University of South Carolina Libraries
The Uni It has come to the attention of "The Gam cock" that an organization for which we ha much esteem has recently been, to our wt of thinking, discriminated against. The allocation of WUSC-AM has been c from 35 cents per student to 26. Why? WUSC has been working to remedy con< tions that prevent their signal from reac ing certain parts of campus. The conditio were not created by WUSC. The facts a that the station needs a much stronger trar mitter to reach the new buildings whose stE structures ground out the signal. Is the c ting of allocations going to help build a nc transmitter? The radio station is a close-knit group hard-working people. They are dedicated the principles of good radio. Their reco collection has been carefully culled from t offerings of many top name labels. In t classical music field, their collection su passes any in the Southeast. Much of the equipment has been rigg from second-hand materials by an extremc fine engineering staff. All of it has been i stalled by the staff. The equipment a records of the station have been evaluated over $18,000. This represents the work of many peol The Spirl Those who gripe about there being school spirit at Carolina have not yet d covered that this is not a school but a u versity. A university, by its very name impli diversity. Many paths of learning are pti sued at a university. While a college is fore by economics to specialize to a certain ( tent, a university must specialize in ever thing. These many paths of learning must le in different directions, thus giving to d parities in the attitudes of the people follo ing them. A small college gains unity by the ve fact of its size. Everybody knows everybo else. A university gains unity by the bo of pursuing knowledge, and by students joi A Word Our congratulations to Registrar Godfr for planning a most effective registratic Though there were still a few rough spo on the whole this was smoother than ai registration in years. The idea of mailing out cards to studen is a good one. Too bad it couldn't have e tended to the town students. This would ha prevented the milling mass that spilled fro the Assembly Room down the stairs to cov the ground floor lobby on Monday mornin Dr. To attemp)t the wrapping up of the inea ing of a mani's lifeo ini a short tribute is foil So we wvill not try this with a man such the late I)r'. Clarence E. Crotty. We wv merely try to explain some of what the Ui versity has lost with his recent death. In his efforts on the behalf of the Unive sity Players he raised the sites of young dIi (;ROWI NG FORl A G.IW.EATEI I 'IVERISITY OF S01111 CAR .MembtIer of A,,'c~ie (ollegiate I the Univity o I f South Carolina weekly, ont Fridauys, year e*xcept aon ho4lidays andt dauring examI1iniations%. The iopinionsi expressedl by co,laumnaist, andc lette: ueesarily thos%e of1 "The Gamecock."."he Gan,mu I.etterE to the F,ditor. buhail l letter% mus1lt he signled not cons%titute an endorsemfent. The right to edit pulientionl may letter is reserved. EDITOR .1 MANAGING EDITfOR BUSINESS MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGI:R NEWS EDITORS Levona P SPORTS EDITOR ASS'T SPORTS ED)ITOR FEATURE ED)ITORt SOCIETY ED)ITOR ASS'T SOCIETY ED)ITOR CAMPUS EDITOR EXCIIANGE EDITOR CIRCULATION MANAGER .. REPORTERS: Carroll Gray, Brenda Williams, Joan Wolcott, Mary Anne Sadler, Philip Ilas Gene Platt, Pat Peden, Bonnie Miller, Rot Derrick, Richard Sullivan, Betty EasIer, Bil Parsons, Pat Tapp, Joe N. Medlin, Blanding Steadman, Tommy Marchant, E. V. Kimbrell, Bradley, Doris Meads, Jack Gottlieb, Leroy Cob' Cookie Crum, Emily Redding, Claire Foster, Ann Thompson, Henry Laffitte, .J o a a n n e Darling, Tunis DuRant. BUSINESS STAFF: Herbert Adams, Brenda Kollkin, Murray Coker. TYPISTS: Gay Wright, N a r a hi Teague, B Alicia Gardner. dndest Cut e- over the years. The station was founded in ie 1946 under the direction of Mackie Quave, ty of WIS fame. It is a training ground for students who ut wish to enter the radio-TV field. There is no course taught at Carolina in radio work. In fact there is no school in South