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BEAT BEAT VIRGINIA' VIGNA A UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA CROWING FOR A GREATER CAROLNA Vol. LII, No. 7 COI,UMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, NOVEMBER 3, 1961 FUDD10 Tiger Co-Ed Featured Next Week The news department of "The (;amecock," feeling it should do something in the line of a nice gesture toward Clemson Col lege. will dedicate next week's Bantam Beauty to the Tigers. Since it has been impossible to secure a photo of a Clemson co-ed, a staff photographer will make a trip into the hills the first part of next week. The reasoning behind this re cent movement is to better rela tions with the smaller institu tion, and to bring attention to the upcoming clash with the Tigers on Big Saturday, No vember 11. Librarians Attend Meet Tomorrow Carolina librarians will be among the key participants in the .10th annual meeting of the S. C. Library Assn. at Charleston to day and tomorrow. Among those attending will be Miss Jessie G. Ham, president elect of the state library associa tion and now vice president. She is head of the Cataloging Depart ment in McKissick Library. Also to attend are Alfred Rawl itgson, librarian; J. Mitchell Reames, director of the Under graduate Library and chairman of the College Section of the S. C. Library Assn.; Miss Margaret Givens, cataloger, state exhibits chairman for the association; Miss Frances C. Means, order librarian; and Ray Barker, reference li brarian. Prof. Claude H. Neuffer of the department of English will be the luncheon speaker for the associa tion tomorrow. His subject will he "'The Names Reveal the Man and the Land." Other speakers will include Ed mon Low, librarian of Oklahoma State University; Mrs. Annis Duff, executive editor of junior books for Viking Press; Dr. Ern est M. Lander, Jr., Clemson Col lege history professor. "Building for the Future" is the theme of the meeting. Social functions are also ached uled! for the two-day meeting, in eluding a tea in The Citadel 11 brary and museum. Other hosts will be the library of the Medical ltlege of South Carolina and the Charleston Library Society. q UNIVER I (rasduate studenti Wilnma Kirk Btarrliger (right), a leader ini Th4 consut,41lin inl tissues', aind is use ..mtienIt' like te"e will he aided h 'Bantam. M. Kathy Whihwck, our -eleetion for sophonore, ma.joring in phiarmacy like to buy drugs.) She love. to s KamneS, in addition to dancing. Kal sorority pin, but she weiars the fria that a shame, fellows? ('hoto by Blue Key V Annual Day A night of fun and fast dancing will aid scholarship on the USC caimpus Friday, Nov. 10, when the annual Carolina-Clemson Blue Key dance will be held from 8-1 p.m. Senior Class Will Sell Campus-Pacs Thie Senior Class is sponboring a fund-raising drive for the Na tioial Defense Ian Fund at the Univer-it%. For a donation of 50 cens, each male ttaident will receive a Cam pus Pac covntainsing approximately $4.00 worth of drug and toiletry products. 'he products are sup plied by such nationally advertised manffacturers as Gillette, Colgate P,an1olive, Schering, Pharna craft, IMuis liowe and many miore. TIhe Pacs contain Right Guard Deodoraant, Pahmoliv~e After-Shave IAtionaa, Ting A thlete's F o o Remedy, Mixture #69 Pipe To (Continued on Page 8) SITY FUND 1 tatrick and Robert Baldwin explain Greater Universit' Funad campaign. I in this physiology laboratory in tha v felowshina the f..uld enannien aill Beauties' hi% week' "Batant Beauty," is a (With her beauty, who wouldn't .w cook, swimI, and go to football lv niot oilyh wears the PI Beta Phi lernity pin of IAon1ard Rice. Ain't Fuller Horton.) 7i11 Hold ice Friday at the Wade Hampton Hotel. "The Hearts," well-known musi cal group. will entertain for the evening. They have played at Pawley's Island Pavilion and at many campus social functions. Dance chairman Roy Lucas said profits of the dance will go toward the establishment of the Blue Key Scholarship Fund which will reward academic excellence. A joint service project of the Carolina and Clemson chapters of Blue Key, the purpose of the dance is to allow students of both schools to meet with their friends before the Carolina-Clemson foot ball game. In order to promote this, stu dent groups of fifteen will be able to reserve a table especially for that group. Reservations can be made by contacting Roy Lucas or a member of the Carolina Blue Key Chapter. Admission will be $2.00, stag or date. Tickets wvill be sold daily from 10-2 in the downstairs lobby of the Russell House. Refresh ments will be included in the prtice of the ticket. ZEADER Warburg apparatus to I.aurentce S. W'arburg device mneasure's oxygen department of biology. (raduate pmvidte. (USC photo -- McGrail.) Dancc Hamil Plans have recently been an nounced by the Dance Committee or the Christmas Dance, which will he held in the Township Audi lorium on Saturday, December 16. 