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The Chatter Box By STAFF WRITER Mid-term exams begin next week ... the Sigma Chi's Playboy party coming up ... Derby Day in near future ... Sigma Nu's step out tomorrow night to their White Star Ball and then to the beach... SAE Founders Day causes excitement this weekend. ANNUAL FESTIVITIES Some KA's seen at the Greek Week festivities Saturday night . . . Peggy Rivers and Warren Holland, Dee Smith and "Joe Ashley, Sally. Boyleston (Converse) and Pat Blackenship, Gracie Hutchinson and Tom Edmunds . . . also Suzy Gasque and Archie Hardy, Norma Higgenbotham and Flynn Bowie, Sandra Stork and Johnny Jones, Noonie Edmunds and Buck Owens and Fran Evans and Peter Read ... then off to Warren Holland's house. MID-WINTER AT CLEMSON Attending Mid-Winter at Clemson this past weekend were DZ's Betty Farmer, Dana Zimmerman, Eva Harkey and Ruthie Harrison . . . Sigma Nu's partying it up last weekend at the Township ... Alex Garner and Betty Lane Wise, Don Allen and Nancy Hiller, Frankie Lee and Sara Ann Baughman, Bobby Bentley and Trunelle Berry, Billy Lipscomb and Flora McNair ... along with Bobby Mitchell and Tootsie Dennis, Bobby Ellis and Judy Andrews, Boyd Ford and Norma Jean Little. PINNINGS AND ENGAGEMENTS Recently pinned are Betty Jo Graham and Jim Foster (Chi Psi), Frances Arthur and Carlisle Oxner (KA), Ranny Randall (PKS) to Schrader Ruff (ZTA) and Linda Mc Donald (ZTA) to Everett Norton (SX) at N. C. State. En gaged are Elaine Bury and Arthur Gaston. AROUND CAMPUS Dave Bledsoe is a DJ now at WCOS . . . Deloris Bull went to The Citadel last weekend . . . Charleston flooded ... Nancy Burridge of Angleton, Texas, a Delta Zeta field secretary, is visiting the Beta Delta chapter at USC this week. Chi Psi's attending the recent dance at the Auditorium were . . . Ann Cobb and Ray Thomas, Peggy Green and Eddie Bagwell, June McCauley and Ray Williams, Ann Fos ter and Pettigrew Clare. McBRYDE BROTHERHOOD Party ... Saturday ... officers and dates of McBryde Brotherhood were Margaret Scott and Larry May, Bob Waldrep and Amy McKnight, Barbara Roney (Coker) and Wesley Whittington, Mary Ruth Fallin and Jim Matthews stunt gifts presented to several members during dance. PHI KAPPA SIGMA At Greek week ... Bill Thomas and Ann Valley, Joe Jordan and Dee Gritman, Sonny Hite and Ann Robinson, Howard Weeks and Pat Wilson, Hack Kirkpatrick and Kay Kaiser, Joe Hamilton and Elizabeth Weeks, and Bill Sword and Mary Bell. SUMMER PLANS Plans for beach and mountain houseparties in the offing ... Caroline All and Mont Morton at the Post on Beltline ... Sally Davis, newest DZ pledge. Pi Kappa Phi's had a drop-in Friday before the informal dance ... Wayne Wetzel and Jane Hammond; Benny Dusen bury and Jean Brown; Jerry Ellis with Donna Aycock; Mackie McDonald and Anne Howard; Nick Atria and Betty Kennedy; Tommy Dudley and Sandra Nolen; "Doc" Patrick and Sylvia Nolen; and Jimmy Long and Jane Sexton all had a delightful evening. SA E Founder 's Day Dance Tomorrow At Jefferson Delta Chapter of Sigma AlphathborofrueeatheU Epsilon will hold its annual vriyadpnsmn a Founder's Day dance from 8 to ee u.Ntinlfaent 12 o'clock tomorrow night at Jef ferson Hotel. .Music will be by fieswr ore oeihr~ Jim Farr and his orchestra. ec hpe' hre,adte The dance will follow a ban- bcm o-xset quet and an address by Dr. Mmeso h ibne A Nicholas P. Mitchell, head of thechpefomdanwlbkon extension d'ivision,.ste"a lu, ae fe Saturday's activities will cele- apa hnpaigi ouba ~brate the 103rd anniversary of Th ol pesdn'hm, SAE as a national fraternity and whr MKiic Lbayno the 77th year that Delta Chapter sad,wsteofca etn has been on the campus.rom Delta Chapter was originated Thanifteiylwws Feb. 28, 1882 when James G.realdil)2anDltChp Glass obtainedl permissi-on from ti a eciae.I otne the University president to estab-toepnthugte ohu lish the fraternity on the campus.tithCofdreWawee The chapter tfunctioned untilSA wamoetnwllrp the ~State Legislature :passed areetdaitsnthlrgt law banning all national social pretg fismmesit fraternities from state-su,piported thwafoteSuhrncs. institutions. Then, along with Afethwa,hertrny other groups, SAE retreated tospedtruhttecony a sub-rosa status off campus. antoaheerevr14ac In 1921, the chapter existencetvecaer inheUte was broe&bhardoofherattention oheState FrietheRealSout ersiay and punishmnt as Cor Tasete it Fech chaer' Potater, and te becameynon-existent We veDinng oom Aailalyo encilngieolmba Cm.' tat.