University of South Carolina Libraries
e , O45n '3 ee ... a spoke a week .. . By MARLENE RAST Now that the football season has gotten into full swing Carolina students are really beginning to roam. hA's turned out in force for the Furman game in Greenville last Friday night, being given a supper at the Kappa Alpha house (Iota chapter) before the game and a drop-in after the game. Actives and pledges attending were: Billy Fairev. Bill Rowe, Henry Parnelle, George Henry, Walter Robinsoii, Stuart Hope, Joe Berry, "Flaps" Jumper, Kemp lilyers. Joe Savitz, Henry Eddy, Louis Houck, Jack Breckenridge. Bill Penn, John Colonna, Jimmy Moore, Bob Milling. Sam IRay, Billy Upshur, John Mason, Jimmy Mason, Eddie Stubbs and Andy Gary. Alumni attending were: "Red" Coleman, "lam" Jones, Cecil Gray, Harold McCord, Rut Osborne. J r., Bobby Osborne, Calhoun Mays, "Oofus" Kelly. \elsev Foster, Don Sherard, Bobby Harrison, Willie Rush and Ilenry Priester. Pi Kappa Ailpha's seemed well represented at the Furman game alse. PiKA's and their dates were: Bobby Waites with Joan James, ND; David Vcst with Wimpy Webb, DZ; Walter Roberts vith Nancy Clarke, Pi Phi; Carroll McDuffy with Joan Anderon, Pi P1hi; Dave Thompson with Lillian Dillard, a Coker graduate; and Ken Lannigan with Marietta Taylor. Forrost Aboott, G. 13. Carter, Frank Martin, Jimmy Smith, Quay Wilihfrd, Roger Kirven, Joe Dennis. Cannon Mathews, and Bunk Cuxe weren't doing too bad on their own. McBryde Brotherhoed got their social season off with a bang last week with a dance from 9 to 1 at the Pinewood Club. It sounded like a wond,erful time with lots of refreshments and a huge open fire. Officers for the Brotherhood are: Paul Greer, Prcsident ; Ronald Adams, Vice-President; H. P. Smith, Secretarv- Treasurer; and Bubba Ard, Social Chair man. e1ti, i att the affair were Mitch Graham, Quincey Nan armn. 1:: d ev iston, Billy Platt, Jack Herndon, Jin :hiu\ .):tne Almv, Barbara Derrick, Jerry Hartman, Geor:i I1 1linan, and June Marshall. On Wednesday, Oc tu ei .:;, 1' kappa Sigma held a lawn supper at alumni brother N. A larter's home, Idlewood, in honor of the ruh }ri:tii Ferguson of Brooklyn, N. Y., a sophomore, is a flea li de oI the Phi Nap's. .J u t l;ail tha; Mill Melba Claire Cannon, Sims second wVest=r", w wering the beautiful diamond of Mr. Jack Davis L f '. >iuniia. Lambda Chi's must have been highly en tertaiined at the tarolina-Georgia Tech game week before last ,ecttu: tia are still talking about it. Those taking in th' h.. a tmes were Jim Findley, Jim Kondorous, Sam Gal,, :, .1 o. L:ldy, .Jim Ilinson, Ken Hill, Pete Kon duJroun.. i1r 111t:a l)ezi.. .ones, Dennis Dellinger, Ernie M e w :\\aid "( .\Iuetts. li kA Dic kie Leapt rott and Curtis Williamson attended the I11i l' 'r1i:11 at (' nverse on Saturday night. lrf 1N'n u1i-t \ as reeiitly activated in Pi Beta Phi 1,r:t \'. I.ldnbia i'i's tiunst have stayed on the go all the last I , At ki n1on uarried Mary Denny, Pi Phi, Sat t1rd11' a i !i t. Otobelar 7. 'I .bea VoUle seen running around the campus with he wi t bxe.- underi t heir arms are not selling anything but1 arie L.::nl la Chli's going t hrough ''Hell'' week. Robert L4angstun. Li.v ihar'dson, David Ball, John Youngblood, l)eins .1a.-. M Jkhuo, Son Kinnon, J. T. Mauldin, and .Jackl N Kicr are the (characters going through this n titim i On. l'i :p AMpha wviil entertain rushees wvith a spaghetti upperltt ti b eiuin. Thursdlay night. Frta I . lubh-y, Tr'i IDelt, went to Dur'ham last weekend - al f t he t raveling and marriages we've up for this week. If you have any news you 'W t iS hear~i about it at THE GAMECOCK 43 D-A-N-C-E n T'o The "Artistry KENTON iDan'e (Orche8tra * U nor Feru n * Jay Johnston ** Ibiro4 \h ar *lirt Varsalonua \' t i' pper ab.oe * ShllIy Manne (Col umilAa Town-ship A uditorium Advance Tickets Only $1.50 owon '4ale4 a11 \\111 Id lajmo ihotel Pharmacy, Bradford U4(erordE Shop. .ilhanI'4. krell4 Radio and Appliance Co., I 7 I2 1la;~ in n 5 PointM b,ran.ch. .d,r.missina vi loor naigh'ait dOance $29 a German Stuc Impression By JACKIE SOUTHERIAND This semester a new German ex change student has been introduced to the campus. He is Peter Kahl from Hamburg, Germany. Kahl was born 21 years ago in Hamburg. His family consists of his older brother, his mother, and his schoolteacher father. The blond German came to the university to major in