'he hours for the dance are 8 to 12. 'le featured entertainer for the dance will be Roy Hamilton. Also on hand will be Bill Parker and his orchestra. A male and female voealist accompany the orchestra. Admission for Carolina students will be by 1. 1). cards. Each stu dent must have his card. Any per sonx who does not attend the Uni versity must have a date ticket. Tlh coFt of these tickets is $2.00. The lince Committee is having 500 of these tickets printed. No couple will be admitted by two date tickets. The purpose of the date tickets is to reduce the number of out siders and to encourage students to date within the Carolina Com muity. Members of KSK, ODK, APO, Blue Key, and Block C will have the responsibility of helping the chaperones to control the enjoy ment of the crowd. The chaperones will be Dean andN Mrs. George Tonilin, Profes sor aid Mrs. L. L. Phaup, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Ledeen, Dr. and Mrs. M. B. Seigler, and Professor and Mrs. Gettinger. A section of the first balcony nearest the stage will be roped off for the chaperones. The total cost of the dance will be $1,350. Roy Hamilton will cost $1,000. and Bill Parker and his orchestra will be $350. Secretarial Workshop Held Here Three members of the faculty will participate tomorrow in the annual secretarial workshop co-sponsored by the School of Business Administra tion and the local chapter of the Na tional Secretaries Assn. Dean James A. Morris of the School of Business Administration will make the opening address to the secretaries. The theme for this year's workshop is "The Road to Secretarial Success." Dr. Nicholas P. Mitchell, director of the Exension Division, will speak on public relations as it applies to a se'cretary's wvork. Prof. .J. Adger Brown of the de partment of psychology a n d p)hilosophy will discuss the psy chology of learning wvith particular emphasis on skill learning. Mrs. Ada B. Thomas of the secre c:arial studies faculty Is coordinator between the University and the Palmetto Chapter of NSA. Luncheon speaker will be Mrs. .Iewell S. Baskin, assistant cashier of the Citizens and Southern Na tional Bank. The topic of her talk is Fee Enterprise and Socialism." Vol lowing Mrs. Baskin's remarks, the secretaries will see a demon stration,. "A Secretary Looks at llers:." Mrs. Marjori Toth, in ste -r of the Nancy Taylor School of (' arm, will conduct the (lemon st roi >n, assisted by students from l'al h <r(ollege. ('ost of the workshop is $5 which ine.uihi lunch in Russell House. Theu Student Union asks your ciooperat ion in seeing that the .o SM(ING rule is carried out in the assembly room. Most of~ thre other activities have beien successful in this but the week ly movies have had some dIiffticulties. No other indoor theater allows smoking so It Is nothing unusual. It is extremely expensive to refinish the floors after each Thursday movie. So we kindly ask your co-opera tion in seeing that the Union can continue to present these COrn ton W RE Oanooker- wvatch a-, firemen e% da. about 10 a.m. 1g amas wa. e 11eC. Mar-h and laree trucks extinp (Imppled into the timp ha.ket. (Ph Co-Ed Ca Board of Twenty women students who head campus organizations were intro duced to the Board of Women Visit ors at a luncheon Thursday. Members of the board spent the, day at the University to learn more of the women students' role in uni versity education. This year coeds head several activ ities and organizations composed of both men and women, as well as those for women only. Boy Scout I Will Be Her The Pers 'onnel Division of the Boy Scouts of America will re cruit at the University November 13 andl 14. History Professors Go To Meet Members of the history faculty at the University will again be among the key participants in the annual meeting of the Southern Historical Association, to be held this year Nov. 9-li at Chattanooga, Tenn. D)r. George Curry wvill preside at a session which has as its subject, "Aspects of British Imperialism of the 19th and 20th Centuries." D)r. 11. 