&frouomSre. ThCnt-raeniy.a.a DZ Tells Officers For Year Kathleen Adams has been elected as the new president of Delta Zeta sorority in elections held recently. Mary Catherine Fletcher is first vice-president and Betty Farmer is second vice president. Recording secretary Is Loretta Plott; corresponding secretary, Paula Klicka; treasurer, Penny Sinclair, and historian is Kay Phillips. Eva Harkey is the Panhellenic delegate; Dana Zimmerman is social chairman; standards chair man is Carolyn Rabon and The resa DeWitt is scholarship chair man. Officers are to serve for the coming year. Chi Psi Maid Jill R1yon of Aiken has been selected Maid of Chi Psi by members of the nen's social fraternity at the University of South Carolina. She will be presented a gold medallion, on which is the Chi Psi insignia. A junior economics major at the University, Jill is pinned to Joli McCay of Greenville, vice pre%ident of the fraternity. ZTA Honors New Pledges At Banquet Recently Zeta Tau Alpha held a b)anquet in honor of its new initiates and pledges. Those honored were Ma rga ret Adams, Joannc Eleazer, Chucky Grigg, Beth Miller, Pat Morris, Abby McKinney, Dot Neal and Omellia Sue O'Dell. Also Sandra Pcrry, Luanne Sanders, E 1 a i ni e Schnauffer, Beverly Spears, a n d J u d y O'Shields. Sandra Perry wvas presented wvith the best pledge award. Featured Best of the BI Here is smart covering as worl dressed British cousins at Wii Lord's . . . and now creating in the states. These Blazers authentic traditional model, a soft, pliant, friendly Orlo sacking that is perfect for wear . . . Available in new shades of navy, black, brown and Cambridge gray. You're Invited To Our Exclusive Gamecock Chars Season's Car Races On Tap By BILL DUNNE Staff Writer A new social function has ap peared on the campus in the form of the recently organized Colum bia Sports Car Club. The club has planned a series of sports car events during the coming season that promise to be most entertaining social events. Co-eds will got a chance to show off their new spring wardrobes at any of a number of rallies, races, and gymkhanas. A rallye is an event in which contestants are given a route to follow and an average speed to maintain. The entrants who come closest to doing this are the win ners. The entry is composed of a car, a driver and the navigator, the latter usually being a female. Gymkhana A gymk-hana is a test of a driver and navigator dexterity and skill. The event is run against time and the person who performs in the shortest amount of time is declared the winner, all other things being equal. A race is almost completely self-explanatory with the big ex ception that sports car races are usually run on regular or simu lated roads rather than ovals. The big event that everybody who is interested in sports cars is waiting for, is coming up on March 19-22. This is the Interna tional Twelve Hour Grand Prix of Endurance at Sebring, F-la. This is the event where the latest in European sports fashions are usually displayed for the first time in the year in the United States. International Grand Prix A good many students who have sports cars or are inter ested in same are planning on making the trek to Sebring. Some attending last year were Bill Gammage, Buddy Gailliard and Charlie Simons. At last count there were four full car-loads planning on being Florida bound within the next two weeks. A big local event of the season will be the semi annual race sponsored by the Sports Car Club of South Caro lina at the road race course in Chester. There will be a number of sports cars entered in this race by students from USC. This club annually sponsors two races at the Chester course. In the usual course of events there is one in April and one in October. The spring race this year will be on Sunday, April 19. Fore those diehards who never leave Columbia, the Columbia Sports Club is tentatively plan ning a race at the old Columbia track, once the most popular sports car site in South Carolina. Here's hoping to see you at one or all of these interesting events. For M.u'e" at MI ni by our best nbledon and quite a stir tailored In are made of n-Wool hop year 'round v handsome burnt olive, 7.50 Use e Plan Engineers arr ing the S.