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CLUB & CAMPUS FASHIONS BY 0. E. SCHOEFFLER, ESQUIRE'S Fashion Director Correct campus fashion begins with the basic dress suit. The back bone of any undergraduate wardrobe is a minimum of three basic suits. Here, then, are the trio that suit all occasions from every-day wear to evening dress. TOWN TWEED ... Here's a fresh interpretation of a smart but casual suit that is virtually a campus classic. It's in an olive tweed with a bright Tiger Tone overplaid; a versatile addition to your wardrobe that puts you at ease in town - or on campus. "BLUES MAKE FASHION NEWS"... The wheel of fashion turns back to blue for dress-up wear. Here's a three-piece blue serge suit ... sartorially smart, traditionally styled in the natural shoul der silhouette. It's an elegant vested suit featur ing a three-button front and notched lapels; in perfect taste for both daytime or dressy evening wear. NATURAL SHOULDER NEWCOMER... A striking three-piece suit with an olive bronze suede finish. Its vest features matching suit fabric on one side, pat terned fabric on the other. It's a smart, rugged, good-looking suit in a traditional styling. TWO ALTERNATE SUITS always correct for campus wear... One is the classic grey flannel, an old standby, and always dependable for daytime or evening wear. The other alternate is the glenurquhardt plaid. It affords a sprightly change of pace if you are in a position to expand beyond the three suit minimum. COLLAR POINTERS ...Your shirt collar complements your suit. A basic wardrobe of campus dress shirts should include the smart, elegant, crisp looking tab (there are several variations-the British tab, the grip t-b with short point, and the snap tab). The o.rford button down is still the perennial campus favorite and the short round collar is always neat and correct. (our' This time I was ej 4air It perceptivity dOterm/nwd to hook Did you Pail to is as keen the rogue! I land The /g One as my employed patience, ir again,Gort? chagrin! cunning, daring, strength... PiKA mnitates The Xi chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity recently activated 13 members. The new. actives are: Byron Rast, Larry Winn, Johnny Pilcher, Tommy Piu- . cher, Glenn Lumpkin, Pete Maver, ~ David McInnis, Reginald Brown,.............. Randy Burnette, Henry Arm strong, Keith Elliot, Mackie Mc Queen, and Ed Hutehinson. The newly activated members were honored at a banquet at Morrison's Cafeteria following the ceremony. ATO Captures Honors At their final stag smoker last Sunday, Alpha Tau Omega Fra ternity was presented a set of Encyclopedia Americana by Rob ert B. Cox, Dean of Men at Duke University, for leading all 124 ATO chapters in the nation in scholarship for the academic year 1959-60. The Carolina ATO's, in addition Eeyma sate to winning the Worthy Grand b ovne Chief Award for scholarship, mas eeals copped the national fraternity's award for the most-improvementplaue Pshdf of any ATO chapter in the coun-Morsnsevies try.ti e,enyasc Eddy Brown, ATO President,fre received the awards from Dean Cox on behalf of the chapter. Deadline Formo Society News The deadline for Society news is 5:0 on Monday afternoon. If it is absolutely inmpossible to have it here before then, have it in the Gamecock office, Room 208, Rus sellasure.ePushed f Rain, Sle BY CLOUDY HARDY Mike Sheheen, this year's Senio Class president, came for his in terview with a noticeable liml which had been incurred durinj a heroic effort to win a socce game in P. T. class. "I was trying to stop the ball but it rolled under me and brok my foot," he explained. "Th coach said I was just spastic, bu I attribute it to my old age. Sen iors are definitely too old to bi taking P.T." S .. .. . . . N He sat down in a chair, leane( his crutches against the desk anc proceeded to make his broken foo comfortable. Mike, who is a native of Cam, den, is majoring in business man. agement and plans to go int( business with his father upor graduation. He likes all types ol music and enjoys water sports such as fishing and swimming. In response to a request thai he tell about himself, he said ...a neo and exotic bait... jet the brute spirited the bait. New awag with barefg bait a bobble oP mg corky Enjoy Morrison's I SAVE A DOLLAR t at Morrison's. Come in anc splendid salads, tempting abulous desserts await your r time . . . no problem, al unbelievably fast. Plenty ol ond cup of Morrison's coffee, 1334 SUMTER ST. S.. a ? A, Nor Bro "I'm rather boring, to tell the r truth. I love to talk. I even cut classes sometimes to talk. I like to hear other people talk, too. I sometimes take the opposite point of view in a conversation so that r I can listen to someone else talk. To sum it all up, I'm nuts and I babble a lot!" a Mike lists Carolina as his main interest right now. "It is the ideal t community because you're ex - posed to all types of people and a ideas, yet you can live in harmony with them." i About his initiation into campus I life he says, "I didn't want to come to college. I thought I wanted to stay in Camden, so I worked all summer in order to buy a car to commute. The first day I came to Carolina for orientation I called my parents and asked them to pack my clothes. I had decided to live at Carolina. I've been here since that time and I love it." For relaxation and fun, he likes to talk. He also loves clothes and likes to shop for them. His only problem, he declares, is that he LIKES to SPEND moneyl What, A nevo chap baitV named 'Jonah! )elicious Food and While You Do! MEAL TICKETS AVAILABLE AT CASHIER'S STAND ,ken Feet Mike can easily be recognized around campus as a loyal Carolina student by the Gamecock decal which is glued to the cast on his broken foot. That's originality foi you! Mike not only possesses a friendly personality and a sense of humor, he has the ability anc energy