The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 09, 1956, Page Page Eight, Image 8
RECITAL IS TONIGHT ...
presented in a senior piano recita
torium.
Music Majo
Piano Re cit
Joan Harter, a graduating r
in a senior piano recital tonighi
auditorium, Dr. Hugh Williams
ment, announced.
Miss Harter entered the Uni
Babcock Has
Garden Story
In Magazine
Appearing m this month's issue
of The American Home magazine
is a story by Dr. Havilah Babcock,
head of the University English de
partment.
The story titled "Oh You Lucky
Dog!" is an account of the per
sonal experiences of Dr. Babcock
and his wife, with some of the
people who come to see their gar
dens.
As Dr. Babcock writes, these
people are classified as "the Oh
you-lucky-doggers, the I-would
have-had-a-garden-but-ers, and a
third group, of which the least said
the better."
Dr. Babcock and his wife
classify the people into the above
three groups and tentatively as
sign them IQ's that would enable
them to shine in the fifth grade.
AFROTC Cadets
Visit At Shaw
Thirty-one Air Force ROTC
cadets visited Shaw Air Force
Base in Sumter on Saturday,
March .3, under an Air Base visita
tion rogram. Captain Charles Nor
ton was the officer in charge.
The cadets saw among the
fighter and bomber type air craft
the RB 66 twin jet bomber and
reconnaisance plane, the only one
of this particular type air craft in
operation at present.
The cadets traveled to Shaw
TV IS ADDED ...University p
patient, Sylvia Hanna, Journalism
set installed recently in the girls' s
Pil Epsilon Pi fraternity donated
with proceeds from last year's pie
by Wayne Pat..ick)
i
t
V
t
t
Joan Harter of Fairfax will be
I tonight in Russell House Audi,
Presents
aL Tonight
rusic major, will be presented
at 8:30 in the Russell House
on, head of the Music Depart- c
f
versity in 1952 after graduat
ing from the Fairfax High School. s
While at the University, she has t
studied under Dr. Williamson and
has participated in a number of
previous student recitals. C
She is a member of Delta Omi
cron national professional music s
fraternity and serves as choirister
in this organization. She is also 0
president of Delta Zeta social
sorority.
a
Miss Harter, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Harter of Fairfax,
plans to teach piano after gradua
tion.
ii
The recital tonight, to which the tl
public is cordially invited, is the i
first of a series of senior recitals d
to be given during the semester.
Numbers on the program to- ti
night include "Organ Fugue in G t
Minor"by Bach-Samaroff, "Rondo h
in E Flat, Op. 11" by Hummel, t
"Andante in F" by Beethoven, b
"Romance in F Sharp, Op. 28, No. t
2" by Schumann, and "Impromptu
in G Flat, No. 3," and "Ballet lua
sic from Rosamunde, Op. 26" by F
Schubert. d
Also, "Sonatine" by Ravel, .
'Danse De Meunier" by De Falla,
and "Fiesta Mora En Tanger,"r
'Lejeudi Saint a Minuit," and g
'Sacro-Monte" by Turina.
C
LOWEST SCORE
The lowest scormng output of the
season for the University of North
Carolina basketball team was 59
points. The Tar Heels were held
a
Stadium.
Fie!d for a flight indoctrination ~
program, in which they were to
fly in jet type air craft. The planes
were grounded, however, because
of inclement weather.
*
*
14
1(
a.1
Fiysician Dr. R. B. McNulty and
junior, inspect a new television
Ing of the Universty infirmary.
the TV set, which they bought
throwing contest. (Staff photo
durphy, Bub
Will Appear
)n TV Program
Two modern language professori
rom the University will appear or
e WIS-TV program "Learning Ii
'un" tomorrow at 1 p. m.
Dr. E. F. Murphy and Dr. D. F
ub of the University, with Co
mbia College Professor Willian
[unter will give their respectiv(
iews on modern languages, Miss
ally Battle of the WIS radio and
!levision station announced.
Dr. Murphy will speak or
'rench and Dr. Bub will talk oi
ne German language. Dr. Hunte:
rill speak on the Spanish lan
uage.
A University student and a stu
ent from Columbia College wil
ive a skit in English with th
tree professors narrating in thei
espective languages.
The University audio-visual de
artment will present a film
L'Arrive A Paris."
WUS Group
Organized
On Campus
The World University Service
eneral Committee at Carolina me
:r the first time recently. The
:mmittee is composed of repre
entatives from campus organiza
ons.
WUS is located on more than 60(
merican campuses and in 38
Duntries of the world.
