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OAM ANOTHER WEEK ... ANOTHER PARTY Rush comes to an end . Maxcy Brotherhood . . . at Knights of Columbus . Blue Notes Combo . . . David Blackhurst and Margaret Brown, Richard Compton and Mary Ritchie, Ronnie Everett and Lynn Johnson, Skip Brooks and Marieanne Adair, Pat DeStrfano and Paulette Rhody, Ken Pugh and Mary Ganeau, Kittrell Hyman and Evelyn Huth, Robert Kallahan and Pat Flynn, Sonny Tim merman and Carole Lawson, Larry Barrett and Marcy Al bers, Fred Tollison and Jean Carter, Vic Moore and Pat Hodges, Flynn Warren, Jr., and Phyllis Hubbard, Gary Skinner and Mary Reid, Sumpie Moore and Beverly Barr, Jerry Arp and Sue Macdonald, Bob Buggel and Dottie Haynes, John Stevenson and Makky Albert, Earl Breazeale and Merrie Christmas, Joe Creel, Jr. and JoAnne Light, Hamid Ejlali and Linda Wilkes, Bill Buggel and Bernice Meetze, Marvin Waddey and Mary Miers, Habib Hakim and Joeno Caraway, Stan Rushton and Melinda Pitts, Spencer Gantt and Beth Miers, Robert Grookett and Marilyn Green, Bill Hughes and Jan Bishop, George Morningstar and Loretta Gardner, Ellis Merritt and Sandra Smoak, Johnny Jones and Dianne Philips, Joe Neeley and Anne Ellis, Rich ard Ashley and Cecelia Yoder, John Maxwell and Janie Carlisle, Mark Taylor and Ann Farmer, Roger Rutledge and Leroy Ebert, Ibrahim Khalil and Ann Burgdorf, Naif Subh and Trina Parson, Michael Niveh and Carol Easterling. SEEN BEING THEMSELVES For the first time . . . Since Rush began . . . At Pledge Parties . . . Wednesday . . . New Pledges . . . Old Pledges . Actives ... Dates . . . Jim Johnson and Marty Whaley, Jim McElveen and Patti Fishburne, Al Hagood and Lucy Robson, Ed Yarborough and Sidney Rutledge, Buddy Epps and Betty Kennedy, Jackie Seawell and Marcia Wofford, Ray Fretwell and Mary Myers, Bill Cowan and Dianne Hall, Billy Jaillette and Caro Riley, Jose Osteen and Kitty Welborn, Jimmy Thomas and Linda Elrod, Robbie Caroll and Judy Caudell, Selby Merritt and Billie Lynch, Ken Hat field and Sherill Shaft, Bill Lamotte and Bambi Bell .. . Ron Smith and Mimi Van Wagner . . . Sigma Chi's . . . Frank Hartman and Dell Gerard . . . Jimmy Pressley and Penny Howell, Arnie Webb and Sandra Williams, Dee West and Leigh Powell, Jeff Gunter and Boykin, Tim Quinn and Anne Sliegh, Frank Fulmer and Martha Hackney, Doug Mosteller and Sandra Bolt, Zeb Thomas and Julia Rowan, John Stribling and Sandra Shaid, Billy Brock and Linda Harter, Johnny Bowen and Sara Garrand, Belton McCarty and Mary Moseley, David Jordon and Linda Coleman, Bill Singleton and Virginia McFadyen, Stu Montgomery and Kim Bowles, Ted Davis and Scott Kendall, Ed Holler and Molly Drayton, Mickey Henry and Jo Anne Green, David Hare and Anne Thomas. Pika's . . . Jimmy Nodine and June Meadows, Tommy Pilcher and Jan Wood, Stretch Stewart and Evelyn Still well, Fred Davis and Mary Ann Wilden, Jimmy Sharp and Ann Brown, Cliff Holler and Jean Carroll, Alan Gregory and Betty Allsbrook, Phil Johnston and Carol Haynes, Dan Kirkland and Ellen Travers, Kenny Rhea and Sally Keys, Ray Kestler and Joyce Durham, Don Blair and Mary Mickle, Kelly Grayson and Helen Thackston, Ed Duffy and Libby Rodlgers, Charley Hussey and Patty Dawkins, Gene Martin and Marty Rosen and Becky Cole, Dan Reeves and Peggy Ellis, David McInnis and Loretta Morrill, Bob Burris and Catherine Stokes, Keith Angerman and Kathy Dotten, Dickie Smith and Ann Kendricks, Bob Diseker and Virginia Thruston, Buddy Calhoon and Rhetta Davis, Henry Lee and Donna Russell, Randy Burnette and Sandra Burnette, War ren Cole and Florence Cole, Jerry McSwaine and Cynthia McSwaine, David Watson and Jane Freeman, Bob Moore and Cindy Moore, Dennis Myers and