The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 13, 1953, Page Page Three, Image 3
Seventy- Three
115Freshmen
Fall Semester
There 'were seventy-three stu
dents on the sophomore honor roll.
These students have in the preced
ing term' attained a scholastic
average of 2.50.
They are Robert Ackerman,
Mildred Adcock. Mary Lou Brodie,
Thomas Edmond Brown, Thomas
0. Brunson, Leonard Buff, Vera
Jane Church, James Cordell, Wil
liam Corley, Gerald Cory, Kath
arine Dozier, Betty Jo Edens,
William Lee Edens, Elizabeth
Ehrhardt, Willie Elliott, Alexa
Fairey, Raymond Farmer, Robert
Gabriel, Mary Jo Gooding, Sue
Graves, Joan Hall, Augustus
Harrison, Julie Anne Hartnett.
Also Michael Heinz, Howard
Hester, Ywlane Hobbs, Betty Rae
Holley, Robert Holmes, Fay Hud
gins, Laurens Irby, John Johnston,
Barbara Jordan, Theresa Kessler,
Mable Kirven, Esther LaBruce,
Arlene Lois Levy, Donald Robert
Lewis, William Ralph Lewis, Jerry
Livingston, Edna McClain, Carter
Martin, Lily Matthews, Sadie
Merchant.
Also Charles Morris, Thomas
Moseley, Mary Murray, Mary
Nickas, Ronald Oberle, Louise
Owens, Clarenda Parknian, Harriet
Parler, William D. Pridgen, Wil
liani Quattlebaum, Elizabeth Red
man, Mildred Anne Rhyne, Bar
bara Richardson, George Rider,
Emanuel Rish, Jean Ritter, John
Robinson.
Also Richard Lee Rose, Harry
Salisbury, James Dean Smith, Ran
dolph Smoak, Frances Spiers,
Betty Lou Toole, Charles Tucker,
Phyllis Unger, Beverly Joan Utsey,
Richard Williams, Royal Williams,
Charles Wilson, Johanna Wright.
One hundred and fifteen stu
dents made the freshman honor
roll for which a scholastic average
of 3.00 must have been attained in
the preceding term.
These students are William Al
wood, Rebecca Anderson, Mary
Elizabeth Ariail, James Austin,
Harold Baldwin, Hugh Gilbert
Bell, Philip Benediktsson, Joanne
Miller Berry, Marvin Gerald Berry,
Edward Ray Blount, Janet Bow
didge, A!exia Broughton, William
Bruce, James Burnett, Janie But
ler, Clarence Byrd, Oscar Burt
Carlisle, Evangeline Carter, Wade
Alonzo Carter.
Also Charles Lee Chapman,
Bettye Jane Clarke, Frances
Clarkson, John Robert Coleman,
Martha Couch, Linda Covington,
MORE AIRCRA
bear this emb
Sophomores,
Are Named to
Honor Rolls
Harriet Ann Creel, Hattie Cromer,
Mary Elizabeth Culler, Sylvia Ann
Cupstid, Herman Weeks Daniel,
George David, Carol Davis, Thomas
Deloach.
Also George Lynn Derrick, Sara
Earline DeWitt, Barbara Dominick,
Jennifer Ruth Dorn, Hazel Duke,
Ronald Elliott, Mary Emrie, Otis
Etheredge, Robert Ferrell, Ed
ward Field, Cecil Edward Floyd,
Thomas Flynn, Elizabeth Folline,
Harry Garner, Joseph Gibbons,
Delores Gosewisch, Sidney Griffin,
Warren Griffin, Reed -Griffis,
Joyce Gross, Floyd Leon Hagan,
Also Eleanor Hagood, Delores
Hammond, James Hankins, Donald
Harrington, John Harrison, Mari
lyn Hartley, Lucius Heriot, Harvey
Horne, Gertrude Horton, Woodrow
Howle, Elmer Paul Huggins,
Sylvia Jacobs, Emma Jenkins,
Gordon Jolley, James Hassie Jones,
Charles Jumper, Thomas Mike
Kinghorn, Horace Kirby, Margaret
Kistler.
Also Carolyn Kominers, James
LaCoste, Frances Lawton, Rosa
mond Ann Levy, Mary McClain,
Emily McClure, Robert McEntire,
Patricia McGaher, Dorothy Mc
Neil, Robert Mack, Gus Manos,
David Merline, Mary Alice Miller,
Johann Mishoe, Oscar'Mitchell.