Each year students and profes
Drs respond to the WUS appea
)r funds and gifts. A major share
f the funds raised by WUS in th
nited States goes to' aid students
1 need at colleges and universitie
broad.
The needs of students in othei
Duntries are in many cases in a
tost desperate situation, accord
g to the committee. Two out o:
iree student refugees interviewed
i Germany live on less than one
ollar a day. Twenty thousand
apanese college students a r e
iberculous and three to five
nousand are in critical need o:
ospitalization. One h u n d r e <
aousand students were destitute<
y recent floods in Assam, India
he committee said.
Last year WUS prov ded scholar
hips for 302 refugee students ir
rance, 28 displaced person stu
ents in America and 80 refugees
Switzerland. It set up loar
ands for needy students, includini
sfugees in Germany, Israel
reece, and England and tool
rders from students in Germany
reece, France, Yugoslavia, India
apan, and Korea for 470 tons 0:
F. S. surplus commodities.
World University Service of
ered clothing, food and financia
id to victims of the Assam flood:
nd to indigent students in Greece
apan, India, Pakistan and Korea
At the next meeting of WUI
lections will be held for a chair
ian and a secretary.
640 K. C.
wUsc
Radio Guide
640 K. C.
MON., WED., FRI.
1:59-Sign On
2:00-World New, Roundup
2:l5-lIere's to Vets
2:30-Day Dreams
3:30-Jazz at the Concert
4:00-Carolina Calling
. Palme:to Mystery Tuna
4:45-World News Roundup
5:00-Carolina Calling
. Carolina Mystery Tune
S:00-Co-eds on Campus
3:15-Join the Navy
3:30-Flying Hi1gh
7:00-This Is Jazz
1:45-World of Sports
3:00- l ops in Pops
3:30-BBC
1:00-Request Rendezvous
):00-Career Hour
):15-Nostalgia
1:00-Classic Musicale
1:00-Sign Off
TUES., THIURS.
:59-Sign On
r:00-World News Roundup
r:l5-Serenade in Blue
2:30-Day Dreams
1:30-Jazz at the Concert
1:00-Carolina Calling
Palmetto Mystery Tune
1:45-World News Roundup
:00-Carolina Calling
Carolina Mystery Tune
1:00-Co-eds on Campus
:15-Join the Navy
1:30-Flying High
:00-Proudly We Hail
:30-This Is My Faith
:45-World of Sports
:00-Tops in Pops
I:30-BBC
:00-Request Rendezvous
4:00-Career Hlour
:15-Night Train
:00-Classic Musical.
:00-Sign Off
SUNDAY
d.
:00-Sign On
:05-The Night Owl
n.
:59-Sign On
:00-Sunday Morning Devotional
:10-Sunday Morning Concert
U.
:00-United Press Sunday Show
:15-BBC
:15~-Swing Street
:45-World News Roundup
:00-Music fromt Broadway
45-Worldao aS oi..
MathematiE
Here Marc
Dr. George Polya, mathema
tician, will present a series of pub
lie lectures at the University dur
ing the week of March 12.
Dr. George Polya
He recently retired from Stan
ford University and previously
taught for many years at the Fed
eral Institute of Technology in
Zurich, Switzerland.
Dr. Polya comes to the Univer
sity through a visiting lectureship
program sponsored by the National
Science Foundation and adminis
Decorated Figi
Addresses AFF
Colonel Francis Gabreski, direc
tor of operations for the Ninth Air
Force and many times decorated
fighter pilot of Wor!d War II and
the Korean conflict, spoke to the
Air Force ROTC cadets on Tues
day, March 6.
Col. Gabreski spoke on fighter
combat "then and now." He dis
cussed the history of the Air Force
briefly, and then he talked on or
ganization and operations of the
Air Force of the present and the
future.
Cadets heard some of his per
sonal experiences during the attack
on Pearl Harbor, his first fighter
combat, and his difficulty at get
1. SUPERIOR TA
So good to your taste be
superior tobaccos. Richer
cially selected for filter en
flavor you want, here's the
RELAX I
ian Talks
F 12-15
tered by the American Mather
tical Association, Dr. Wyman
Williams, head of the mathemat
department, said.
The subjects and dates of his I
tures are: "Maxima and Mini
without - Calculus," March 12,
p. m.; "Let Us Learn Guessin;
March 12, 8 p. m.; "The Isopc
metric Therom," March 13, 4 p. r
"Descartes and Euler on Po
hedra," March 14, 4 p. m.; a
"Mathematics and P i a u s i b
Reasoning," March -15, 8 p. in.
All lectures will be held in ro,
309, Sloan College, at the Univ
sity.