Carolina li- that offers courses in radio journalism. h- Over the years WUSC has contributed as many persons to professional radio and TV re work. Among these graduates of WUSC are s- Charlie Morris and Bill Hay who now work e1 with South Carolina Educational TV. Bill it- formerly worked with WIS, and WNOK. w Jack Wood and Robert Glymph are with WIS. Dave Bledsoe worked with WCOS, of WMSC, and WIS in Columbia, and is pres to ently with KHOG radio and TV in Fayette rd ville, Arkansas. The list could go on and on. he The argument against WUSC is that it he (oes not reach everybody. It must be realized ir- that as opposed to many college stations, WUSC is carried over lines. In other words, ed a line must be strung to each and every build ly ing the station reaches. It must compete - ith five downtown stations with much nd stronger signals carried over airwaves. at WUSC formerly reached the entire cam pus; it could and should do so again. The )le station must. have money. Of Carolina no ing many different organizations. is- People group with others who are in ni- terested in the same thing*. One person may be a member of a social fraternity, the Y, es Student Council, and a professional fra ir- ternity. Another may be a member of another ed social fraternity, the newspaper staff, a re x- ligious group, and the University Players. y- Both may belong to the same school, thus giving them a tie. Or the tie might be in ad religion, or the football team; or they might is- both be from the same hometown. w- The spirit of Carolina is an intricately woven thing. Its nonexistence is loudly pro ry claimed, but just watch it take hold when ly someone from another school starts running id Carolina down. We do it ourselves, but watch n- it, buddy! i Of Praise .y It seems as if some satisfactory method of n. mailing out cards to town students could be ;s, found. Most of them would be willing to pro iy vide self-addressed stamped envelopes. Or perhaps a part of last semester's sys ts tem might be used, with town students re x- ceiving their materials in their respective ve schools. m In any event, it seems that the era of mile er long lines in front of McKissick is gone. So g. much to the good. Crotty n- nmatists to undreamed of heights. Plays pro y. dluced und(er his p)erfectionist eye rated with is the best of college-producedl plays, and some ill times surpassed even l>rofessional p)roduc i- tions. A dledicatedl man is contagious. He lends r- the fever of his enthusiasm to others. D)r. a- C'rotty was such a man. f"reen GoLnae as thed an, n had ~a ir the students of (a eotbjtes n'do si Iauring the college nn' - writers a.re not cock" ecou'(,rages nti ja an mrK ayn Pu,blishing do(eNS ,r withhold fromshseJrse eurn h.ci UiDY K I LLOUGHI Mncno Vnko hth Howard Hlellamis kosntig oewudko Jerry i~ Jackson nvrohn.(hcopxiyf Gene D)yson tepeeigsnec sproe ige, Nancy Ariail, l,0 1nttodtuithilson Anita McCartney oftoewotikhateynw D)oug G;ray )tthn) Carroll Gray vtbeoeIeiahdPdud Kelley Jones inenilbyocte,woth Brenda Williams Otceol)lh(ecrbdath Kerny Wofford wss a nAhn.Scae Pat Peden Ihuh hth nwntig e' Murray Coker msFybewudgv i p Bob) ll pioohclssmstrgou lank Leltermann, hsoy 'es, Pat Butters, Satr'Eisniasiceac 'in Burns, Gene enninauirswtht I Savage, Trina proesest eaite ee Clarkson, Gene tiinithcyl.Myyog Ann Cox, Herb mehaefudhspiopya mn, Dennis Myers, vcoeeapfrmesniblt Sandra Infinger, t oit.Te ru hti hr Verdery, Kathie isnpup.enli,thnury Williams, Ruth .sdti ruet sajsiia endLanatr, htomn Sats" ado notr reag niA, however, and at buteermore l'm u ytena edo ni Letters To The Editor Deer Editor. Several questions were posed about the "Gamecock" during a re cent discussion between a girl friend and myself. The main ques tion that we would like cleared up was posed in reference to "Little Man On Campus." Just who was the lady in the cartoon talking to? We didn't want to sound ignorant but there doesn't seem to be any one in the car. If there is, what are they doing? Sincerely, Two Maxey Occupants Ed.: Maxcv ain't what it used ito be! To the Editor: Last month the free world read a smug