University of South Carolina Libraries
Pi. CongWrE The Department of International Studie deserves a commendation for a stimulatin: 1962-683 program-"Crisis Areas in U. E Foreign Policy"-which was climaxed Tue day night with an address by Allen Dulle. An overflow audience heard diploma Guest It's Easter, and that means spring holi days, and beach parties, and celebration: It means no books, no classes, and no studies It means going home to plenty of sleep ani good cooking. All that's true and we can happily HUR RAH and honestly enjoy every moment of ii But for the Christians of the world it als means something more. Easter is the most important day i; the Christian Church ... the day of Christ' Resurrection. The Rev. Dr. Phillips Brook wrote many years ago a statement wort] bearing in mind as we celebrate these holi days. Here is a man who was born in an ot scure village, the child of a peasant womay He grew up in another obscure village. H worked in a carpenter shop until He wa thirty, and then for three years He was as itinerant preacher. He never wrote a booA He never held an office. He never owned home. He never had a family. He neve went to college. He never put His foot insid a big city. He never traveled two hundre miles from the place where He was bori He never did one of the things that usuall still 4 Two weeks ago The Gamecock began fund-raising campaign with the expres hope of preventing an increased student ac tivities fee for 1963-64. Our friends have rallied while our foe have railed-behavior patterns have ru true to form. In this case we feel tha many of those who have criticized us a "complaining that we aren't getting enoug) money" or "they just want to write any thing" did not read-or understand-ou fl GAI Co (ROWING FOR A GREAE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CARO Eo-nh- ef Amd.a.dm Gaaga. p, Ed~ emh and~ --l- - oshpet - sUds eandr dusved. EDITOR .... .. .d m. .... .3 ~. w . .he .o MANAGING EDITOR ........D BUSINESS MANAGER....E1 ADVERTISING MANAGER . COPY EDITOR ..................MA) NEWS EDITOR................. ..DC SPORTS EDITOR ......MI CAMPUS EDITOR...... SOCIETY EDITOR. ...........REG FEATURE EDITOR.... CIRCULATION MANAGER. CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER . . . RO1I BUSINESS SECRETA RY . . ... HARRI] REPORTERS: Mim Russell, Rob Weir, Mary Carl Bledsoe, Sara Elliott, Henry Elchel, Tom Hunte Jacqueline Lee Davis, Lita Golson. EDITORIAL COLUMNISTS: Dave Bledsoe,: Letters C Editor's Note: to make a de< TIhe following ee wa i ter shortly aft to The. Gemeeock by Student Body 'i preddent Osce Self becaus, of the eoncern expreosed by the student body on, thmis ina Dear Editor: Mike McCar Dear Osce: gratulated on During the past week, while he gave the I have been away from the Uni- ming Team. versity, I have been considering mNgearbeco the problems connected with the and space givi forthcoming Commencement. The Gamecock. resolution passed by the Student On behalf of Senate has been helpful. If there like to say "1 is additional information that well done." ought to be brought to my atten-S tion, I would like to have it in James my office by April 8. I plan vote tolatioans s Dulles speak of problems in government g "intelligence" work. We thank Mr. Dulles, I. the preceding speakers in the lecture series - and the International Studies Department i. for bringing a challenging program to our t campus. Editorial - accompany greatness. He had no credentials . but Himself. He had nothing to do with this . world except the naked power of His divine I manhood. While still a young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against Him. His friends ran away. One of them denied Him. He was turned over to His enemies. o He went through the mockery of a trial. He was nailed to a cross between two thieves. ri His executioners gambled for the only piece s of property He had on earth while He was s dying-and that was His coat. When He i was dead He was taken down and laid in - a borrowed grave through the pity of a friend. Nineteen wide centuries have come and gone and today He is the centerpiece of the e human race and the leader of the column s of progress. I am far within the mark when I say that all the armies that ever marched, and all the navies that ever were built, and all the r parliaments that ever sat, and all the kings e that ever reigned, put together have not j affected the life of man upon this earth as powerfully as has that One solitary life. -Phillips Brooks. rowing purpose as stated in the March 22 issue. To the student senator who proposed the bill asking that the Gamecock's allocations be cut off, we ask that he re-read that issue or drop by to talk to us. We simply want s to alleviate the strain on an already too n strained budget, by individual contributions. t Clariosophic Literary Society this week s became the first to make a group contri i bution, and we hope others will do the same. - To all of you, we say rally or rail, The r Gamecock will continue to crow. CIf 3a ifemoriam Lloyd H. Huntington, executive editor of The State and Columbia A Record, died April 3, of a heart IAattack. He was an instructor in ese the School of Journalism until .ales the this current year. Graduated from th. eees Carolina in 1950, Lloyd Hunting ton was an editor of The Game se'n.gncock during his senior year. The Gamecock mourns the pass NbIhiI,ifn L~ ig of one of South Carolina's rOANN COKER most distinguished journalists. ENNIS MYERS (See story, page one) [ILY REDDING - -_-__ . DON SEASE GAEBYD Exchange Corner INNA RUSSELL Not A Complete Loss KE McCARTHY (ACP)-Lots of people lent a WARREN NYE helping hand after the Pi Lambda [AGLAO Phi fraternity house burned at the [AT GALGANE University of Oklahoma, Norman. PAT RESSLEIncluded, noted The Oklahoma ..JERRY ARP IDaily, campus newspaper, was the ERT GASKINS University Administration. It is DT LA BORDE sued a memo that, since books and ton O'Neil, Dave notes burned along with other r, Robert Want, possessions, the members of the fraternity would not have to take EIayes Mizelli finals. 