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(ALSO, WELCOR FAe GAP#I o CROWING FOR JREATER UNIVERSITY OF 1 s. TH CAROLINA Member of Associated Collegiate Press Distributor of Collegiate Digest Founded- January 30, 1908, with Robert Elliott Gonzales as the first editor, "The Gamecock" is published by and for the students of the University of South Carolina weekly, on Fridays, during the college year except holidays and examinations. Editorial and business offices are located in the east basement of Sims dormitory. Advertising rates are 65 cents per column inch. Deadlines are: edi torial, 3 p. m., Mondays; society, 3 p. m., Tuesdays; news and sports, 12 a. m., Wednesdays. Advertising deadline: 3 p. m., Mondays. The opinions expressed by columnists and letter writers are not necessarily those of "The Game- I cock." Publishing does not constitute an endorse ment although the right to edit is reserved. STAFF Editor . Bill Routh Managing Editor.......... . Bob Isbell Business Manager ..Harry W. Hiott, Jr. EDITORIAL STAFF News Editor .............Carroll Gilliam Society Editor. Belinda Collum Feature Editor .............. . Jean Davis Co-Sports Editors Don Barton, Ken Baldwin Exchange Editor . ..........Norine Corley Cartoonist .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .Sam Boylston REPORTERS: Jack Morgan, Jean Hill, Tilli Young, Jack Matthews, Henry Walker. Says Gaston, Bernard Massing. Llbby Cole, Jane Dowe. Lynn Couch. Pat KIng, Beb Horton, Helen Childers, Jimmy Crawford. Ida S. Webb, Marguerite Webb, Holly Beck. Robert E. Lee. Robert Gillespie, Rupert Blocker, Arthur Rosenbium, Carolyn Busbee, Alva C. Singley, D. L. Ounter, Lee Butler. Vilma Hugeins, Carolyn Aicorn. Barbara MoBwain, F. J. Rodgers, Betty Jean Strom, Betty Ann Putnam. Ann Moore. Laura Speed. Ann Rogers. Pat Rem. Betty Clark, Jo Ass Deilinger, and Frances Harper. Now Read This Official Organizatic (Editor's note: All announce- at the church. Co ments must be registered at the fun! information desk In Maxcy lobby - before being accepted for publi- The Episcopal ( cation. Deadlines for the forth- ice is held every' coming Issue of October 31 Is 12 p. m, inFlinn Ei a. m. Monday, October 27.) The Hillel D will' meet Thurs4 Carolina Christian Service Club ~~ n,I h r meets every Friday at 7 p. in., in Flinn Hall--all students are wel- IAlprosm come!ing, please put number and clas: The Euphrosynean Literary So- card and send i ciety will meet Thursday, Oct. 30, Box 2125, Campi at 5 p. m. In Euphradian Hall, top floor of Harper College. The Euphrai ciety meets ever Wesley Foundation meets every p n nHre Bunday at 10 a. mn. at the Wash-p.minHre ington Street Methodist Church. Sons are invited In addition, the Foundation holds an Informal recreation party each The Spartanbu Saturday night from '7:80 to 10:80 will meet every ci F ju RE, TIGERS!!) Ti pr Eley, How You, Bengals? No kidding, tho! Clemson men. Carolina is more than glad to welcome you to its cam- Y pus! H It is only natural that we show our spirit )n this occasion; we've been doing it for gif years. We hope, however, that it will con .inue to remain on the friendly basis which I ias marked our rivalry since resuming our nterrupted relations in 1906. pal We are now on the threshold of a new era, the mbodying a program of good relations. In '" L939 we tried a similar movement, and ra nothing concrete came from it. This time, :hough, we earnestly hope that we can for- F( ;et our petty differences and get together Th n such a plan. At least, that is, with the ,xception of a wee two-hour period once L year, on our Big Thursday! Anyway, Carolina and The Gamecock| rreet you to our university. Our campus An s open to you. Through your Blue Key chap ;er and ours, and also other organizations, mtertainment has been planned for you, SI Nhich began with last night's dance. And .here is more yet, all in the hopes that our the )etter-relations program will succeed, an So, welcome, Tigers!! |wo The Only Alternative| At the beginning of the semester, The E4 Eamecock notified all organizations that in ublishing all social layouts for dances, etc., of they would be billed for costs of engrav- ke ng. This move met with considerable oppo- Ns sition. col Thus The Gamecock takes the only alter- T.b mative, charging for additional costs above i" :ertain specifications. In the future, all pie- tw Lures of dance sponsors must be five by ;even inch glossy prints in order to be pub- L ished free of 'charge. Any other size or ~omposition will necessitate processing by se the engravers, and ,must be charged ac- in, ~ordingly. g, / . in n Announcements, me and join the Tuesday of the month in 101 Le. st gare College at 7 p. mn. The next meeting will be held Tuesday, Oc ommunldn