education. He plans to teach German and English. His studies have included a year and a half at the Univer sity of Hamburg and three months at a teachers' college in England. It was in England and at his job as a translator that he learned his English. After his year at Caro lina he expects to return to Ger many, continue his studies, and then teach in a university. To come to the United States, Kahl had to face the competition of many others of his countrymen. He underwent three interviews be fore teachers and military officials Canterbury Club Adopts Program To Serve Others Canterbury Club, Episcopal stu dent group, adopted a long-range program designed to serve resi dents living on and around Rich land and Huger streets, at a meet ing held October 1, Betty Crews, student director, announced. This program is being carried out in conjunction with St. Mat thews Mission which is affiliated with Trinity Episcopal Church of Columbia. Worship services will be held each Sunday at the mis sion. Canterbury Club meets at 5:30 each Sunday evening in Trinity Episcopal Church for worship serv ice and at 6 p. m. for dinner. Officers for the club are Cor nelia Schultz, president; Corky Melchar, vice-president; Harry Bull, secretary; Jimmy Sims, treas urer; and Frances LaBorde, pro gram chairman. New Production Opens Last Week At Town Theater By KEN POWELL "Goodbye, My Fancy," a delight ful three-act comedy opened at the Town Theater Wednesday evening. The play, which was written by Fay Kanin, is the first of this, the theater's 32nd season. Roy Lind plays the leading part of the college president and Ruth Gottlieb plays opposite him in the role of Agatha Reed. Three university students are also included in the cast. They are Mary Anna "Sparky" Elliott, Helene Firetag, and Don Reddick. The comedy drama will run through next Tuesday night. Pi Beta Phi Holds Drop-In On Sunday Pi Beta Phi social sorority will hold a campus-wide dIrop-in Sun riay from 8 to 9 p. mn., Carolyn Alorni, president, announced. The affair will be held in the sorority .hap)ter room in Sims college. T~he first newspaper to emp)loy womfeni was the ''New England Courant" in 1722, but one of the women is supposed to have been Benjamin Franklin. In an eighteenth-century news maper marriage was classified as mfe of the miseries of mankind. PhIone 2-9250 918 MAIN STREET Joe Patrone's Collegiate Inn Speci isLng in STE SJ~ ICKENW ,SPAGHETTI * * * Dine and Dance In the "GAMECOCK" ROOM ent Gives F America and then had to write a paper on what he expected from and what he wanted to get from his stay over here. The young German's reaction to the American people seems to be the same as that of many other visitors. He is impressed with their free-from-worry attitude and the concern with material values. The students and citizens are much friendlier over here than in Eu rope, he says, and he likes the atmosphere of comradeship and easy familiarity. As far as American women are concerned, he has made only a superficial observations, but he has noticed that they wear more make up than do their European counter parts. But he said that he hopes to have many opportunities to study them more closely. Kahl spoke at the Junior-Senior 'Y' September 29 and at the Sophomore 'Y' meeting October 5. College Students Illiterate Says Yale Professor New Haven, Conn. - (I.P.) Charging that too many students entering the nation's law schools at the present time are "illiterate and ignorant," Prof. Wesley A. Sturges, dean of the Yale Uni versity Law School, recently de clared that these college graduates cannot "effectively read, spell or write the English language, and even more, to read, spell or write any foreign language." Sturges listed the following specifications of why he felt that students entering law scihouis do not have the necessary back ground: The first is the "widespread il literacy" prevailing among college men. Second is that "college graduates are destitute of vocabulary and un derstanding of semantics." Third, Dean Sturges said that students "indulge in herd instinct to jump for the answer of con troverted issues with relative in difference toward the process of deriving the answer and with little caution toward the problems of verifying that process." Fourth, he continues, the stu dents are accordingly "gullible, ex tremists, non-critical and scarcely deliberative in their judgments." Trhere is a music collection in McKissick Library. Itecord albums there may be borrowed just as the books are. This music library was a gift of the Carnegie Foun dation. The university started its exist ence in 1805 with the staggering niumber of 29 stuidents.a For allrud capuN isAnrrow The'rom and to give you long rug gabardines, colorful che all washable I See your A RROW, UNDEWEAR . AnD.,... Student Faculty Relations Improve With Suggestions Madison, Wis.