University of South Carolina Libraries
Monroe ToizeUSC's zeoln Sesquicentennial carYear UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA CROWING FOR A GREAl'ER CAROLINA Volume XLVI, No. 11 COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, DEC. 7, 1951 Founded 1908 r Usc~ Violators Get Letter By Board The Honor Board notified uni versity students today of its deci sion in the matter of ticket viola tions during the football season. In letters received in student mail boxes today, the Honor Board informed students who fal sified their class status in order to obtain better seats that they would be delegated to the fresh man section next fall. The names of the violators will be kept in the ticket office so that auto matically they will have freshman seats. Although the classes were given special days to pick up their seat reservations, some students ob tained their tickets in, a section above the correct . one for their class. This, the board decided, is a violation df the honor principle and shoUd be handled by the Honor Board. Efforts were made to weed out the names of students who might )ossibly have made mistakes in their class status. Even with this attempt approximately 250 stu dents will receive letters today from the Honor Board. Any student receiving a letter, who feels he has been unduly wronged, may appeal to the coun cil and will be granted a hear ins.' The Ionot Board ihopld be "ontactc(t and 'correctEl imnc diately if the student feels that there has been a mistake. Those students who took seats in a class section beneath their proper one are not considered as ticket violato rs. History Club To Show "Tennessee Johnson" "Tennessee Johnson," a motion picture produced in Hollywood and starring well known Hollywood personalities, will be shown at the Dec. 13 meeting of the Graduate History Club at 8 p. m. in the Faculty club. The picture, starring Van Hef lin as President Andrew Jackson, in office from 1865-1868, and Lionel Barrymore as Thaddeus Stevens, devotes most of its run to Johnson's impeachment trial. Actor Coburn Plans Performance Here Mlotion picture star Charles Co bur n will be on the university camn tius Thursday night, March 13, to give a one-man show under the priomotion of the University Play ers, Miller Lide, president, has an niou nced. Mr. Coburn will act out scenes fi om several of the p)ictures in which 1e has starred. The twvo hour show wvill be on an informal basis. There is 110 planned pro gram and there wvill be none. The actlor will decide which roles he will perform as he goes on stage. Souith Carolina is one of a nunm her of colleges and universities that Mi. Coburn is visiting. Several other Hollywood personalities have contemplated going on such tours buit no others have gotten to the act ioni stage as yet. NOTICE! Anm ed(itor and an entire edi lorial and business staff of the "Cariiolina Review" will be se lectedl for the ensuing year at a mheetinig in the publicatlin's of nie Wedneasday at 7 p. mu.,re tirinug editor James Inabinette has anniounced. lie says that there are vacan elson the staff for the. in terestedl in art work, writing, or 'Elic'iting ads and urges those to Student-Faculty Committee Plans To Renew Work The Stutcent.Faculty Relations committee will meet within the next three weeks, Student Body Presi dent Floyd Spence has announced. The committee is provided for in the student body constitution, and its purpose is to give the students an opportunity to air their com plaints which concern the faculty, thus helping to establish better re lations between the former and the latter. The committee is composed of the president of the university, the dean of women, dean of men, dean of arts and science, secretary of the YMCA, director of student ac tivities, president of the student body, one student from each school represented on the student council, and two faculty representatives chosen by the committee. Spence suggests that any student who has a gripe should present this gripe to him or Jackie Southerland, a member of the committee, in per son or by mail. Miss Southerland's box unumber is 3649. Memibers absent at Monday's Student Council meetinag were: 1Juddy Derrick, C. A. Fischer, Ge'orge James, Jack McLean, Ed Royal I, Joe Pitman, William P'enn., and Philip Carfinkel. Officers Installed For Law Quarterly Fred Buzhardt, of McCormick, was installed as editor of the South Carolina L,aw Quarterly at their annual banquet last night at the Friars restaurant, retiring presi dent W. JTerry Fedder has an nouncedl. Other newv members who were installed were: Thomas C. Fitz gerald, Columbia, associate editor; Francis Nicholson, Greenwood, note editor; Buck Grant, Spartan burg, circulation manager; and Dupree Miller, Bennettsville, ad vertisinig manager. Retiring staff memb)ers, besides Fedder who received certificates of service, wvere: H. P. Smith, Melvin Younts, and Charles Bernstein. The quarterly is a student-edited publication whose aim is to serve the Bar of South Carolina and the student body of the law school. The staff is assisted by Profs. James Sumner, Coleman Karesh, George King, and Dean Samuel Prince. Officers of the law school fed eration and members of the faculty were guests at the banquet. Salul First Day's RE Week The Rev. Claude U. Broach dis cussed "If I Should Die Before i Live" at the concluding convoca tion of Religious Emphasis Week yesterday. The Rev. Mr. Broach is minister of the St. John's Baptist Church in Charlotte, N. C. During his talk, the Rev. Mr. Broach discussed the idea that it is a