11. Wienefeld, dean of the USC Griaduate~ School and former head of the D)epartment of History, is a member of the Committee on Nomi tntions. D)r. l1. D). Ochs, head of the De partment of History, is a member of the association's Committee on Membership. Other Carolina history p)rofessors who will attend the meeting are Dr. Avery 0. Craven, Dr. Daniel W. Hollis, and Dr. George C. Rogers. Members of the USC history de partnment regularly hold key posi tions in professional and scholarly organizations and the department is widely recognized as outstanding. Twelve of the 14 regular members of the history faculty hold the mitteC ill Be MAINS OF F] tingui-h a minior fire ii a warehou"e limate at 440 to0 11me u1111iling, L1d ui-Ahed thfe laze. 1i i- lotIieed 1ha1 11 1 oto eourte!. of I St': Ne-, Ser- ie.) mpus Lea Women The editor of the "Garnet and Black" is a woman student, as are the presidents of International Rela tions Club, Press Club, and several religious organizations. The lic-ard of Women 'i.itors also oured the campus and saw facilities and programs for women. They heard addresses by President Robert L. Sumwalt and C. Wallace Martin, director for development. In order for them to see all the lecruiter e Thursday The Placement Bureau has scheduled a group meeting for all interestedl s t u d e n t a , freshmen through seniors, with Mr. W. B. ('hanmdlecr, area representative, at 5:00 P.M. Monday, November 13, in Room 204, Russell House. In dlividulal interviews wil be con dlucted throughout Tuesday, Nol vembler 14, in the same room. Cand idates for individual inter views may arrange appointments through the PlIacement Bureau in the Russell House. "The Boy Scouts of America has annual opportunities for per manent professional employment for' a minimum of 400 properly qualified men," the National Council has announced. "AII men begin their profes sional s8rvice as district Southern executives, serving as members of the executive staff in one of the over 500 local councils and work ing under the direction of a Scout executive. The wvork involve. broadl adIm inistrative duties re lated to the promotion and super vision of Scouting in the council territory. The work does not in volve leadership of boys, but doe. include the recruiting, training and direction of men who work with boys. Starting salaries range froni $4,000 to $5,000 per year, plus car allowance. Successful men may ex peet. reanonab'ealary. In.---ses1 Sa s Here RE be-hind Pre,on Dormitor Wednes ;100 to ulipmlnlit. Fire Chief A. ighte41 match cor eigaretle had4 b-een ders Meet Visitors educational opportunities for women, the visitors had to visit virtually every classroom. Women students are no longer confined to secretarial science. education, and nursing as in previous dlays. Te School of Law includes three women istudents and tae School of Eigneerilng has two, plus a woman graduate student. Twenty - five women are enrolled in the School of Pharmacy, with seven more taking pr- -pharmacy courses. In the School of Journalism, there are 56 women. slightly more than one-third the total of journalism majors. The student leaders who met with the Board of Women Visitors at the luncheon are Sara Krebs, Alpha Kappa G;amma; Eleanor Spruill, Canterbury Club; Fran Baskin, "Garnet and Black"; Claudia Waites, Angel Flight; Heverly Coleman, D)elta Omicron. Also, Nancy Ariail, Euphrosynean Society; Abbey McKinney, Hypatian literary Society; Ann Burgdorf, In ternational Relations Club; Cathie Michelsen. Kappa Delta Epsilon. Also, Jane Boyce, Meditrina So ciety; Ann Shirley, Pan Hellenic Society; Annette Robinson, Pi Sigma Alpha; Susan McLaurin, Sigma Alpha Sigma; Levona Page, Press Club: Theresa Swink, Wesley Foundlat ion. Also, Elaine Haldwin, Women's Athletic Assn.; Lucy Crosland, Women's Standards Committee; Patty Whitlock, YWCA; Eleanor Hlouck, Religious Emphasis Week; Mary McLeod Hardy, Phi Epsilon Nui. Notice Seniors who have had their pictures made with another class and would like to have their class standing changed in the "Garnet and Black" are asked to notify the yearbook office Monday, Nov. 6. Final schedule for seniors who have paid their reserva tion fee and not had their pic tures made is Monday, Nov. 6, 9-12 and 2-6. Pictures will be made in Room 206. Photographs may be picked up by sophomores today in the "Garnet and Black" offic.