Serv. tober 21. All Spartanburg County Si 'hursday at 7:15 students are urged to attend. L all. * - --st Clariosophic Literary Society seussion Group will meet every Tuesday night at lay, Oct. 30 at 7 p. mn., on third floor of Legare fi of Life Temple. College. You are lnvited to attend. " erested in fene- Your devotional period is ob- e( your name, box served every afternoon, Monday schedule on a through Friday, from 1:80 to 1:60 to Bill Keith, p. mn., at the Baptist' Student Cen- zi is Mall. ter. Every student is invited to 4 -.. attend. y n Literary So r' Tuesday at 7 Your Vespers Is held every Sun College. All per. day at 7 p. m. in the Chapel-- fl to attend. Welcome to all. e L rg County Club The Canterbury Club supper first and third will ha gfvan every Sna)A. a 6 'our views on fashions to the din DICTA v ALOUYSIS Miss Hook interrupted at this point, saying "How distressing professorl Isn't there something we can do about this 'deplorable situation ?" The prof leaned a gleaming eye In Lyms direction and said, "That's left up to the individual, Miss Hook." FEATHER OF THE WEEK This column takes pride in I gathering a whole bouquet of Gar net and Black feathers from the .orso of the 'well-known chicken' md bestowing same on a man who eopardized his position as student ody prexy on this campus by I !inally making the decision that Jarolina would continue its tra litional march down the Main, and >urning of the tiger. We know hat this decision was mhde for he best interests of the student )ody. So, to you, Palmer Mc krthur, a bouquet of Garnet and 3lack feathers. E FRIEND OF MINE ... . t once knew a young gal named HARRIS, Whom nothing could ever em barrass, r Till the bath salts one day, In the tub where she lay, rurned out to be plaster of paris. A WORD TO THE WISE ... "Is it true that we have 4,600 tudents on the University campus, )ut no student body? "-Anony nous. EPITAPH . . . Jnder this sod and beneath these trees ies the body of Jonathan Pease. lis soul isn't here, only his pod;a le's shelled his peas and gone to God. THAT IS ENOUGH ... As a radio patrol car stopped ut front the other day, the fol towing call was heard coming from its two-way speaker: "Calling car 13, car 13, go to College and Sumter Streets. Wom an running down the street with out any clothes. That is all." There was a pause. Then came this after thought! "All other cars stay on your beats! That is all." First Presbyterian Church-Wel come to all students. The Canterbury tea is given every Wednesday at 5 p. m. in Trinity Episcopal Parish House. The Carolina Review meets every Wednesday at 4 p. m. in 306 McKissick Library. Come on, you students, and try out! Every body's welcome. Carolina Spirit, Inc., the Booster Club, that Is, meets every Wed neday at 4:30 in the Chapel Come one, come all. Plans for the Clemson week are to be dis cussed. Kappa Delta sorority will hold a drop-in and patio dance Wednes day, Oct. 29, from 7:30 to 11 p. m. in the KD room (Sims Col lege), -in honor of their new pledges. The student body is cordi ally invited. PILLOW To POST Now, father was the keeper of the Pawley's light, He met a mermaid one dark night. The results of this were offspring three. One was a fish 'and the' others were we, which is why we put out to sea, for 'twas said that in deepest, darkest, equa torial Africa the wild boar hunting was quite the thing. (What a pig!) Our ship was the trusty "Fanny Barnacle", better known as "Old Rock Bottom". She was an old tin can with the motto: "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead, for we have not yet begun to fright." Our course was due south and our speed all knotted up. The weather was fowl (albatrosses, you know) and our ship doused herself with every wave. (Water, water every where and not a decent chaser.) The ship was tossed around like cracker crumbs in a sneeze, but after we passed the Cape of Good Hope, she Rhodesia. Durban, our first port of call, was the last time we saw the rolling sea, for then we headed for a tour of the mines of Johannesburg. Platinum mines, gold mines, diamond mines, coal mines-acres and acres of them, and all mines. While wandering through the pits we ran across a hard bitten old miner and got to talking shop with him. He was .omparing the different kinds of mining and saying, "You an tell a diamond even in the rough", when a breath-taking, Fair-haired babe eased by. "Who is she?" we interrupted. "Oh, she's Katrina Vonder Vere", he replied, scarcely rlancing up, and continued, "But you never can tell about latinum; it might be a precious metal and then it might )e a common ore". Tiring of his shop talk, we decided to safari to the land >f the Ubangis to hunt big game. (Big game, little game, ve're game, you game?) For months of