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SOUTHEAST'S BEAR LARGEST COLLEGE OF WEEKLY ELEPHANTS UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA (See Page 2) CROWING FOR A GREATER CAROLINA Vol. LIII, No. 19 COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, FEBRUARY 22. 1%63 nrn inno FRUSTRATION: The Caroli, before the Clemson game Tuesi Price, sports information directo This was done in an effort to g resulted in unhappy students. Coker Tt New Yor NEW YORK CITY--Fowr edito from southern colleges and Unive sities will attend a discussion freedom of the college press spo sored by the Graduate School Journalism at Columbia Universi February 24 (Sunday). They are: Sidna Brower, UnivE sity of Mississippi; Melvin Meyi University of Alabama; Harwo Koppel, University of the Soul Sewanee, Tenn.; and JoAnn Cok4 University of South Carolina. Miss Brower and Mr. Meyer w give short talks at the meeting. The students were awarded schi arships by the Reader's Dig( Foundation to enable them to atte: the three-day Fifth Internaior Affairs Conference for College E< ors which begins February 22. T Overseas Press Club of New Yo sponsors the conference, which designed to give student editors insight in the areas in which maj news is developing - Asia, Afri< Russia, Europe and Latin Americ Press Freedom The Graduate School of Journi ism, which is celebrating its Fiftic Anniversary, selected the subject student press freedom for examir tion during its anniversary yei The School, founded in 1912 Joseph Pulitzer, recognized the i creasing p)roblems of student pr lications. In recent years there have be disagreements between editors a administrators in Colorado, Cs s * .aa, Michigan, Pennsylvan Newv York, South Carolina a other states. Editors have charg interference by administrators, a administrators have replied tlh acted only after irresponsible si nt newvs stories or editorials. Lihe conference wvill be attend by some 200 student editors. part of the School of Journalisn activities, the students will hear talk by Edwvard W. Barrett, de of the School. Student Panel The speech wvill be followed USCDebater Take Trophy Carolina added another win its deb'ate laurels as it took 1 'first running of the Camilla Debi Tournament Saturday. USC wvon t.he School trophy, co piling ten wins against four loss The negative at 5-2 finished in fi against competing schools and i affirmative camne in second. Eight universities participated lhe tournament: Emory, Georg Clemson, Wake Forest, Duke, Wat ington and I.ee. Old D)ominion C lege, and( Carolina. Ilenry .\arkwood and Fra Ileadley of the negative team f ished first in the debate on whetl non-Communist countries should g~m~ould not form an economic uni The Camilla Tournament t< two days andI enabled each sch' to debate against the other scho during the seven rounds. -sal a students pictured have been turned away ay night. An announcement was made 10 r, that no student would he admitted unk nt away from jamming the field house as a 1 Attend k Confab rs talks by four members of a student r- panel on "Freedom and Responsi )n bility of the Student Press." The n- panelists are: Sidna Brower, editor of of the Mississippian at the Univer ty sity of Mississippi. Miss Brower urged calmness and obedience to A r- the law during the integration C r, riots at the University when James ad Meredith registered. She received h, a citation from Mademoiselle Maga- d r, tine as one of the 10 outstanding r young women of 1962 and was ill awarded a Henry Taylor internship by the Scripps-Howard newspapers. t 11- "Lobo" Editor n st John C. MacGregor TV, the edi- c al or of the Lobo at the Univer al .ity of New Mexico. The Lobo was tttacked by some state legislators a or its publication of international i: k md political news and comment. is Mr. MacGregor is the president of .n the United States Student Press I or Association. t a' Melvin Meyer, the editor of the a. Crimson and White, University of l Alabama. Mr. Meyer has been 'ider guard since September when th his newspaper carried an editorial d of attacking Governor Ross Barnett a- ind his position on integration. ir. Meyer urged obedience to the law, f and as a result received a telephone l n- call threatening his life. Two nights blater a cross was burned on the front lawvn of the fraternity house en wvhere he lives. I1 nd li Bantam ed nd ed I a to es. r~st he inl ia, 01 ni ner or )n.""" ok NANCY WYCOFF: This week'sl )ol campus and snared by a Camecock1 s was discovered that the young miss i fenon Nneth An=usa,a Nancy Is ci necock Stall Photo by Campbell from the gate at the field house minutes before the game by Tom ss there was room to seat them. t the Duke game but the decision USC Goes To Model Assembly The University of South Caroli rill be represented this weekend he Fifth Annual Model Gene] Lssembly goes into progress hapel Hill, North Carolina. During the four-day meetit ebate and proceedings will be cj ied on in exact form of the Unil Jations General Assembly. Delej ions representing various U. iembers will be present from olleges throughout the country. Two delegates from U.S.C. E ttending. The delegation represei ng Great Britain is headed )uehess Fitch. Members are Sus lourne, Priestly Coker, Brad P< Dn, and Sara