The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 16, 1962, Page Page Four, Image 4
C00
M~i od by
SUPRESSED DESIRES!
Seen at the Chi Psi party . . Saturday Night ... At
Lake Murray ... Mary Jane Hicks and Pettigrew Hamil
ton, Sally White and Jeff Christie, Patsy Copeland and Gene
Allen, Shields Osborne and Stephen Niver, Ginny Helms and
Craig Norton, Sissy Williams and Mark Alexander, Judy
Crystal and Bob Faucette, Chrystal Christophersen and Jim
Poulos, Judy Davis and Jim Scheider, Mary Myers and Bob
Plunkett, Fran Lloyd and Henry Everette, Judy Turner and
Toby Van Buren, Margaret Wilkins and Jim Simons, Lynn
Barnes and A. C. Shull.
AT THE FUZZY BUTTON
With The Dynamics . . . A PiKA party .. . On Satur
day . . . Gail Peay and Johnnie Carroll, Barbara Herman
and John Pilcher, Mary Louise Mickle and "Baby Huey" I
Blair, Joyce Durham and Ray Kestler, Jan Wood and Tommy
Pilcher, Katherine Stoltz and Bob Burris, Genie Garvin and
Jim Costen, Libby Rogers and Ed Duffy, Florence and War
ren Cole, Jean Carroll and Cliff Holler, Angel Lackey and
Tom Tindall, Geanie French and Steve Weeks, Ginnie Cone
and Gene Martin, Betty Cox and Richard Kohn,
FOUNDER'S DAY
Sig Ep's .. . At Swain's for Supper . . . Then at The t
Mehl-Rujan Room . . . With the Tams . . . Marilyn New
some and Rush Morrison, Sue Strahorn and Sandy Sagun,
Ann Hewlett and Carl McClendon, Lynn Proctor and Capers
Brazzell, Cecil Slocumbe and Jimmy Smith, Linda Schriver
and Frank Kinney, Emily Redding and Hal Henry, Charlene t
Daughtry and Tom Leonard, Carolyn King and Dean Cap- <
per, Virginia Freeman and Ozzie Corley, Lily-Roland Ebert e
and Larry Edwards, Welda Anderson and Buddy Powell, t
Sheri Snyder and Kelley Jones, Barbara King and John
Dalisa, Flossie and David Hopkins, Cherrie Taylor and Wade
Britt, Jane Hicks and Jim Singleton, Mary Jean Smith and a
George Meeks, Kathleen Higgins and George Seals.
AT HEISE'S j,
Saturday night . . . With the Rockets . . . Sigma Nu's
all . . . Kit Kellog and Benjy Seagle, Linda Byrd and John
Breedin, Jane Walter and Sack McNeil. Clara Annette Rikard
and Milton Lewis, Jane Bowen and John Dalisa, Melissa 0
Thornton and John Shearin, Carole Dubose and Cole Mc- C
Daniel, Lula Murray and Dewain Herring, Bonnie Coyle and
Julian Boswell, Trunky Seastrunk and Patty Richardson,
Bonnie Brewer and Craig Wrigley, Sims Hart and Jerry
Ballentine, Carole Jones and Bo Mullis, Audrey Hand and
Press Mabry, Bertie Green and John Patterson, Reed Maul- n
din and Don McLaurin, Bonnie Dreher and Harris Deloache, P
Pudge Clarke and Ben Boyd, Kay Leitner and Ford Douglas, h
AT GIBSON'S POND t
A Kappa Sig party . . . With Drink Small and the Group ti
. . . Ellie Kerlin and Luther Rankin, Jane Arnold and Swami -
Nash, Lynne Curry and Henry Richardson, Suzanne Zimmer
man and Paul Valentino, Nan Franklin and Rob Weir, Nancy
Orr and Tom Lawson, Abbie Frick and Karl Beason, Janis Y
Clemons and John Godbold, Diane Dowell and Bob Crain,
Martha Lewin and Lewis Argoe, Mary Frances Reid and j
Jimmy Copeland, JoAnn Austin and Carl Warren, Ann
Dunning and Ed Burgess, Becky Gerald and Joe Bailey,
Nidkie Still and Bob Dirkes, Tiger Jones and Bill Hughley,
Mary McCraw and Tom Conner, Lois Quattlebaum and Dan C
Sherrill, Caroljean and Tommy Moore, Shirley Holt and
Jimmy Plowden, Faye Martin and Tuck Clifford, Mary ti
Jo Sherrill and Les Dickert, Ann and Jim Baldwin, Martha sa
(Continued on page 5) n
There's a lot u1
Cornfort, silence and Chevrolet. Its
Fisher screens
luxuy tochalengeany inst.ant respons
luxuy tochalengeany engines, a host
and look like
car from anywhere that make it h
car. But your
1905 Chetrojet Impa2a Sport Sedan eh
Ask about "Go with the Greats," a special record al
dilffernt Aind.s of case at yuru Cevolt de.:alrs
College Students
Can't Spell
New York City College students
may be more scintillating than the
rest of us, but chances are they
can't spell it.