Ann Detraville, Mike McCarthy and Maxine Folger, and Jacqueline Lee Davis and friend. Phi Ep Rush Party . .. February 14 . . . At the Car riage House with the Tempests . . . Mark Lehrr.ann and Rozzie Shurin . . . Bobby Riemer and Andrea Bogan.. Max IHellman and Linda Firetag . . . Ira Berendt and Vicki Caraway . ..Sammy Draisen and Loretta Ginsberg... Sam Abrams and Susie Harris . . Henry Eichel and Susan Denberg . . . Leroy Rosenburg and Gileen Roth . . . Roger Greenspan and Pat Powell . .. Al Cappagrossi and Ann Riley . . . Paul Rundlbaken and Lynn Blum . . . Tad Fogel and Susan Balser . . . Chuck Altman and Jayne Glass... Richard Kurtz and Bunkie Abrams . . . Sam Solomon and Kay Therigo . . . Sid Rowe and Alena Tess . . .Gary Poliakoff and Harriet Coplan . . . Charlie Lippman and Linda Schriver . . . Ken Eriedman and Judy Fischman ...Mickey Fischbein and Sally Sharnoff . . . Richard Hayes and Phyllis Gartner. Lavolier -- Mickey Fischbein (Phi Ep) to Sally Sharnoff. I'VE RUN OUT OF CLEVER WAYS TO SAY That people are getting pinned and engaged . . . but there seems to be no apparent shortage of pins and rings ...Pinned, Buddy Epps (SAE) to Betty Kennedy (DDD), Peter Browne Ruffin to Karen Espedahl (DDD), Keith Elliott (PiKA) to Anne Breazc.ale (AOPi, Tenn.)... Pat Owens pinned to Frank Ramos (Psi Omega Dental Fraternity), University of North Carolina. Engaged . . . Eddie Roberts (Chi Psi) to Helen Wooten, Butch Askins (Phi Kap) to Judi Roberts, Richard Sullivan (KA) to Marion Boyd (DDD). Bob Burris (Pika), and Catherine Stoltz (Pi Phi) ; Byron Rast (PiKA), and Anne Young (ADPi); Dickie Smith (PIKA), and Ann Kendrick. Doors . The Yesterday you probably walk through at least 20 different doc -house doors, closest doors, b :oors, car doors, subway doors, el vator doors, bathroom doors, c fice doors, and store doors, to natn a few. And you weren't the on one. The Steelcraft Manufacturii Company, makers of doors a frames, has estimated that the do of any large office building is us 4,000 times a day. In fact, a che was recently made of the Fic Building in Chicago: in one hoi 3,720 people pushed their w through the revolving doors - average of more than one a secon Despite how common doors ai and how often we use doors, i of us know the slightest facts abo them. Ninety-nine out of a hundr of us can't even properly define t word "door." "An opening in enclosure?" That might be a wi dow. The New Century Dictiona provides this definition: "A movable barrier of wood other material, commonly turni on hinges or sliding in a grooi for closing and opening a passa or opening into a building, roo etc." Now, that's' a door! But if defining a door is tricl we all know what one is for. I to let us in, and keep out unwi come visitors. Nobody knows wh the first door was invented, b credit must belong to some uniden fied cave man. He needed somethi: to protect his domicile from gree neighbors and snooping dinosau: so he hung up an animal skin front of his cave, or lodged stone there. Sliding doors, believe it or ni are actually centuries old. The a cient Egyptians used them in pyr mids and tombs: slabs were ma to fall down or slide sideways in grooves inside the tombs. The Egy tians were probably also the fir people to use wooden doors. T] oldest wooden doors still in use a the richly carved and heavi paneled doors of the basilica Santa Sabina in Rome. They da back to the fifth or sixth centuri( The most famous bronze doors, ai perhaps the most famous of , doors, are those designed for t' Baptistery of Florence in the for teenth or fifteenth centuries by I renzo Ghiberti and Andrea Pisai Today, they are priceless. How do modern door's compa with those of