Nayjar. Sponsori his delegation is the Internatiot telations Club. Chairman of the New Zeala elegation is Laurie Moseley. Ott nembers include Ruthie Henders< 'inny Helas, John Flowers, a :ddie Roberts. This delegation ponsored by the University YMC Dr. John McConaughy is atter og as advisor. Beauty rame.cock Seafl Photo by Gaskins B3antam Beauty was discovered oni shotographer. Upon questioning i is freshman Nancy Wycoff. Hail rrently majarin= in atnh at USC.' Dors( Greel Student Becomes 50-Miler Buckland Follows Kennedy Orders BY MIM RUSSELL Staff Writer When President Kennedy won dered whether today's Marines could hike the 50 miles that Theodor( Roosevelt ordered for them in 1908, Kennedy probably didn't know he - was at that moment innitiating s new fad for the U. S. Marines, college studetns, politicians and practically everyone else. Carolina student Tommy Buck land proved non-chicken in this age of quick, easy transportation. The lanky 6-2 adventurer braved a 50 mile hike in ten hours and twenty two minutes. This hot-footing makes Roosevelt's order seem slow -- the na march was to he 50 miles in three days, spending no more than 20 as hours on foot at a time. Tommy ral expertly prepared himself for the in treck. To eat he brought along sandwiches and plenty of water. For fortification against the ex g, treme cold, he donned two pairs r- of socks, tennis shoes, bermudas, ed seat pants, bluejeans, two shirts, a sweat shirt, a heavy top coat and a Ia- toque (a hat that covers the whole N. face except the eyes). 61 Knowing how far 50 miles is, Tommy didn't lunge into an immedi ate dash. The one-time distance run sre ner stated, "I wasn't that eager. I t- started at a brisk walk, walking by up hills and running down hills." When asked about his hike, which began at 3:30 a.m., he said, "I was >s- bored. The only person I had to talk ng to was my roommate Horace Beas tal ley." Horace followed along on his motorbike. Considering such an adventure in nd one future, the courageous hiker er isserted, "It was a great experience, , but I wouldn't do it again!" All nded pleasantly enough - smiles nd Tommy, "I have not one blister, my is feet aren't a bit sore." A. 'Newsweek' Mentions 1USC Alum Jasper Johns, a man who received Siis art certificate at Carolina, has been called "the most influential -oung painter in the wvorld" by Jewsweek. ~(The magazine did a display of ~4ho works af seven modern artists $ d titled the article-"Seven News SShows: Subtle . . . Simple . . . Sure ...Surprising." The display ap peared in the February 18 issue. John's work was called "Fool SHouse" and is being shown at Cas .elli's Art Gallery in New York shat the aim of the painting is to 'restore an unjaded response to turn .ale objects, and to simple paint by 3ringing them into a relationship diat is unexpected but felicitous. Johns wvas at USC 14 years ago. )uring the wvar he maintained the "ort Jackson exhibit at the South arolina Museum of Art. From Columbia, Johns went to ewv York, Italy, and Japan. He iow spends half the year in New fork and the other half at Edisto Beach. Johns is also featured in Vogue nd Horizon this month. He has been in many magazines and has mad several books written about him. Johns took almost all his classes while at Carolina ur.der Mrs. Cathe rine Remhert yBai We ( l'si DORSEY CONDUCTOR: Sam D Dorsey Orchestra when it comes to C mal on March 1. Donahue has app. returned to the orchestra where he st Literary Puzzling ' BY DAVID E. ABEEL h: A literary mystery is being un raveled by the slow, painstaking J work of scholarly "detectives" en gaged in research. C Principals in the mystery are author Thomas Wolfe and Editor al Edward C. Aswell, whose tamper- m ing with the dead author's unfin- Ie ished works is the main element of; the mystery's "plot." In the supporting cast are literary a< researchers, among them Dr. George M. Reeves of the Department of ! English at the University of South a Carolina. w The scenes icueAwl' d-l torial .'urgery in which Wolfe's later wvorks are incised, patchedR w with questionable skill, and sutured g together for publication. The main witness in what has be- n1 come a public trial of Aswvell's edi- lc torial practices - or malpractices --is Richard Kennedy. a young liter ary detective. b A far-fetched dIramatization of a *1 real-life story ? Maybe. el Beyond doubt, USC's Dr. Reeves and other Thomas Wolfe scholars are more than a little enthusiastic ibout Richard Kennedy's' newv book, " "The Window of Memory," which * Dr. Reeves says is "by far the most important pubilication about Wolfe ' during the entire 25 years since his death." nl At the Sorbonne in Paris, where ItI Dr. Reeves studie'd, his dloctoral dis sertation-written in French-was "~ published wvith the title, "Thomas ~ Wolfe and Europe." I Dr. Reeves is convinced that thea new revelations will mean that Wolfe's later works "wvill have to be re-edited." As a result, he be lieves "one of our most talented authors (Wolfe) may eventually t 'find his rightful place in the publica mind and in literary history.v Wolfe, author of "Look Home ward, Angel" and "Of Time and y the River," is knowvn "as a wvriter of almost unlimited energy, who poured a out wvords in an endless flow, some- 3 times writing five, six or eight thousand