> ~.:Soc Ho Eve Goss Tor wil 1 den bal Dic Bet Wi Cot A(l for Wi Sol* Mrs. Butch Williamson Nine Pledge To Maxcy Brotherhood Nine new pledges as given by Doug Lawing, president of Maxcy Brotherhood, are Cecil Bennett, Jerry Allen, Cecil Johnson, Tommy Williams, Johnny Bar rini, Bill Cosby, LaVaughn Dent, Clarence Doyle, and Carroll Taylor. Complete Stock of STEREO RADIOS RECORD PLAYERS PORTABLES -- CONSOLES Direct Factory Dealer For Magnavox Stromberg-Carlson. 6001 Main - Adjoining Campus 'Ball Tc Sponsors For Societies 'he annual ' Engineers' Ball, anged by the Joint Engineer Council in conjunction with National Engineering Honor iety, Tau Beta Pi, will be held orrow night in the Jefferson ,el from eight to midnight. iy Torre and his orchestra provide the music. he Engineering Society presi ts and their sponsors for the are as follows: Eve Goss for k Adkins, president of Tau a Pi; Mrs. William Seel for liam Seel, president of ASCE. ponsor for AIChE Joint neil Representative, N i e k lino, is Saunda Carney, and Butch Williamson, ASME ident, is Mrs. Ruth Wray liamson. Irs. Robert R. Wilkie is spon for AIEE-IltE chairman, R. Wilkie. . (By the Author of" "Baref< ADVENTURES IN SO4 Today, with earnestness and sc our forays into social science. M social sciences-sociology itself. Sociology teaches us that ma instinct or heredity that deterfr ment. This fact is vividly borne of Julio Sigafoos. Julio, abandoned as an infant was adopted by a pack of wild, o Wn. When Julio was found by the poor child was more canin fours, barked and growled, ate r tongue, and could neither speak : In short, he was a complete pr< Julio, incidentally, was more dren. They never become truly ceptional. Bit by bit, he began drink as people do. His long-d< awakened at last, turned out to so bright that he learned to re through grammar school in thre< And last June as thousands of Julio had overcome, stood and graduated valedictorian from C physics! Who can say to what toweri would have risen had he not beenj menit while chasing a car? But I digress. To return to sc in groups-a tendency that bej introduction of Marlboro Cigare1 they are!i How benignly one 10oo< ing on Marlboro's filter that real that's really flavorful. How eag hand of friendship! How gratel making possible this togethernesi bleak pre-Marlboro world withe The groups that people live i vary widely in their customs. V one society may be quite outlari stance, the case of Ug Van WycI Ug, a Polynesian lad, grew u where the leading event of the ~ sun god. A quaint all-day cr dancing, war chants, fat-lady rac< the grand finale, the sacrifice of t According to Ug's folkways, s acceptable, but when, in his eigh exchange student to the Univa learned that Americans take a Wisconsin, at any rate. The first sacrificed, he was let off with a Persisted, drastic meaures were his fraternity. A broken man, 1 Milwaukee where today he earna Pbr real sociability, provide A and Philip Morris for non-flit by the Philip Morris company; Pmorrow Mrs. Wmiiai Seel Saunda Carney Rally Round the Flag, Boyst "and, ot Boy with Cheek.") DIAL SCIENCE: NO.2 briety, we make the second of re take up the most basic of all n is a social animal. It is not iines his conduct; it is environ out when you consider the case in a dark wood near Cleveland, logs and reared as one of their a hunter at the age of twelve, e than human. le ran on all aw meat, lapped water with his nor understand one single word. >duct of his environment. fortunate than most wild chil humanized, but Julio was ex to talk and walk and eat and >rmant mental p)rocesses, when be fantastically acute. He was ad and write in a month, got 3 years, and high school in two. spectators, knowing the odds nised cheer after cheer, he was ti Tech with a degree in astro ng heights this incredible boy killed the day after commence 'ciology, people tend to gather ;an, as we all know, with the dtes. What an aid to sociability :s upon one's fellows after puff ly filters, on Marlboro's flavor er it makes one to extend the ul we all are to Marlboro for si How good not to live in the very man a stranger I today (thanks to Marlboro) hat is perfectly acceptable in dish in another. Take, for in p in an idyllic South Sea isle ear was the feast of Max, the 3mony was held, with tribal es, pie-eating contests, and, for wo dozen maidens. erficing maidens was entirely teenth year, he was sent as an irsity of Wisconsin, he soon dimn view of this practice-in fifteen or twenty maidens Ug warning. When, however, he taken: he was depledged by Jg quit school and moved to a meager living as a stein. fariboros for Alter emokere er amokers. Both are mo.te both anon.or th. oo5. ...