- (I.P.) -Two chapters in the recently completed 227-page "report card" of the Uni versity of Wisconsin's Functions and Policies Committee are de voted to Faculty-Student Relations and Student Activities. "The relation of faculty and ad ministration with students is both friendly and courteous at Wiscon sin," the committee found, "but it is not always one of complete un derstanding." A chief cause for this is "the sheer physical lack of sufficient common m e e t i n g ground." Entertaining entails cost as well as effort, offices are too crowded for private conferences, the Student Union is overcrowded and sometimes too distant. Following are two of the com mittee's typical suggestions to bet ter the faculty-student relation ship. "A liberal representation" of students on all faculty committees dealing with student affairs di rectly or indirectly. Provide space f o r an attractively furnished lounge, possibly with a dairy bar for light refreshments. There stu dents could adjourn with a teacher to follow up ideas started in the classroom, a profitable pastime which is now almost impossible in buildings where classes meet. "Clearly some students suffer from a misplaced emphasis on extra-curricular activities," re ports a special chapter, "and it is also clear that some students would enjoy and benefit" by participating in such activities more than they do now. Not enough spend a suf ficient time engaged in cultural activities. Education Major Delivers Address To Literary Club liss \larlene Rast addressed mnhers of Ilypatian literary society Wednesday on the depart m'nt ot education here. Iler talk included information about courses offered, instructors and p rofessional organizations as sociated with the department. The address was a continuation Of programs heglunl last semester in which vartious mlembers dliscuss their jor13 course5(s. I lypatian meets every other Wednesday at 5 p. m. in I .egare college. .1 une lIouknight is p)resident; Alarilyn Gettys, v'ice-presidIent; Tommie Ilerbiert, treasurer; and Ann Chler c, cri tie. M . F'. St ough is chaplain andl Jane Almy, marshal. I ( riIs Shirts rear . . . bes choice de to fit comfor tably (e wear. Corduroys, L'ks and( laids ... Arrow d(aler. *3.95 IEo Sj0 SHIIRTS & TiES Carolina-Cler To Be Wedn The traditional Carolina-Clemson Blue Key visitory dance will be held in the Field house Wednes day, immediately following the Freshman football game. The dance will begin at 10 p. m. and last until 1 a. in., Grady Decell, president of Blue Key service fra ternity, announced. Tickets will go on sale at the gate of the Field house just after the freshman game and will cost 7 fd flis Orchestra and Fine New Vocali PHONE 2-9331 For Further Inuormalion StudeIIts! For tin and4 Food, COLLE G B.reakfaM Plate (Meat aid 4. Ved Steaks, .75 i.-... .%e'rr.ing (:uroli,nu .1a 1015 Sumtiier T,iiE lacE To GO . . . F:4 Do We Have A Wide 3 S ports Shirts . Rugged ... Right f Boher . ..'hatev'.er here in an Arrow. Ru1 rich Gabardines v.'.:th inig dettai . . . and livcI All wiashauble. All exel here today! INEI 11EN;N WEAR . 1437 Mam nson Dance esday Night $1, stag or drag. Music will be by Clarence Brazell and his orchestra. The dance is informal. Plans were made for the dance at a joint meeting of the Carolina and Clemson Blue Key service fra. ternities. Sponsored by Blue Key each year the dance is held for the purpose of improving relations between the tWO schools. The etttire student body is urged to attend. Dance To The Enjoyable M11usic ol CLARENCE BRAZELL -Blest in Siervie V isit tle 'i I ic Pil:ES - .30 ip le) -- .50 Up wiches of All Types tuin tiervl-e rte" Orders e' I For 25 )eara )II IIIIANI)S Y*OU KNOW" ARROWS? - AND H OWUI! election of Arrow .Comfortabl. .. or Campus Wearl yo ur preference, it's ~ged Corduroys... nrt saddle-stitch 1checks and plaids. ent b)uys. See them $3.95 up - TWO FINE STORES 614 11.-Aden