Wesley Mollard, William Moon
eyham, Lee Morris, Billy Mungo,
Rhetta Murphy, James Herman
Nagel, Floyd Melton Neese, Betty
J. Nicholson, William Nicholson,
Donald O'Cain, Dorothea Ost, Kitty
Parker, Mary Allen Patrick, Rich
ard Penland, Albert Joseph Perry,
James Howard Porter.
Louise Poston, Waltraud Retsch,
Thomas Towland, Margie Rushton,
Mary Alice Rustin, Samuel Shan
non, Sidney Shealey, Margaret
Sims, Maria Siokos, John Geddeth
Smith, Ronald Smith, Mary Dan
Spencer, Robert Steece, Charles
Rowe Stine, Lawrence Swails,
Charles Swindell, Edward Tarrer.
Aileen Taylor, Kathleen Terry,
Leroy Thornal, Lewis Thornton,
Hannah Timmons, Harriett Tootle,
Lila Touchberry, Harriet Travers,
Raymond Trewhella, Archie Umph
lett, Emil Wardlaw Wald, Marian
Kay Wengrow, William Weston.
William Whatley, James File
White, Mary Louise Wideman, El
bert Wilcher, Joseph Williams,
Warrington Williams, Ray Frank
lin Willis, Robert Wimberly, Nancy
Jean Wingard, Gwendolyn Wood,
and Beverly Ann Young.
FT ENGINES
lem than any other
There are few places whi
can utilize his training mc
evolving field of aircraft
are constantly exploring
Thus their work is varied
find good opportunities for
If you are looking for cha
future in engineering-for
-why not talk to our visiti
There may be a place for
and development work.
structure analysis . . . in
in analysis and developi
systems . . . in work on
research problems.
Coatact
for
Gray Inter
Sonny Gray, roving Gamecock
interview poet-humorist Ogden Nasi
bia to speak at last week's assemi
forego an aftcrnoon nap to answer
Manos' ever-clicking camera. (Gam
Nash FinC
Students i
By SONNY GRAY
Staff Reporter
"I have found that college
audiences are by far the most
responsive," said Ogden Nash,
famous writer of light verse, prior
to speaking to the faculty and
student body in Drayton Hall last
Friday at 10 a.m. Mr. Nash spoke
to the assembly on "Midway
Through Nash."
Mr. Nash claims that his present
niche in the odd literature that
he writes is the immediate result
of fooling around with poetry As
a boy. His poetry was.worthless
so he decided to revert to the non
sensual approach, that of turning
his poetry upside down and writ
ing bad verse deliberately. Mr.
Nash also said, "I have always
been interested in words and play
ing with them so the trend toward
writing this bad verse came to me
with great ease."
Nash has another book coming
out on the 7th of April called, "The
Private Dining Room and Other
New Poems." He did the majority
of the writing for this book on his
~re the technical graduate
re fully than in the rapidly
propulsion. Our engineers
new areas of knowledge.
and interesting, and they
professional advancement.
Ilenging work - for a real
real living in New England
ng engineers.
you in experimental testing
. . in performance and
mechanical designing ...
eat work on controls and
heat transfer'and applied
March 19
veer College Placement OUce
an appointment with eer
visiting Enginers
iews Nash
reporter, was right on hand to
a when the latter arrived in Colum
sly. Nash was obliging enough to
Gray's questions and pose for Gus
ecock photo by Gus Manos)
Is College
Lesponsive
tours in his spare time. "I usually
sleep, however, in my spare tinie
because of the tiring trips. Naps
and baths seem to be the most
restful things I can find," Nash
remarked.
The noted lecturer and authoi
travels and speaks on tours every
year mainly because he likes to
travel and meet people. This year
his tour began in the ipring and
will probably end sometime during
the summer. Prior to slica,:ing in
Drayton Hall on Friday, Mr. Nash
spoke to the Poetry Society in
Savannah the preceding night.
Although Mr. Nash loves the
(Continued on page 6)
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Air-Conditionin
Highlights Comm
Extensive interior renovation,
including the air- conditioning of
library rooms and face-liftings for
two complete buildings, has recent
ly been completed or is now under
way at the University, Dr. W. H.
