cussed at a bruised finger or viciously attacked a stubborn nail, there came the eternal question, "What are you doing?" Patiently they explained the first 5o times, but they soon learned. At last they nailed up a poster and continued. The ticket selling: why, the re sponse was wonderful. Two Marines stationed themselves to draw a crowd, until they decided that they had rather go drink beer. And one eager soldier was seen chasing potential buyers down the street, still insisting. But by the end of the three day life of the ticket booth for the Powder Bowl game, the booth looked good, and the sales had soared. And that was enough for the co-eds, although they will never hammer on Main Street again. Hubert H. Biser USC A lumnus, Honored Overseas Hubert H. Biser, who attended the University of South Carolina for one year before entering the service on March 17, 1945, has been authorized to wear the Distin guished Unit Badge with one bronze cluster and promoted to the rank of technical sergeant, it was an nounced by the 15th AAF Head quarters in Italy. Sgt. Biser is a ienber of a veter an liberator group that has twice been cited for 'outstanding per formance of duty in armed conflict with the enemy." His group received its original gold-rimmed blue ribbon for an attack on the prufening aircraft factory at Regensburg, Germany, on Feb. 25. The cluster was added for a mission over the Ptnesti, Rumania, oil refineries on April 6. The citations read, in part: For Regensburg: "Notified to prepare . .. maximum aircraft, per sonnel worked feverishly, enthusi astically, and with untiring intensity . . he tremecndouis material dlam age inflicted . contributed to the curtailment of aircraft production by the enemy at a time of great importance." For Ploesti: "U nder- the most difficult andl trying conditions on the ground and (despite extremely adverse wveather cond(itionls in the air, the group . . . successfully de livered a devastating blow to the important enemy oil installations". "Tile grinm determinlation... and heroic courage of the combat crews, together with the profes sional skill and devotion to duty of ground p)ersonnel . . . are out standing in the history of aerial wvarf are." Sgt. Biser was graduated from Dreher High School'in Columbia in May, 1941. He attendled the University for one year before he entered the service, receiving his engineer training at Keesler Field, Miss., and his gunner's wings at Laredo, Trex. Capital Drug Store 1213 Gervais Phone 8177 Excellent Fountain Service nutiful Garments cIusively at 'n's PH RECORDS - HILL-DILLY - WESTERN - BOOGIE-WOOGIE )lO COMPANY PHONE 5a45 Staff Editors Of Annual Announced Recent Replacements On Garnet And Black Listed Graduation, commissioning, and resignation have just about coin pleted their -havoc-wrecking pro cesses with campus organizations and the 1945 Garnet and Black staff has been almost completely reor ganized. Anna Darby Tison, editor of the publication, recently an nounced the staff heads who will serve until the book leaves the presses. Jim King replaces George Hover as Business Manager. Bob Dressel and Betty Knowles are in charge of the photography, while George Deisel and John Cauthen serve as art editors. The various sections, with the editors who will complete the an nual, are: Dedication, Betty Murphy, Rosilind Spong; Divisions, Betty Pennell, Mary Ramsey; Ad ministration, Patsy Patrick, Edna Hill Haynes; Navy, Chuck Voight, Elise Ready; Law school, Ruth Goldsmith; Senior Class, Bill Moore, Helen Leppard and junior Class, Mary Varn, Toozie Johnson. Also, Sophomore Class, Howie House, Jim King; Freshman Class, Jo Seideman; Lib Cole; Sports, Walter Hamm, Joe Guess; Co-ed Sports, Toni Simpson, Janet Crego; Publications, Peggy Williams, Mar garet Fowler; Organizations, Jerry Robinson; Beauty Section, Merial Black, Eleanor McCall; Sororities, Jeune Good, Nell Mayer; Fraterni ties, Ernest-Davis, Marion Smith. "We hope that the annual will be out on time," the editor said, "and it will be if everything continues to run as smoothly as it has been." Recent War Battle Pictures Released The Audio-Visual