the most terrible iardships we veldt our way northward. Only the giraffes aved our lives, as they always led us to the water holes. :The drinks were always on the giraffes). Finally we reached the edge of the hot dry country and plunged into the jungle. Wild boar proved scarce and even hough we bagged two pygmies, things looked dark. How ver, as we approached the Ubangi country, the complexion f things became brighter even though we had occasional rouble with head hunters. One of the camp followers had run-in with a boa constrictor (a masher in a snake skin) ut got off withqut a scratch. The viper bit adder, but only attlered her. At long last we saw signs of human life but somewhere ve had gone amiss. It was the land of the Udrivits (Chevro et?), but since we were so tattered and torn from our long ourney we decided to camp and immediately built some ough shacks to. live in. It happened that the night we arrived, a big feast had een planned in honor of the coming war with the Weown urs. (They could afford it.) The Udrivits had studebaker* nd benz nashing their teeth in anticipation all day long. 'hey offered us..mango collins but we were afraid we'd get tewed, so abstained. There was also donkey barbecue, of vhich, though it did not look enticing to us, we partook. One of the highlights of the evening was when Tondelayo end her sister Ludlu, the chief's daughters, appeared and lid a dance in our honor. Tondelayo (she'd love you if mu atto), was undoubtedly the more beautiful because she vas a half caste. (Half girl, half breed.) Later we took Tondelayo back to our camp and fed her me food and nectar, and made a forward pass, but got hrown for a ten yard loss. All of a sudden a series of screams and yells were heard ~rom the village. Running forward, we saw that a huge go 'illa had dropped from a tree, seized Ludlu and was carry ng her off into the jungle. "Don't monkey with me, you ape," moaned Ludlu, as the ieast made for the wood. "Frankly," meowed Tondelayo, who had always been ealous of her sister's charms, "I don't see what he sees Since it was almost morning before the excitement died lown, we decided that it was no use to try to sleep, and >rganized a little hunting party, Tondelayo and her father accompanying us. She, being a creature of the wild herself, was somewhat mn sympi4thy with the animals. This first be :ame apparent when we spied a herd of zebra. "I weel get reed of zebra", she proclaimed, an'd as every ne turned to watch, the chief admonished, "That sarong!I" This remark made us realize that the ire of the chief had been raised. "It's too hot here, chief," we mumbled, fingering our re spective Jugulars. "We got to Russia off to Siberia; Soviet-. usgro. Abbysynian1" O. K., Mac. You'd better state y pline committee. OBITER By BENJAMI] DOTBALL .. . My five-year-old nephew had At seen his first football game, d the excitement and cheering de a great impression on him. at night after he had said his ayers, he added: God bless Mummie, God bless Daddy, God bless Uncle Ben, Rah! Rah! Rah! E MEN OF LEARNING, EAR MY WORDS ... A woman's beauty is not a t to man; it's a bribe! KNOW ... f an islpnd in the vast ex ise of the South Seas where re are no taxes, no unemploy nt, no beggars, no crime, no iger, no swing orchestras, no lios, and ... no inhabitants. )OD FOR THOUGHT... ere -was a young soldier of .eeds Lo swallowed a package of seeds n a month, silly ass, le was covered with grass, d he couldn't sit down for the reeds. EAKING OF EATING.... Ambrose Pierce once defined word 'edible': "Good to eat, I wholesome to digest, as a rm to a toad, a toad to a snake make to a pig, a pig to a man, I a man to a worm." 30NOMICS . .. ['he prof. asked his class to give rious definitions or examples how the world's population was >t at an average by Mother ture in order that production 2 ld take cara of the demand. e following examples were 'en: "Death from natural causes, ease, war, starvation, and... in beds." E'NN HOOK... One of our more advanced tolars in, Economics was listen r to the prof's lecture with the eatest interest. The prof was plaining that "There are 275 idren born to every 100 morons the world, and there are only children born to every 100 Ilege graduates." m. in the Parish House of *inity Episcopal Church-All udents are welcome. The Hillel Society meets every mnday at 3 p. m. at the Tree of fe Synagogue-Welcome to all udents. The Newman Club meets every est and third Tuesday of the onth in 101 Legare College at 30 p. m. All students are wel sme. The staff of the Humor Maga ne will meet every Monday at 80 p. m. on the second floor of Iinn Hall. Kappa Sigma Kappa service aternity will hold its meetings rery Tuesday at 8 p. m. in 101 egare College. ~Westminster Fellowship meets