manifesto that declared the Communist system is bound to win inl peace over capitalism "by the force of its example." The statement was part of a 10, 000-word document, issued at a re cent meeting of the world's Com munist leaders in Moscow, which said that war is not inevitable and that Communism can win out over the capitalist West in peaceful co existence. How Christian such sentiments seem. For aren't peace and good example the secret Christ taught us by His life on earth to be the key to persuasion? Who is benefiting by I His lesson now? While we retain the truth in our minds, we are sur- I rendering the means of spreading i so smug. If the truths we hold I that truth to Christ's enemies. Christians cannot afford to be seem worn and uninteresting, it is because we are not living them. We have lost sight of what we believe I in. We must return to simple things and the beginning of a new year is an excellent time to do so. - As a nation, we go without a cause to help people who are look ing for more than a handful of sur plus wheat. These down-trodden q nations, which hold the future bal- r C ance of world power and maybe the survival of civilization itself, are studying the ways advanced nations deal with the complex spiritual r problems of civilization. Is it because of our separation of church and state that we go t empty-souled? No, because the very philosophy that is behind separa- '] tion of church and state also exalts the individual and the dignity of his beliefs. Our difficulty lies in the fact that we attempt to separate the religious and the practical man within ourselves - something that can never he done without harm to one or both. r The dollar is weak, and we arej cutting back our aid programs. It r. is time for us to realize that men, a not money, wvill win men to the r Christian cause. TIhere is no more n p)oint in aiding a poor country with- s out personal love than there is in tI giving a Christmas present except tI as a sign of love. Hut is ou r cause Christian, or is it taLx deductible? n Sincerely, i Richard John P'awley USC at Florence ol Meaning smn can he the basis of a positive tU value system, as well as a negative ii one. O)the~rs, wvho claim that they t( a re, the ",t rue heats,'' challenge this rt statemnt by alsserting that they do S< hlave' a positive value system. They i su pport t heir "'free-love'' views with ai quiotes from Rousseau, and insist til that society would (10 well to re- sI coust ruct its dogmas into an adlmis- et It has become increa.singly 01)- mE vi('us thait lI:instein's most famous si thPery applies as well to philosophy mi as it doies to malthematics. ( Both t( mthemtatics and p)hilosophy derive mI from inuterchangeabile logic.) E in- or stein realized this, and spent his hi1st yearis demonstrating the puosi tive humanistic. aspects of his w theory. ( IRelativity, w h e n applied to wV everyday life, does not necessarily thl eaet a meaningless void, for it may a b)dEome ai value system in which E (very man is a creative artist of thl the future as he wvould like it to bes ce Ideals may become realities. "Much vt of life is of such stuff as dreams es are madIe of," as Sandlburg put it. fr T[here are those who wvill call ell Sandhurg's "dreams" by the name a of "illusions," andl so they are. But, di as Sandburg concludes - "someday bo we may weave them into realities." ie Tt is the opinion of this writer or that illusions are as necessary to tir man as oil Is to his cybernetic he fiends. Illusions keep our maclh- m< inery in working order, and may be alr discarded when and if we attain en the status of the long-sought It's Our Birthday 4V go ar So fllj da ch SSo is be] Ste ha tr" thi thi ev, ha "o pa no obi inj in tot lif col Photo of Robert Elliott Gonizales coturte*4 of Dr. Jack Crau ford. rij Monday, January 30, "The Gamecock" reached its 53rd re irthday. In 1908, Robert Elliott Gonzales founded the wi aper and became its first editor. he Gonzales, one of the leading students at Carolina, came rom a distinguished newspaper family. His father, his ho -randfather, and two uncles were widely known journalists. ua