The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 13, 1950, Page Page Four, Image 4
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