Patterson, assistant to the presi
dent, said today.
Included among new construe
tion noted by Dr. Patterson is the
air-conditioning of four large read
ing and reference rooms in the Mc
Kissick Memorial Library. The
science and periodical rooms at
either end.of the first floor and
the reference and reserve rooms
on the second floor have been
insulated to make them more com
fortable during the warmer periods
of the year. This work was done
by the Clark Heating Co., Inc. of
Columbia.
Work has also begun upon air
conditioning of the University
School of Education library and
the adjoining University High
School library in Wardlaw College.
Wall vents for installation of
equipment have been cut and it
is expected that this construction
will be completed in the spring by
the Columbia Cooling and Heating
Co.
The University Law School
library is also scheduled for air
conditioning this summer, Dr.
Patterson said.
The final removal of all physical
science departments from Barn
well College to the new LeConte
science building, completed last
summer, was accomplished last
week. Only a basement laboratory,
for research with radioactive ma
terials by the biology and chem
istry department:, now remains in
Barnwell, which formerly housed
al the science departments.
A complete interior renovation
of Barnwell, including overall
painting of inside walls, has just
been finished. Ceilings, now lined
with celotex, have been substan
tially lowered on first and second
floors, and three floors have been
sand(e1 and lined with asphalt tile.
The fourth floor, housing the art
ading King-Size <
t .wy to avoid ti
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.g of Libraries
itruction Work
department, has been sanded .nd
walls have been repainted. The
third-floor psychology laboratory
has been partitioned and its ceil
ings have been lowered.
Steward's Hall, the University
cafeteria, has been repainted in
side, a new entrance has been built
on Sumter Street and a faculty
dining room has been added. Now
under management of the Slater
Cafeteria System, the mess hall
is being equipped with modernistic
tables and chairs, now partly in
stalled. The faculty room has
new lights, rubber-lined chairs and
rattan window curtains. The
cafeteria counter was installed last
summer, and among other new
equipment are cold milk and water
dispensers of the latest type.
Placement Bureau
Schedules Four
Senior Interviews
The Placement Bureau an
nounces the following interview
schedule for next week:
The Carbide and Carbon Chem- 1
ical Company will interview all
types of engineers on March 17
at 10 a.m. in Hamilton 117 in a
group meeting at which time V
individual appointments will be
made for March 18.
The Riegal Textile Corporation
will interview business administra
tion students and liberal art stu
dents by individual appointments
only on March 19. Appointments
can be made at the placement
bureau office in the administration
building.
Pratt and Whitney Aircraft
Company will interview by individ
ual appointments only mechanical
and electrical engineering students
March 19. Appointments can be
made in the placement bureau.
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Cqm
pany will interview all types of
engineers, chemistry, physics and
math majors March 20 in a group
meeting in Hamilton 117 at 10
a.m.
HERE IT
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Ills
Carolina To Help
Raise Funds For
[omeless Orphans
The University has been invited
oy an Emory University student
onimittee to join in a national
tudent drive for assistance to war
arphans under the Christian Chil
Iren's Fund, according to recent
announcement by Bill and Nita
linely, theology students at Emory
Jniversity, Atlanta, Ga. Mr. and
drs. Ilinely are chairmen of the
loluntary student committee for
he Christian Children's Fund,
tichmond, Va.
The student committee at Emory
Pegan operation two years ago,
nd through "penny a meal" con
ributions has raised almost $400
oward support of children in Ko
-ea, India, and Italy. The "adopted"
.hildren of the Emory group now
nclude an Italian boy, and a Ko
-ean boy and girl. Pictures and
-eports on the youngsters are sent
egularly to the foster "parents"
>y the C.C.F.
"We -have found so much satis
action in our project that we
wlieve other students will wish
o join in a national movement,"
eclares Hinely. "Any student.
hurch group, campus club, or
raternity or sorority, can 'adopt'
war orphan. An overseas child
an be supported for only $10.00
month. What finer step can
,oung people take in promoting
vorld understanding and brother
iood than in helping to save these
hildren?" continues the committee
hairman.
WHO WILL BE
EVERY GROUP CAN ENTE
aSK CAJVs REP
BOb HAMILTON
McBryde 3rd
ORE
I1E
m exclusively
Irritation I
w REGULAR
iot buy
cigarefle
qualify!