le gained a national reputation as an editorial writer for th, 'The State" when he was only 28 years old. But his career, tic iromising as it was, was short-lived. In 1916, he went to It ,l Paso as a private in the fight against Pancho Villa, who tn iad raided Columbus, New Mexico. Gonzales contracted foi ineumonia there and died. His friends and members of the bri >ress paid tribute to him at the services at Trinity Epis opal Church here. th! The Gonzales family extended credit for the first print- ne ng of "The Gamecock." The two literary societies, Clario- inj ophic and Euphradian, agreed to back the paper. As the tic oung gentlemen of Carolina had developed a Pastime of tealing chickens from the professors' homes, one l>rofessor ne emarked, "May 'The Gamecock' survive longer than any un hicken I have been able to keel) on campus." It has stir- de: ived both the chicken and the professor. all "The Gamecock" has served the students of Carolina for ver a half a century. It has grown over the years and now ne eaches nearly 6,000 persons. It is read by state officials, be lumni, friends, persons in other cities and states, and tic though sometimes we wish otherwise) by the faculty and At he administration. en "The Gamecock" continues "CROWING FOR A BET- th 'ER CAROLINA." to knthony E. Brown . . . A Tour Into Outer Several gentlemen recently time before we turnet agjin to jhe col e t u r n e d from an extended travelonmter. After :nli,wimn io >urney into many of the remote cransih reua ta nsa. yaches of our knowvn Universe iiato.w oc'd j i nd even into the dIreamedl-of orettleltth.utra ~gions that lie beyond the ketn of bns fteMlyWy hs o an. Their trip was kept a deep pat!'heounywsihutb rcurity secret for obvious reasons; duttems i!r.,t,fre is, then is the original account ofth cluso S':eftsm g tat trip), as related by one of the vihl))erfo IhEat R chausted voyagers,.ob r sy1m,nc c ''As we let t the Earth at a speed TOCpieymu<a..rnig aver before attained by living men fo epadfeyci pln i a space vehicle, we could neither tasuny "r* sw r- a e nor hear a single physical ~ee hrohti -'' ll l sing, save for the even movements te,a 'del ... l'gn the instruments that wer*e ar- tego~gfrsv >~ ,dw a tyed in rows b)efore our eyes. CCti*fino . .-v'd resently, the feeling of this hack )1t1tdinhea* ba touch with our senses eased, and qikygoigpt i ih,o e were ale to orient ourselves Deph.1 ily to outr immediate environs. "xase W(2 ~ a f U "After observing by means of wthn ihee : e instruments that our course was alfv sfl .~1 lo,o ue and our speed correct, our in-frm hihwal a.in re.st soon centered on the picture sattiOtl ): . sb 'layed -to the receiving television cncosyapr; . i tlby the camera located in the lih,wihernc1 . - >.se of the ship. Imagine oursilatohei' t nlazemuent when we witnessed notwehd;a,'- . ec Earth, but the moon steadily huserir i -a rinking on the screen. Franti- setdt e~ ~~4h .lly, we checked the travelometer,sptal)(i5ftth. q a hich we had overlooked previ- laCadgaty~ a h sly, and dliscovered that we had hdn yoynn f h dover four-hundred thousand anoteclr Oi .or W iles into) space, or approximately "sw rg--I~~a a ptoint on1 the (lark side of the SpeWecld' - ,,ar 'on where the Earth was situated thtrvlmeradI*'d si the b'right side,.ii n a n-j,'.llae O het Other Side-ewiese 1* .ie "Rather, we had thought. that it (akysrue -*titI i auld be t he (lark side of the moon.bn iue hu ,. ~I( .Ir ph~otofgrap)hs revealed that mn epcst. f)tiy hat we have always considered big aoigOIb . o ( '(lark side' is in reality exactly soebtUen -dn.Ia(dr brilliant as the 'Earth's side.' ~&( h v'en more astounding is the factJaItin,w lw th\hlet at o'ur p)hotographs outlined the acmlt tp HI g h nfigurations of the moon in re-tlvso iwr'i X c h rse, but precisely the same in munu a*~-i,pdti r ery detail, as those which we see n vnth4p ~ bdb. m the Earth! Our tentative con- VIO o o~It5''lto h n Ision was that the moon is not ~nieqo h 41~bpw a sphere, but flat and transparent eetdt oS noiij,it ~k that receives its illumination'14'lfIcj,.hi th fromt the sun and from the "u pcal *)Mrit4 ut o flect ion of the sunlight that fallsaloe uscOetfrbjtf the Earth. Further investiga- mto,ada . tp~~ hog n revealed that there is a slightthsaeyat,a V'. 