Quizzed on a list of 12 words do
chosen from "The 100 Words Ks
Easiest To Misspell" in the October KA
Reader's Digest, not one of a ran- to
dom sample of 69 New York City rer
students on four campuses made a ,
perfect score. Average for the Ho
group was eight wrong, four right. ha
Highest score - a co-ed majoring an
in Spanish in graduate school at hot
Columbia University - got four
,vrong of the twelve.
Although scintillate is one of
:he "100 Easiest" words, it is not .
imong the 12 chosen for the test.
rest words i n c I u d e "drunken- ' U
tess," "embarrassment," "fricas
ee," "perseverance," "irresistible,"
'indispensable," "sacrilegious,"
'genealogy," "desiccate," "recon
ioiter," "apocryphal" and "esopha
Pus." Words misspelled by the
kighest scorer included "fricassee,"
irresistible," "indispensable" and
'desiccate."
Only six of the New York stu- col<
lents quizzed know how to spell the
fricassee." Most, however, err by cen
oubling the "c," or not doubling -olc
he "s."
free
Are the New Yorkers ashamed put
f their poor showing?
Apparently not. Although most goo
met
hink their teachers do "grade .t
own" for poor spelling on papers,
specially in English, only a few .
hink that their spelling ability witl
A
'ill be important to their success .
mng
tter on in life. bi-ot
Says a New York University ate
inior, majoring in Business Law, but
The ability to spell will not have This
iuch bearing upon success unless ViC
nie is a secretary or does a lot of ,00,
)rrespondence." ima.
Says a Hunter College English zpel
iajor: "Good spelling might add A
)mething, but I don't think it will soP'
Eng
ake you a success in life. Most
2ople who are successful don't spel
Ave to write words out. A secre- nted
Lry can do that. In lesser posi- kids
ons, spelling is definitely more xeem
aportant. Colleges are more in- M
rested in your ideas and what doul
'Th
ou can produce." Tp,
A Barnard College sophomore, ;pel
istifying her own nine-wrong ,ers
:ore remarks, "It's always corn- ish
>rting to remember that Winston of v
hurchill can't spell, either." .ig
There is even some evidence "Un
iat the New Yorkers think bad nor
elling signals an imaginative seor
mid. A Newv York University this
iderneath the beauty of the '63
roomy, comfortable Body by
out noise and shock. There's
e in a choice of 6- or 8-cylinder
of refinements to make it run
new longer, and plenty more
ard to believe it's a low-priced 7
Chevrolet dealer can prove it!
sres its carefree Jet-smoothness th the new
bum of top artists and hits and set
-'63 Chevrolet Chevy iI. Corvai, a
i Kappa,
Modeled
By Ray Keeder
Editor's note: We have jumped
wn the alphabet to the Pi
ppa Alpha house because the c
L's and Lambda Chi's requested
postpone their interviews until
nodeling is finished.) t
dodeled after the Fountainbleu a
tel in Miami, the PiKA House t
; the same basic color scheme, e
I arrangement of the famed e
el.
cattered rugs in bright, multi- m
r or orange give liveliness to o:
lounge. There are sofas in the
ter of the room matching the ei
irs in the rugs. ti
n
hman majoring in f i n e arts T
it this way, "People who are 0
I spellers are people with h
hodical minds. Usually crea- T
people are poor spellers.
ginative people are not good
k details like spelling."