required to be a leader ir the Carolina community. As presi dent of the Senior Class he spoke of several projects which will be undertaken this year. "We are going to raise money for the Na tional Defense loans by selling sample pacs of products which we have arranged to obtain from a national advertising agency. These pacs will contain several dollare worth of products which we will sell for much less. We have alsc arranged with a national art gal lery to have a one-man show foi Beulah Bassine and charge a small admission for the benefil of the National Defense loans. Another project will be a pledge campaign toward the end of the year for the Educational Founda tion." Mike's other activities include being chairman of the Speaker's Bureau and a columnist for The Gamecock. He heads the Honoi Board this year, a responsibility which he takes seriously. "We are trying to increase stu dent awareness of the honor prin ciple at Carolina. I believe thai the honor of students should lie with the students. The Honor I suppose the ordina do. You he classes, yoi you watch one little Day? No, Nobody fore, pause stirring sa Christop His father, wash game sprinter. ( brothers ai auto wash young Col However, I and spent nately, the the HNor.. t of the Horc him that t fast as his The run was Cuidai more than Bitterly to India w books. Bui after so m niever want struck him Fired wi the court oi bus, thougl life) and pl1 persuaded. On Octo The followi never befor flowers and tion tobacc invented ( what to di made still m in front of Through and so has in the filte: of work is And so, go Cigarette, Columbus, lovely thing And thanj C'ommnandI And Comr, aboor(IL Board isn't here to catch cheaters, but to help the students attain honesty on campus. The Honor Board has been very effective in promoting honesty. For example, last year we had one student turn himself in for cheating." Mike also serves on the execu tive committee for Religious Em phasis Week. "I don't really feel that R. E. Week should be con centrated in one week. Religion should be emphasized throughout the year with R. E. Week as the focal point. We need to create interest before hand in order to increase attendance and have a college type lecture rather than a sermon. Most students have personal questions which they would like to have answered. I also feel that we should expand A. A. 3a'arm DIAMONDS A Gifts for Every Occasion 2024 DEVINE ST. COLUMB M (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf" Loves of Dobie Gillia", etc. SAIL ON, SAIL ON! )ctober 12 is just another day to you. I ry way and do all the ordinary things y( wve your breakfast, you walk your ocelc i write home for money, you burn the d4 Howdy-Doody, and you go to bed. And hought to the fact that October 12 i you do not. thinks about Columbus these days. L for a moment and retell his ever-glorio h A i Ga A Rh. Columbus, born in heo three-g .His mother, Eleanor (Swifty) Coluni hristopher was an only child, except td eight sisters. With his father busy all and his miother 'onistantly away at t umbus was left pretty much to his o he lad did not sulk or brood. He was an all his waking hours immersed in a boo: re was only one book in Genoa at the til y Aristotle-and after several years of e, Columbus grew restless. So when rut here was another book in Barcelona, o rat little legs would carry him. or, alas, p)rovedl false. The only book i: tn CJaballo by A ristotle, which p)roved t< a Spanish translation of Care of the Hor disappointed, C2olumbmus began to dret here, accordling to legend, there were t: the only way to go to India was on hior my years of reading Care of the Horse ed to clap eyes on a horse again. Then a a perhaps it wats possible to get to India th his revolutionary new idlea, Columb~ 'Ferdinandl and Isahbella on his little fat lI six feet tall, wats plaguied with little fal eaded his case with such fervor that the er 12, 1492, Columbus set foot on the] ng year lie returned to Spain with a cargc e seen in Europe-spices and(1 met,als and -most wondrous of all--tob)accol Oh, w o caused in Europ)el The filter had long :y Aristotle, curiously enough) but ne with it. Now Columbus, the Great nother great discovery: he took a filter, it, and inventedl the world's first filte the centuries filters have been steadil' tobacco, until t<oday wo have achieved t cigarette--Marlbo0ro, of courselI Oh, w~ M4arlborol Great tobacco, great filter, gi ad friends, when next you enjoy a fin pive a thought to the p)lucky Genoese, whose vision andl perseverance made possible. e 3, *p * * Columbus too for the king-ekse phi r. If unfilltered cigaret tes ar. your cha 'ander the cic,e of ti.. ......tqr the interest of the professors and increase their participation in R. E-. Week." Mike is a rare type of indi vidual who is excited about every thing he does. Says one friend, "IHe's always sincere. Everybody likes him." Even his broken foot doesn't stop him from continuing his active work in campus organ -& izations. Perhaps a change in an old slogan would fit his case: Neither rain, nor sleet, nor broken feet Shall stay this student leader i'rom his duty. Want New Clothes? $$ See Page 9 $$ ND WATCHES - Expert Watch Repairing PHONE AL 4-1522 |A, S. C. an9huma "The Many ou get up in u ordinarily t, you go to !an in effigy, do you give s Columbus t us, there us, endlessly st 25, 1451. ninute auto ibus, was a ror his four iday at the rack meets, wn devices. avid reader ' k. Unfortu 'ne--Care of 'ending Care nor reached [1 he ran as ai Barcelona > be nothing Ie. ,m of going liousands of seback, and . ,Columbus iew thought by seali nas raced to ags (Columi legs all his rulers wero 'ew World. of wonders plants and hat a sensa since been body knew Discoverer, put tobacco cigarette? r improved ie ultimate hat a piece eat smoke? i Marlboro ilristopher the whole lip Morri. >lce, you'll WValenm.