greater tragedy to have the gift of life and end it without realizing the high value of life than it is merely to die, because physical death is inevitable. "Religion is not a negation of the joy of life, but is an avenue, the one avenue, by which we may ar rive at the real joy of life and the realization of life's deepest mean ing." There are four main things which are a Christian's responsi bility: to be strong in the midst of ickness; to be pure in the midst :f compromise; to be unselfish in the midst of greed; and to be for giving in the midst of pride. At the fourth convocation on Wednesday, Father Gerard Ma guire, instructor of Bible at the University of Texas, in Austin, de elared, "God cannot be served wvith ignorance, Hie must he served with truth, and to overlook the truth is suicide." Father Maguire's address, which was entitled "Intellectual Suicide," .tressed the fact that the pattern 4f prayer and worship is accepted by a child without. hesitation, and that we, as adlults, should learn to riticize them, but never to attack Melodrama The UJniversity Theater will pre sent '"The Curse of an Aching Heart" or "Trapped in the Spider's Web!" next Thursday and Friday. evening in Drayton hall. Written by Herbert E. Swayne, the play is a modern treatment of an old-time melodrama involving the villain with a long moustache, the hard-working farm couple and their daughter just returned from college, a boarding school teacher, and an honest and industrious farmhand who is framed by the villain. The heroine is played by Bernice Silverman andl Windermiere High tower, the villain, is portrayed by Jim Sitgraves. Bill Lytle plays the parlt of Hiriam Abernathy and Tommy Smith plays as Lucius Goodenought. Flora Jefferies is Battle A xe Annie, the local sheriff. Win, nn ;ed B Convocation ~ ~ttt Concluded them. In this way we can learn to serve God better. Taking as his text "And Because Wickedness Hs, Multiplied, Most Mens ' Love Grows Cia," the 1tev. Edmund H. Steimle reviewed the events of the past three decades at the Tuesday convocation. "The surging wave of Idealism following World War I ended in disillusionment and depression," he told his audience. "The time was ripe for false prophets and so I World War II was the consequence. There was no resulting wave of idealism, but of futility," he said. "The outlook is brighter today be cause of the growing interest in theology not as a science but be cause people are concerned about God as well as their neighbors." "Who Am I?" was the topic se lected by the Rev. James Stirling, pastor of Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in West Palm Beach, Flor ida, for the second convocation Monday. The Rev. Mr. Stirling de clared that the two great questions in any religion are, "Who is my God?" and "In View of That, What am I Like?" "It's the Real Thing!" was the title of the opening convocation of Religious Emphasis Week. The Rev. Wilson 0. Weldon, pastor of the Memorial Methodist Church, in Thomiasville, N. C., led the pro gram, and Ramona Salley gave the (call to worship. All convocations were based on the theme for the week, "Alterna tive to Futility," and the motto, "God is Our' Refuge and Strength." Next Thurs. Indiaun chief who wvorks- for the Abernathy's. is played by Tom Thornton. Others in the cast are: M. F. Stough, Bill Lemiacks, Vee Church, Bob Holnms, and D)orothy Denton. The play opens on a happy ranch home just prior to the daughter's return from college. The peace is disturbhed by the villain Hightower. Near' tragedy appears, but in the end justice triumphs, and the hero and heroine announce their engage mien t. The p)lay begins at 8 p. m. and students will be admitted without (charge upon showing their student ac'tivity books, which were issued at registration. Other tickets will he on sale at Drayton hall on the evenings of the play. The play is sc'heduled to he presented to the soldiers at Fort. Jackson on De cember 15 and 16. Prof. Adger Brown, of the psy chology department, is faculty ad visor to the dramatic group Vau ... Ross To Trade University Post For Marriage Elaine Ross, assistant director of student activities at the university, has announced her retirement ef fective January 21. Miss Ross will marry Mort Smith of Columbia on Christmas Day. The retiring administrative as sistant, long known as "Elaine" to the students who call her service as efficient as any at the univer sity, has occupied her position since Dctoher, 1945. She graduated cum aude from Winthrop College in 1943 with the degree of Bachelor )f Science. In 1950-51 Miss Ross was Awarded the Kappa Sigma Kappa Award for "meritorious and un elfish service to the University f South Carolina." Her fiance received an LL.B. de gree from the Carolina law school in 1950. LOST 11OOK Will the studenta who acci den~itally walked off with Prof. liavilah Ilabcock's book, "Tales of Quails," please return it to thme gentleman immeudiately? It iS aI t~nueed, coplyrigh)t, boxe,d co.py of aI limiited deluxe edition uand cannot he replacedl. Law School Here U ps Requirement In September '52 In September, 1952, among other hings the entrance requirements for the law school of the university wvill be three full academic years >f satisfactory work. The old rule >f two full years of satisfactory academic work will cease after the 3eginning of the spring term, 1952. If a freshman class is to be or ranized for the coming Spring r'erm, those who desire to enter the Law School at that time for ~hei r beginmning freshman work ,hould notify Miriam Holland, the assistant