The lectures are of a popular i
ture and any one with a knowlec
of elementary calculus will be a
to fo!low Dr. Polya fully, Dr. W
liams said.
Dr. Polya received his Ph.D.
,ree from the University of Bu4
pest. Titles of his books inch
"How to Solve It," "Induction a
Analogy," "Patterns of Plausi
Inference," "Isoperimetric I]
equalities in Mathematical Ph:
ics," and "Mathematics and Plai
ible Reasoning."
He is also the author of m<
than 200 articles in scholarly joi
nals.
A member of many professioi
societies in this country and F
rope, Dr. Polya was formei
president of the Internatioi
Congress of Mathematicians.
iter Pilot
tOTC Cadets
ting into combat early in Woi
War II.
At the end of Col. Gabresl<
speech, a brief question and ans
period concluded the program. 'I
Cadet Corps was then called to
tention and dismissed.
Davidson's First Woman Facu
Member
Davidson College will get
first woman faculty member, i
cording to The I)avidsonian, i
campus newspaper. Dr. Carol!
T. MacBrayer, currently a me
ber of the Queens College facul
will complete the current semes1
there before coming to Davids
S
~STE 2. SUI
cause of L&M's So quick
, tastier-espe- comes elei
toking. For the Miracle "1
filter you need. white outsi
S. C. School Bui
Is Unprecedeni
The school building program of
a- South Carolina represents an- un
L
ic precedented effort by the state to
provide better educational facili
Be- ties for all its citizens, University
ma educator E. R. Crow asserts.
4 Writing on "School Facilities in
. South Carolina" in the March is
ri
sue of the University of South
ly- Carolina's "Business and Economic
nd Review," Dr. Crow, director of the
1 e State Education Finance Commis
.sion, claims that "No other state
or- has ever done so much in so little
time."
ia- Large Sums To Be Spent
lge
ge "The great disparity between
il schools for whites and Negroes,
both as to quality and quantity,
le- neant the expenditure of large
la- sums of money, if equalization
ide
nd should be realized," Dr. Crow
ble states, adding, "In 1951 the per
_. pupil capital value of school facili
ties in South Caro!ina favored the
zs- white race by a ratio of more than
four to one."
>re An annual appropriation for the
ir- building program of $20 per pupil
in average daily attendance is pro
l vided. Provision is also made
:u- whereby school districts can an
-1y ticipate their annual appropriation
al for 20 years and borrow from the
state up to 75 percent of this
amount. Funds may be secured
from the sale of state bonds up to
a total of $137,600,000.
Organizational Problem
One of the major problems fac
"Id ing the commission was that of the
organization of the school system,
Dr. Crow says. Since its inception
in 1951, the Commission has re
he duced the number of school dis
e tricts from 1,700 to 106.
at "This reorganization has re
sulted in the formation of districts
of ample size with better resources
Ity and makes possible the employment
of competent administrative and
its supervisory personnel," Dr. Crow
ic- says.
he In, the school construction pro
ne gram, entitlements (the term used
in- to represent the maximum amount
ty, avai!able for construction purposes
:er on the basis of present enroll
)n. ments) amount to $199,076,000. Of
I-lPrewiteisd,p
ide for cleaner,bettersmoking.
YOU4
[iding Program
ted Effort
this amount, approved projects in
the state amount to $158,760,000.
Of the approved projects $78,
000,000 has been allocated for the
construction of white schools and
$86,000,000 has been used for
Negro school construction.
Construction Rapid
Construction on a per capita en
rollment basis has been rapid. In
1954-55 about $293 has been al
located for construction for every
pupil. For the whites this is $288 .
per capita and for Negroes $364.
In terms of approved projects 46
percent has been allocated for
white school construction and 54
percent has been allocated for
Negro school projects.
Looking beyond the present, Dr.
Crow states that the state's con
:ribution for future construction
will probab!y fall short of needs in
.hose districts where enrollment in- j
reases are very large, especially
urban areas.
Will Cover Average Needs
"There will be a deficit in the
predominantly Negro areas where
facilities were so poor at the be
tinning of the program, but for the
average school district the state
contribution will be ample to meet
needs that can be forseen now," he
says.
Dr. Crow's article on South
Carolina schools may be obtained
from the Bureau of Business and
Economic Research at the Univer
sity.
Delta Air Lines, with
headquarters in Atlanta,
Georgia, is interested in
girls qualified for' the
position of stewardess.
For details contact:
The Placement
Bureau
in the Administration Building
K ING S gg
ITMYzRS To.acot
L.E TTER DAY!