days gone by ? Basi ally, the two are not much differei A charred door found in the riii of Pompeii, destroyed by a vi cane in A.D. 71, is much the sar as the front door of your home. On the other hand, today's doc come in an almost infinite numb of varieties. There's the batt dloor, the dlouble door, the Dut door, the rolling door, the slidii door, the swing door, the stor door, the trap dloor, and so on. In designing a door, the archite must keep three things in min climate, purpose, and materia Take the Eskimo igloo, noted I lowv doorways. Thes~e low doorwa keep out the freezing cold, just; the low doorways of huts in ti I Do Yo Do you knowv why JTohn Breed4 is still crying? -That plans are being mlade f< Easter vacation ? -That this paper is a toy. FOR SUPP Tr Large Char-Bi Serv4 FRENCH FRIl Noon 'Li NOWMI "Leadmark for HiEgry Ameri. Comter of Sut. and BIom Si CAYes. a C hrough Ages ed tropics keep out intense heat. The m Dutch door also serves a purpose. It is really two doors in one. The us lower half can be kept closed for e- security, and to keep out wandering ,f- animals. The top door can be swung ne open to admit air and light. Building materials have also had a great influence on door design. Wood, metal, and glass are the ng most common materials in the nd twentieth century, wood probably being the most common. Though or wood does provide a warm touch, ed it is subject to expansion and con ck traction during weather changes. The bronze door remains the richest ld and most dignified, but the cost is ir, frightfully high. ay Of metal doors, the most corn an mon is the hollow metal door, d, usually made of steel. The initial cost of such doors is usually higher e, than wood, but experts say the ex -w pense is worth while because of ut metal doors' perfection of shape, rigidity, permanence, and fire-re sistance. he Such large door - manufacturing an concerns as Cincinnati's Steelcraft n- have even perfected methods of applying nearly every type of finish y to steel doors, even to the extent of making them look like wood. or The Steelcraft Manufacturing ng Co. also proved that metal doors re, are the toughest of all. They have run giant trucks over its doors, and ge slammed one of them 280,000 times m, with a force equal to about 30 pounds an impact. Result? No damage of any kind. The third major kind of door is Y, transparent - either made of glass t's or of sheets of transparent plastic. 31- Though brilliant in effect, it pre en sents certain difficulties. Architects ut say that the major defect is brit ti- tleness. ng A new type of transparent 1y "door" is now in wide use in some rs, office buildings, supermarkets, and m department stores. It's an invisible a wall of air, usually set to a 40 miles-an-hour wind. By keeping out >t, dust and dirt, it eliminates the n- need for a door. But there's one a- drawback: it doesn't keep out de burglars. to Modern doors, all in all, may p- seem light - years removed from st those of the past. Doors made of he wind, doors that fly open auto re matically as you approach, doors ly that can withstand virtually any of kind of punishment devised by man te - none of our ancestors ever ?s. dreamed that such things would be rid possible. ill On the other hand, some old be superstitions still cling to doors. ir- Many pecople think it's unlucky to o- leave a door open when departing 1o. from a house -- and not because flies may get in. It seems that "evil re spirits" may enter while you're not c- looking. And some people insist on it. leaving a house by the same door ns by wvhich they entered --they're l- "compulsive neurotics," afraid to ne take any chances by attempting something as adventuresome as rs leaving by another door. er The largest doors in the world en ar in the U. S. Navy's dirigible chi :hangar~ at Lakehurst, New Jersey. 