City College freshman study
Engineering observes, "My
her is working for his doctor
degree. He is a shining success
he doesn't know how to spell."
student, however, qualifies
:omments later on in the inter
,. He explains, "You can be a
I speller and have plenty of
ination, or you can be a good
ler and have no imagination."
nother City College student, a
iomore s t u d y i n g Electrical
ineering, seems to sum up the
:rity view when he says, "Poor
ling is not necessarily associ
with a plodding mind, but the
who are the best spellers do
i to be that sort of person."
ost of the students questioned
)t that a quiz selected from
3 100 Words Easiest to Mis
!" is a fair gauge of their
ling ability. A Columbia Uni
ity graduate student in Eng
explains, "Those are the kind
rords I always look up."
introducing the list, Reader's
at editors themselves explain,
less you are a statistical ab
aality, it is unlikely that you'll
e higher than 50 per cent on
test."
he make more people
depend on
Bel Air and Biscayne.I
'four entirely
ad Corvette
Alpha Ho
On Fame
At each end of the lounge are
nodern, semi-circular sofas in
orown. In front of each of these
ofas is a low coffee table. Leather
hairs, found throughout the house,
Lre matched in pairs.
The lighting is done by floor
o ceiling fixtures of modern de
igns. Two of these are placed at
he ends of the double sofas in the
enter of the lounge, and provide
nd tables with light by having a
uilt in circular section of light
(Photo by Johnston)
,ood inserted in the lower sections
f the lamps.
White drapes extend down the
,itire length of the lounge. On
ie wall is a tremendous tile
iosaic in the multi-colors which
iatch those found in the rugs and
t h e r articles throughout the
muse.
Separating the lounge from the
.V. room is a large trophy case
If anyone finds a Phi Delta
Beta Fraternity pin, please con
tact Kae Harper, Box 1811
U.S.C. The pin was recently
gained and lost, and it is im
portant that it be found.
(X..
get Lot
czLDi moi
througi
And L&M'
. inside and outs
Enter t
use
d Hotel
with glass doors over which a
slats of stained wood extending
the ceiling.
The PiKA's can be proud
owning the only color television
campus. A black leather sofa ai
matching chairs provide relaxati
for their occupants while watc
ing the prized possession.
The chapter room is marked 1
another trophy case and a larg
round, leather "stool-like" secti(
of furniture. Colored nests on t
walls give the room atmosphei
A painted gamecock and numero
plaques also decorate the wal
The never missing card tables a
also present and provide for t
relaxation needed away from tl
hustle of studying upstairs.
GRILLED F
BOSTON-B
Served with C
Brown Bi
aouiAni
"Ledmort for NHagry AMs'r
Corner of State and Blossom
CAYCE, S. C.
s More If
tore body
the blend
cre flavor
the smoke
e taste
i the filter ..
s filter is the modern lilt
ide-so only pure white
* mMGADPI
Sigma Chi
Pledge
Officers
re Pledge officers of Gamma Nu
to chapter of Sigma Chi are Tony
Traynham of Greenwood, Presi
dent; Bill McGannon of Winston
Salem, N. C., Vice President; Jerry
> Watson of Hartsville, Secretary;
id Mickey Henry of Myrtle Beach,
yn Treasurer; Brother Jones of
h- Greenwood, Social Chairman, and
Andy Borders of Rock Hill, Ath
letic Chairman.
>y
e,
>n All news for the Society
be pages must be in by 1:00 today
e. if it is to be in the paper next
1s week. The deadline has b e e n
r. moved up because the paper is
re coming out on Wednesday of
e next week, and the pages must
le go to the printers tomorrow.
RANKFURTS
and
AKED BEANS
reamy Cole Slaw,
ead, Coffee
WOc
AT
Djounioni
Beom
tocesyurps
f.....
. . . . .. . .