registrar, not later than MIonday, Dec. 10. Whether a freshman class will Me organized for this coming tprnig class will depend almost wholly upon the number of appli ation received by that ate. rhn M n Program On WMSC Carolina will receive nati when Vaughn Monroe and Hi versity on his weekly CBS pr< 15, at 7:30 p. m. WMSC, at carry the show in Columbia. Banquet Opens USC Birthday Activity Plans The university will begin the celebration of its sesquicentennial with a Founders Day banquet or, December 19, the 150th anniver sary of the ratification of the act chartering the institution, Presi dent Norman M. Smith said today. The banquet will take place at 7:00 p. in., Wednesday, December 19, at the Wade Hampton hotel. Alumni, faculty members and friends of the university will at tend. Dr. Dumas Malone, author and professor of history at Columbia university, will give the principal address. Dr. Malone's associations with the university have been close since he wrote a biography of rhomas Cooper, early university president, and acted in an advisory -apacity for the writing of "South Carolina College, 1801-1865," the first volume of the history of the university by Dan Hollis, recently published by the USC Press. Jeff B. Bates, president of the Alumni association, will act as toastmaster for the banquet. Recog nit ion will be extended to Governor James F. Blyrnes; Sol Blatt, Sr., speaker of the house of representa tives; George Bell Timmerman, presidetnt of the senate; Floyd Spence, president of the university student body; J. Arthur Knight, chairman of the board of trustees; Dr. Francis WV. Bradley, dean of the faculty; and President Smith. Tickets for the dinner may be obtained from the university ses (luicenltennial committee. Smith Twins Call Square Dance Here For Evening School Former featured pierformners (in the Horace Heidt Youth Oppor tunity program will call a square dance at Flinn hall Dec. 15, at 8 p. mn. The Smith TwIns, Herbert and Howard, will bring their band from Fort Jackson, where they are now stationed, to take part in the dance p)ut on by the Evening School stu dent council, W. H. Grant, presi dent of the council, announced. The piano and guitar playing duo will come on behalf of Fort Jackson to return a favor done by the univer sity when the University Players p)resented a show at the fort. The square danee Is open to all university students. Bingo and games will be planned for those who do not dance. The fifty-cent tickets will be on sale at the Ex tension Division, telephone 2-6641, extension 2, or tickets may be ob tained through class representa tives on the student cmonl lonroe froadcast Dec. 15. on-wide publicity next week s Orchestra features the uni gram on Saturday, December 1320 on the radio dial, will rhe program will originate in New York. Ralph Lewis, executive secretary of the university Alumni associa tion, announced that the Moon Maids, the Moon Men and Vaughn Monroe will sing the Carolina Alma Mater, accompanied by the Monroe orchestra, and also the Carolina Fight Song which was written in 1938 by M. Carrere Salley, a Caro lina student, but was not adopted until last month by the Student Council. Arrangements for the program were made by Mr. Lewis and Wil liam Thomas, class of 1927, who is publicity director of the Wil liam Esty company, an advertising concern. Mr. Thomas is helping prepare the script, and the univer sity alumni office has gathered facts about the university and its history which Monroe and an nouncer Hugh Connover will re veal. The Alumni office is supplying a list of active Carolina alumni to be invited to receive special studio tickets for the broadcast, and all Carolina alumni will be notified of the program by the Alumni office. Thomas was prominent as a stu dent and was the Gamecock editor, president of the Press Club, pho tographer and senior editor of the Garnet and Black, and manager of the university tennis team while he was at Carolina. The brother of past president of the Alumni association, Calhoun Thomas, Thomas, since his grad uation from Carolina, has worked in the field of advertising, journal ism and public relations. Special orchestration has been arranged for the program. Student Council is investigating the possibility of receiving similar publicity on other coast-to-coast and local programs. President Floyd Spence reports. PLACEMENT BIUREAI A represenhatise. of the lutter s.tate' Life and Accident Insurance. company will interview seniors ont Wedn1esday. December 12, in Mc (:utchteon 24, ina a group mecetiung at 10 a. mn., and in, individual ina terviewr to be arranged with the lisureau of Placemenit. 'Rooms In Dorms To Be Reserved By Late Tuesday Spring term reservations f'or rom in Sims and Wade Hamp ton, women's domitories, must be made before 5 p. in., Tuesday, Dec. 11, Arney R. Childs, dean of wvomen, has announced. The reservation fee of fifteen dollars must be paid at the treas urer's office, and the receipt givena there is to be taken to the office of the dean of women. The blue cards filled out in Mrs. Childs' of fice will be the university's record of payment and will be used in as signing rooms for the spring term. Reservations are not complete un til this card is on file. Priority on present rooms will be honored until 5 p. in., Dec. 11. A fter that, all rooms not reserved will be assigned to any student in order of application. Freshman, however, must stay on the first floor or second floor east in Sims. Upperclass students, now in Wad. Hampton, may fill in vacan cies in Sims in order of applica tion.