words in a day," according ,a to the legend which grew during -a Wolfe's lifetime, Dr. Reeves said. About a year before his death, v Wolfe said he wanted to change p the public Imaen which potrayed ad S1 k Fc muahuc will conduct the Tom'y arolina for the Greek Week For ared with meverul band- but ha,s arted as asaistant director. .ystery 'o Prof m as a writer without control, one ho insisted on putting everythinl. to his books and never taking any iing out. However, the University of South trolina professor continued, Wolfe ed before he did much about his iblic "image," and the "exagger ed picture" of the author remained od became one of the chief prob ms of scholarly researchers. In his lifetime. Wolfe published i number of short stories and short >vels, but only two of his long itobiographical novels," Dr. Reeves id. One of the two long novels was finished product, "Look Home ard, Angel." which tells od Wolfe's 'e in Asheville, N. C. But the other, "Of Time and the vr"was actually unfinished ana as sent to press by Wolfe's editoi ithout the author's consent. Although Wolfe resented the pre ature publication of the second ng book, the reception given it as so immediately enthusiastic at the author became reconciled. But he never forgot that the >ok had been taken out of his mnds, and about twvo years later he hanged editors and publishers. A year after the change, Wolfe ed. Drn. Reeves said the author's death eft a tremendous heap of manun ript in the hands of his second litor, Edwvard C. Aswvell of Harper idl Brothers." Wolfe had not intendled that the anuscripts wvould be published in e form in which he left them, r. Reeves said. "There were too any gaps; there was too much >lishing and organizing to be The author had intended to spend much time as necessary to ex act two or three books from the leap" of material in Aswell's rnds. After Wolfe died, Aswell decided >extract the books himself. "Aftei 11," Dr. Reeves commented, "tihe arious stories and episodes (lid fit >ughly into an overall plan that Tolfe had wvritten dlowTn." Dr. Reeves said editor Aswell inde his mistake in failing "to set iat Wolfe had become a master of te short novel and the short story -hile t.rying to wvrite his 'great, fat, tick hooks,' as he called them. "One thing is certain. Wolfe 'ould never have approved of the ublication of his later books in the wmn in which we have thm. A vvY SJI ~5L. i- VvW )arks irmal Donahue To Lead Orchestra The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, inder the direction of Sam Dona ue. will perform at the Greek Veek Formal Dance, March 1. The band was started by Dorsey fter his separation from his -rother, Jimmy, in 1936. A year ater the band followed their ap :oval in New York with a nation ide tour-from Times Square to exas. The hand subbed for the 'red Waring group on radio and he orchestra became one of the iost popular in the country. Many famous musicians got their tart with the Tommy Dorsey Or -:iestra including Bunny Berigan, ilen Miller, Ray McKinley, Bob rosby, Buddy Rich, Gene Krupa, 'rank Sinatra, Dick Haymes, Jo ;tafford ,and the Pied Pipers. Sam Donahue, the current maes ro, started in music at a young ge, as did Dorsey. He could play our instruments while still in high chool. Donahue's Start Donahue got his start with Gene :rupa's band and moved on to vork with Harry James and Benny .oodman. The latter got Sam tarted with his own band but the var came and Sam joined the Navy vhere he continued to play music. Sam's band had never played to rether but when the war was over, hey all came back together and layed for several years. After go ng back to work with the Navy nd semi-retirement because of ill .ealth, Donahue was given a job y Tommy Dorsey. Donahue be -ame assistant leader ,arranger, and axophone soloist. Donahue spent a while with Dor ey and moved out to take over he helm of the Billy May Orches ra. In 1961, he returned to the )orsey Orchestra. Biggest Seller Tommy Dorsey recorded over 300 ongs with sales totaling seventy nillion. His biggest seller was his heme, "I'm Getting Sentimental )ver You." Two of Dorsey's records set rends that are still around today. Marie" introduced choral back cround. "Song of India" introduced ie "swveet-swing" Dorsey arrange nents. Sam Donahue explains the band's urrent success. "T~ue day os gone vhen the musicians play the music hey want to hear. One of the rea onis for our success is that we -ealize the band must play for the ublic's satisfaction and not for the nusician's own pleasure." Spin-Dryer Fad Junked The University threw cold water Tmto the student-in-the-spin-.dryer fad. After Dr. R. B. McNulty, the University physician, reported to ,he administration on the medical iazards of a spin-dryer ride, a USC pokesman said students who par icipate in the "dangerous fad" face lisciplinary action. A University student Sunday light claimed he set a spin-dryer ide record with 1,553 revolutions ni 37 minutes and 23 seconds, after which he is said to have emerged 'romn the dryer with h:is head turned iright red in color. An additional factor, the Univer ity spokesman said, Is the disregard :or private property shown by per ons who cram themselves into dry 'rs. The mechanism is designed for -omparatively light loads of cloth ing.