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eGocky " DORMITO R M45 01 6 mns OaTn -m Glimpse Th Let's See Do you burn with a yearning for strange adventure? The place for you is the Student Union Movie Marathon, more or less affec tionately known as the Russell House Assembly Room. Tomorrow's selection, Wake Me When It's Over, stars Ernie Ko vacs in a free-wheeling, loose minded satire on the time-honored army tradition of red tape. Ernie, drafted by accident and immeasur ably bored on a Pacific island back water of World War II, turns it into a pleasure resort. A hostile CAMPBELL'" PHAI Cornell DRUGS - SCHC NOTIONS - SOE di Sah taste of Sprin Salem smOker e monti By Rosemary Hankin ./4 C ti L91% g e< hi 'UT tc r< ai P 12' it 01 v( T tv rQ0I sou t $ MA g& p PM A ... 01 e Gay Life : ne A Movie : paper labels it the sin-spot of the T Orient, and Our Hero is summoned bc for a court-martial trial with an w, unusual ending. Thursday, Jules Verne's Journey To The Center Of The Earth will th he given a thoroughly thrilling ti< going-over by, among others, Pat be Boone. Fantastic episode follows rantastic episode, from bathing in pr . grotto lined with glittering ar :juartz to being blown through the PE Lop of a mountain, all in the name - f science. Better than the Twi light Zone - drop in. i CORNELL AACY Arms fil OL SUPPLIES so 1A FOUNTAIN w M re SIT refresi mir- softens gtime... so soft and refresh ir i fresh and flavorful every ti hol fresh . rich tobnac tbout April FDon't Can It was a March Day on the arolina Campus. The sun was shining brightly irough the dormitory window. Suzy Mortenstill groaned rumpily and grudgingly acknowl Iged the plaintive insistencies of r roommate and her alarm clock. )1d Grammar iews As an example of the treasures be found in the Rare Books >om of McKissick Library, the icient volume, De Priscorum roprietate Verborum by Jurianus aius, is an excellent one. The oldest book in the library, was printed in 1477, by Bernard Colonia, and given to the Uni ,rsity by Fisk Brewer in 1874. his valuable book contains quo tions from Latin grammarians the period. Perhaps the most unique part 'the volume, apart from its con nt, is its binding. The pages, ade of linen rags, are bound be reen two boards which were iginally covered with leather. No leather straps once held the ok closed and prevented the yoden covers from warping. Inside this volume one notices e absence of title page informa mn which is later discovered to in the back, the varieties of int and type, and the colorful. tistic capital letters which were inted by hand. Lessons Ii How T yIV jean Derrick Well, here we are going into the th week of second semester and me of us are still full of zeal - )rking our heads off trying to ike the best grades we have ever ceived. Needless to say, this zeal hes your t every pul A Salem cigarette bril g. Puff after puff... pack e me. Smoke refreshed ... sn taste - modern filte Created by Rt. J. Reyr D What T. S. i She stirred one sleepy eyelid, Out then the other, then both togetherlseel . . then let them rest . . . z-z-z- , twi Z-Z! A "Wake up! It's 8:45!" froi "OOPS!" reel All in all, it was a typical day ven )n the Carolina Campus. wh( mol of t Class over, Suzy walked out into S ;he sunshine and really opened her as !yes for the first time. The sun a fl .vas shining from the chrome on wh( ;he cars around the Horseshoe in a L ,vay that was blinding, but some iow, not unpleasant. i There was a warmth in the air, haa ind the grass had never looked was ;reener. The flags were flying one 3roudly against a cloudless sky, a a ind below, Maxcy Monument one silently p a s a e d judgment on MW passers-by. pro A pair of squirrels chased each bro )ther around the foot of a budding d ;ree, while the nearby sprinklers yot pfft-pfft-pffted themselves into clas nerry oblivion. An industrious :ommunity of birds busied them- S selves with an ill-fated family of lid, ?arthworms. tog Suzie looked again. They were .obins! She looked around again. S 3reen grass . . . blue sky . .. Mo )fft-pfft-pfft! It all added up! aw "Spring," said Suzie Mortenstill * * xoud, "has come!" Reg son What could be more perfect? brid iere it was Friday morning . - - min )mc more class today, one tomor- last 'ow at nine and an entire weekend Thii o enjoy the beauties of Nature the3 n all her glory! a p With high heart Suzie Morten- She itill walked briskly toward the the lussell House, deftly dodging a It )ulldozer behind Currell a n d outE skipping lightly over a sewer ditch. It t College L o Waste Vill die a passionate death after we >ur first or second hour-quizzes. the kfter the funeral comes the big th luestion -- what to do with all our- tim iewly acquired t;me - our old1 stil ,tudy time. This poses a problem i vhich needs some deep thought -- it g pret it d the -the pail c hos God Sys1 A Rool bein at b suee the Was mos1 over with in a will not but grat aste igs yOu the M fter pack... 10ke balem! rtoo ijoidbahra cmnan y utliot Said on Green Street everyone ned happy. Cars zipped by at :e their normal speed. blue jay screeched merrily n atop a campus squad car as -ampus policeman cheerily di ed the ladies of the State Con tion of Sweetpea Sewing Circles re to park their shiny auto >iles on the luxurious green he Davis Field grass. uzy dropped by the post office a matter of habit and wiggled -iendly finger at her pet spider n she checked her mailbox. ater, fully donutted and cof 1, she was lazily watching the sing sights . . . hasn't that girl rd about skirt lengths? . . . she suddenly amazed to find some standing next to her. Not only :meone, but a HE type some Long, dark, wavy hair, icles where they belong, Greek rile . . . and, man, those eye vs! Pardon me, do you play bridge? L see, Bill had to go to 5. . . . he stirred one interested eye then the other, then both wther aturday morning . . . Suzie -tenstill w a s already half ke when the alarm sounded' . she had never really slept. inald! . . . Reginald Fergu She'd never played such ge in her life . . . all luck, her d was three feet away. Supper night, movie . . . TODAY! was it! Right after class were going to the country for enic. . . . Nature at her best! bounded out of bed, threw up blinds . icles hung from the blossoms ide. was sleeting. ife No. 1 ime just can't sleep all day, that's ckward's way out. Wt. lmult .k like hail how to waste our 'e could begin with the old id-by of sitting on the benches ront of Russell lJouse but until ,ts warmer, this is going to be ty unhealthy. To get into the spirit ..f the thwg we have to St 11fw mna te's or hours - - ependsi on your nerve~s -. in Game.coc k IL,:mm. II.re 0mi-is cultural bma--rounud f ire tings anid ghi music fromi the us behind the.' comter sinogine.~ Blessium Ourium Slater Food temium, we can wvaste time, ,and more time. fter leaving the, Gamecock n, you will have a feeling of' g an almost complete success eing a time waster. Almost a ess, but nuot quite. To get into Carolina Blue Book of Time ters, you have to perform the sacredl act of wasters. Go to the U ndergraduate Libra ry some friends and talk - not whisper but LOUDI. Here you be in your glory, for you will >nly he wasting your own time everybody else's too (on ulat ions! We all make mistakes ... ERASE WITHO ON EATON'S COR Don't meet your Waterloo al typed papers begin with Cor typing errors with just an o that simple to erase without a time, temper, and money!I Your choice of Corrisabl light, medium, heavy weights Onion Skin in handy 101 sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrisable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPE RPORATIm The Pride Of Persona One Of the most outstandinj figures to graduate from Caro lina's NROTC was Commande Garette Ertel Lockee, now captail of the USS Turner. Captaii Lockee was graduated from US( in 19.13 with a B.S. in Commercu During his college years he was ai active member in many organiza tions such as the Clariosophi< Literary Society, the Baptist Stu dent Union, and the varsity trac team, and was president of th< Christian Service Club. A full Cherokee Indian hailinj from North Carolina, Captait Lockee is noted among his friend. W W. . Beut ad.h Thi huli'aAheUiest Besca urcuu atd theSot ofShCarolinalee inolubia Uni versity. It standl(s majestically in an island of ground which sepa rates Sumter Street into two( traf fic lanes just south of Grieen Street. Blessed though it is with beauty, the building was heset with lI-fortune from the beginning, and UT A TRACE RASABLE BOND the typewriter-perfectly risable! You can rub out rdinary pencil eraser. It's trace on Corrisable. Saves Sin )-d y [PITTSFELD, =A.. a- uge a xree Carolina lity Plus r,and associates for his smile. He is - also acclaimed by many f*r break r ing the record for replenishing arid l refueling. I tecently Captain Lockee was host to many USC midshipmen who traveled to Charleston for the I purpose of observing new sonar - equipment in action. After this demonstration, t h e midshipmen twere conducted o) a complete tour of the ship. and later that night. brought back to the Charleston .11arbor. apta ini i G ttE Ertel Lockee is i v d nzan o>f Wlm CaIrol nn's; N ( -,iit can I pr.li !4A**,Ak4' ~ X.. Beastly Echoes particularly curisedt w i t hPoor acoust its. Construction began in 1 852 but the building -- College IInal -- rema inedl unfiiished until sonn- time ini 1855 he'(ause of at series of misfortunes. Bricks to buihl( it wer'e destr'oyed in a Conga ree flyier freshet. The con rac'ting f'ir lii ot inito financial ruldes an d the work bad to lie tomipletedl by others. Thme roof blew off twice, causing at great deail of damaged. As College Hall, pri marily an auditorium, the building was a complete failure b)ecause of poor acoustics. The c'ost was abiout 50) per cent more than the amount of the contract, and ai consider able sum was spent on carpets, curtains and other measures inl tendled to improve it as5 ant audi torium. It wvas used a> a ('on federate hospital beginnaintg in 18(;:. Two years later' the .Stat e flouse of itepresentativtes met in the audi torium antd the Senate in the base ment, but only for a week -- again (due to the acoustitcs. F'ederal forces occupying Columbia used the hall. In 1882, it housed a local military unit. Mechanical workshops and classrooms were in it during one period. In 1888, it became a science building. Five years later, its basement was conv'erted into a gymnasium, and finally in 1910 the entire structure was given over to physical edlucation. It reC mains "The Gym" to this day. Thus, College llall - the "Greek tempille" pride of architect William Graves - has p)rovedl useful in many ways, although it was worth less from the start for its original purpose. There would be0 a great (eal of history revealed if the pesky old echoes of the past 157 years could be revived. (USC photo - McGrail; data from the two-volume "History of the Uni veraity of South Carolina" by Dr. Daniel Walker Hollis.)