Aids B.:reau, which is connected with the Exten sion Division of the University of South Carolina, has issued a bulle tin of Army and Navy war informa tion. This bulletin contains actual combat films taken by service pho tographers in the field, and they have been released for public con sumption to give the workers, of America a better understanding of how they are supporting the fight ing men. Included in the release are the following films: "Prelude to \War," "Nazis Strike," "Divide and Con quer," "Battle of Britain," and "Battle of Russia." In connection with the seventh War Loan Drive, which will be gin on May 7 the bureau is pre paring a list of films to be shown during the advance publicity caim paign beginning in April. These films have been released by the Office of Var Information and in clude combat films as well as some on post war p)lanninlg. During the month of Mlarch the bmureau has shown several groups of films to the students in the de partnment of political science at the U)niversity. These include, "Survival of People,'' "Commerce Around the Coffee Cup" "Theit Airplane Changes the World Map." A filn entitled "basic Typing," was given to the stud(ents in the commerce dlepartment. BUSINESS 5 920 Main Street COMPLETI INKS - PENCILS - DRAWIN YOUR MOST CONY~ APPOI NTMEN THE BEST PRODUCT FROM T MANNI1N4 Photog rape SPECIALIZING IN GIRLS', ( Office and Residei Columbia Office Supply Co. PRINTING Commercial Stationery - Office Equipment 1112 LAnY STEET PHONE 516 Clario Backs Story Contest A short story contest will be spon , sored by the Clariosophic Literar Society this spring, repeating the precedent established two semesters ago. All undergtaduates arc urged lo submit as many entries as they may wish. Each entry must be original, and may not exceed four thousand words in length. All entries must be typed in double-line spacing on one side of the page only. Entries must be submitted to an officer of the Clariosophic, or mailed to Box 543 before May 15. Aw&rds will be: first prize, teti dollars; second prize, five dollars; and honorable mention.' The decision of the judges, Dr. Babcock's short story class, will be final. All awards will be presented at a joint banquet of the Ilypatian and Clariosophic Societies in late May. The proposed changes in the con stitution of the student body were analyzed in a round table discussion at a meeting of the Society Tuesday evening. )ick Vanderveen presided over the discussion. Seated at the table were Ierb l3eitel, Ed Boucher, Ernest Davis, Jimmy Partlow, and Bob Peters. The changes under dis cussion were those reconmendationsa made by the committee appointed by Student Body president Willie P. Horton at the first of the year. Each man at the sable had studied two or more of the proposed changes thor oughly. and a great deal ( stimulat ing infortnation was brought out. Coed Finds Pearl In Oyster Stew Eats Bowl After Bowl For String Of,Pearls "I love oysters," said one Univer sity of South Carolina co-ed, so I think I'll just have a big bowl of oyster stew." She hanged the menu shut and gazed around the local hasherv as the waitress vanished in search of one bowl of oyster :;tew. It was piping hot and it looked de licious, so in our co-ed'dived. lHalf of the bowl had gone the way of all good stews, when she disco ered there was more in her stew than oysters. After one careful search the stew proved to be camalouge for one lone peari, which apparently was un harmed by the cooking. Althoumgh tilled tn capacity with stew the girl kept asking for bowl after bowl of oyster'. "'You certainly mwist lov e CIysters, the waitress ventured a fler her third tripl to tIhe k itchien. "No," was the co-ed's anuswser. "I found a pecarl ini the tirst howl and( I thought this woul lhe the cheapest way (of butyinig a string of real pearls !" iUPPLY CO. Columbia, S. C. E LINE OF NOTE BOOKS and G PAPER ENIENT LOCATION Any Time TS: Any Place Any Price HE POOREST RAW MATERIAL 3 HARRIS :er DeLuxe :IVILIANS, V-12 & NROTC's ice: Tenement 20 ECONOMY *~ DRUG STORE CUT RATE DRUGS SODAS AND LUNCH EON ETTE Five Points * Phone 8119 Motorcyce elver y