1'eo pl riding away of the edges of the waredlapa!lthouhte fs on from the Earth, so that the thnbttuhta'ra rfrs sl pearance of a sphere is appar-obevtnWa fhePcEll "So entranced were we by our weesadnlnuiyinar ti courevain ha tws e asa ledI a far the 'wuer anI te Jordan . . The So ih Sub Iecti ly Southerners do we shoes. A A many people in 's country a stunned by this covery. It is common know! across Ison's and Dixon's 11 that all utherners a r e a -ejudiced, terate lot w ho a nd their ys planning -old-fash ned lyn Ings. Some think that the uth is peopled entirely by Si mn Legree types. Dr even more fantastic the South pictured as the land where les, replete with hoop skirts, ,nd fluttering their lashes at ndsome gallants under magnolia es, while in the backgrcund two >usand Negroes sing a choral in ee part harmony. This wasn't en true in 1861. Ihese and other misconceptions ve been strengthened by so called >jective" national magazines and pers. These misconceptions are only unfair and untrue but are tacles to a better understand r of the South. It is difficult for one not born the South to understand its cus ns, its problems, and its way of a; but annihilation of these mis iceptions would he a step in the ,ht direction. The South has much to offer the ;t of this country. Its heritage, 6ich is more of a burden than a ritage, is unique. The South is the last real strong Id of conservatism and individ lism in this country. These are ! qualities upon which this na n was founded and grew strong. is vital that we return to these Lditions which we have deserted * conformity and a disastrous ind of liberalism. The South is the only section of s country ever to know the bitter 3s of defeat in war and the crush r humiliation of military occupa n. Southerners do no have the cocki. ss which is natural to a people beaten in war. They know that reat is possible, this is a lesson Americans need to learn. National self - confidence is cessary, but too much and it :'omes complacency; the na n grows w e a k and lax.. nerica can not afford com i oy in today's world, w e ?re are so many real thre ts her existence. Space ild see into the gloom. Stepping up to one of these ups, who appeared harmless and to were outfitted, both in dress d in pigmentation, in the palest greens, we asked wvho they might In a voice that wvas at onIce ar and softly pitched, a tall, unt figure replied, 'We are the flections of Earth-Men; some .1 us by different names nacience, Soul, Talent, Tempta - n--it makes little matter, for we those forces that create in men that is extra-sensory, all that in him that is intangible. We 1 each other "Abstractions," for can only be experienced, not nm or felt. When a man dies, one us must make his journey, as i see us doing now, to another iverse, where we will assum . same role among the new-h~ men in a world that exUe re.' "'Why, then,' we asked, 'are re so many of you journeying oce, if you go but one -at a 'His answer petrified us with the cc of our owvn powver, for he said: 'ir Earth has destroyed itself oug aM'ncerous growth of - -- eked nuclea idivi.dac'. There i i re use of us here, Ex se five you see by that rock, ~ey Syour Abstractions, and they de e for you to go with them, if will, to the new Universo that beyond those green fields in the hance.' The Awakening 'As we strolled along with the ymn group, the new plain sud ly opened in front of us; and re was blue sky and the sound gulls whistling above us.' 'It was then that we awakened m our unconsciousness to dis er that we were in the sea, still ide our spaceship. The firing I failed, and we had been pitched the Atlantic Ocean, only two dred miles from the Florida st. The green we had seen was dazed view of the water as we idly surfaced after the deep nge into the sea; the figures, vague shapes of schools of ies that swam about the cap e. A later cheek revealed that entire "journey" had lasted -ty minutes; its effects will last ifetime, and more