1ig They're 250 feet wide and 120 nm feet high. The word "cardinal" comes from et a word meaning "hinge," because d: cardinals were thought to be as im Is. nortant to churches as hinges are or to dloors. ys -In other words, doors may have as ehlanged through the ages - but rie :nan hasn't. L1 Kniow?I 'n -That the drinking statue is not marble, it's human. >r -Rush is a farce. -KA's finally had a decent sized pledge class ER TONIGHT e' Our roiled Rib Steak id With ES AND SALAD 2.50 1 Midnight gJomuon5 arns" Adding a page to our "Bantan a sophomore from Barnwell. Eloi sorority and a hall conselor in Wi Dear BY JACQUELI Staff Jackie, I'm a 19-year-old sophomore coed who is madly in love with my English 22 prof. Whenever he says Shakespeare, I go ape. I now realize that I'm hopelessly in love. What can I do? In Love Dear In Love, Play Desdemona, he'll notice you. Jackie, I am in love with Kennedy, but have projected it to Frank Webster wvho is in Law School. The only person interested in me is Sam Freed. Should I take up law? No judge Dear No judge, Don't be a member of the bar; head for one. D)ear Jackie, Why dloesn't anyone notice me ? I'm a 6-4 coed, have braces on my teeth, smoke cigars, can't dance and don't like dark trailors. Lonely for Greek Week Dear Lonely for Greek Week, Are you wearmng Weejuns? CANDY AT LOC Beauty -(Photo by Anon.) Beauty" album is Eloise McMillan, se is a member of Alpha Delta Pi ide Hampton. Jackie NE LEE DAVIS Writer Jackie, My number is in the phone book but he doesn't call. I've tried every subtle hint I can think of, but it still doesn't work. Help! Desperate Dear Desperate, Send him a postcard with your number on it and a dime. Dear Jackie, I've been carrying on a violent love affair for the past few weeks with an active. He suddenly drop ped me and I don't understand why. I don't really care, I hate him. Confused Dear Confused, So what's the beef? Sh A Famous TRADITIONA It Takes Oni to Open Your 4 ILK COFFEE SAND1 MANY CONVENIE? ATIONS ON CAMP DISTRInBUTINGr C HO HUM! Same Gripe Same song, second verse, a littlef bit louder, and we're making it a little more emphatic this time. From the tired typewriter worn fingers of the Society Editor comes the cry - WE HAVE NO COPY TODAY. We know you tire of reading the same thing every week about lack ing copy, but it's your fault. Each week the bulletin board is full of names for "Cock-Tales." It's amaz ing how vain people are when they have a special date to announce, but when it comes to something -fairly constructive, the publicity spirit just seems to wan. Ergo the pages don't look like much, or read like much, but we're not mind readers, nor can we send a re porter to every committee meeting that's held. We're getting tired of griping, and we're even more tired of rack ing our brains every Monday after noon for ideas. The nicest thing in the world would be to be able to take a book over to the library and study every now and then, or even to pass a course occasionally. It's been said that the impossible always takes five minutes longer but the impossible five minutes we've used, if strung end to end would make eternity look like a holiday. If you've got something to con tribute, write it down! Don't just stop a staff member in the middle of Green Sreet and say, "I've got - some news for you." Remember, that the University doesn't suspend classes just so we can get this paper out. 97&.& ?fAint COSMETICS and ACCESSORIES Free Demonstration "Try Before You Buy" 1215 Hampton St. op SName y 2 Minutes harge Account PJICHES US 1. INC.