'n All Subjecd ision on the mat- Dear Editor: er that date. A few words of rebuttal to icerely, the angry young men who poured 'homas F. Jones. forth their prejudices with great gusto in the March 29 issue of your literary endeavor. What is there about student thy is to be con- hood that implies a right of self the fine coverage dietermination in matters of inter University Swim- est to the University? Each .group of individuals associated e has the swim- with the University deserves a nived the attention voice in decisions; however, the mn by the present question as to which group is the eamI wuki more qualified to render judg th tem . ol ment surely leaves the students' ,hanks, for a job opinion with least credence. He, who dares to speak forth ncerely yours, in defiance of a university from W. Ratliff, Jr. which his 2.0 shall scarcely al Iwimmingr Coach low his tak,ing leav., .hou.d WE ikME N, XV 2, 1 ag,4 Re S PEAKING recently to the members of the American Benedictine Academy, a staff member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions said that "while we Americans are many times as numerous as we once were and necessarily confront vastly more complex problems, our sources of informa tion and means for popular par ticipation in the democratic dia logue are being ever more lim ited." Such a limitation of in formation may present a dilemma to some, but the problem at this University is that many of the students do not use the sources of information which are avail able. If it is correct to say that students seldom read books, then it is only slightly less than a truism to say that they hardly ever read magazines of a serious nature. We will not deny the place of McCall's, Life, News week, or even Playboy in the mainstream of American periodi cals. I NSTEAD) of concentrating sole ly on the trivia, the student would do well to use sonme of his college years to explore the "magazines of opinion" as they are usually called. These pe riodicals, some slick, some of the pulp variety, contain ideas and opinions which are much more potent andl stimulating than any that will ever lie found in the Reader's Digest. In a series of three articles we hope to arouse some interest in the publications of opinions on the Right, Center, and Left. B EGINNING on the Right, we find that the Ainerican Opin ion rules the extremity of that end of the political spectrum. Published by Robert Welch, the founder of the John Birch So ciety, this monthly periodical regularly attacks the State De partment, the Establishnient, and any person or organization tinged with liberalism. On the cover of recent issues Amnerican Opin ion has featured Edward R. Mur' row, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Such cover p)ortraits are, how ever, mere war nings of what the -Letters to Editor s; Our i surely express his concern in the temporal aspects of his grad uation, rather than the spatial ci rcumstances of the thousandl neademically above him. Those who moan over what they call a lack of dliplomacy on the part of the administration have blindlly erred in kind. Sure ly one should not stoop to malevolence over the triviality of dress and location at graduation. To complain of lack of commun ication is likewise a shallow plat form. College studlents should b)e too intelligent to be dominated by their own habits, rumors, prejudlices, and other irrational characteristics. With regard to the voice from the past blaring- out against the The Trn 10, - Hayes A< ading (? Frc magazine has in store for its guests. The lead articles on these demi-gods were attempts to prove that while they have received a good press and the admiration of the liberal camp, they are es sentially just as evil and debased as the rest of us. ONLY slightly more removed from the far Right is the ' Farley Questions FRANCE'S president General Ch termination to build an inter independent Europe (except Britai life of every American. Even now in our grain and i of the country producers are begi destructive tariffs imposed by the all non-member nations. In one month, for example, oui from $12 million to $2 million. oHUS far our country's agricu brunt of the hardships thrust However, should the Europear laboring and business man and th whole will feel the harsh effects of tl T HE powerful voice that the Unit of the Western World, its strc been forced to capitulate in the fa( trade agreements. Will Europe isolate itself and tu: Will it become a Western nuclear United States? Will the United States takei China? In the face of the European Western Alliance? Will the United States be fore order to survive? W.T ILL de Gaule compromise in TVfrom the other European coi These are but a few of the questi peoples of the Western World. However, one thing has been era of the strong man, unless the of rigidity in governing its external the dominant role of one "voiceism" of the Western World. American Mercury. Originally established in 1924 with H. L. Mencken as the editor, the mag azine now bears no resemblance to the Mercury of the Meneken era (1924-1933). By 1950 neither the cover, size, quality, content, nor the caliber of authors was war lords from the north, let it be known that there are those who look beyond their childhood prejudices andl seek to examine with an open mind the possibility of integration at USC. Red Be thea has exclaimed to the world the opinions of 10% of the South Carolina illiterates while the re mainder of the state and the worldi has reverberated with pro found laughter. Full of sound an~d fury, signifying nothing, Bethea and a very few ohters hold on to the backward tradIi tions of the past and seek in vain to pull the state into the abyss of ignorance. Opposition to integration means 1) rejection by the rest of the world. 2) violence and danger to norseve. spasser 'OM PLAS Mizell )m The RigI the same as in the days of Menck- tl en and immediately thereafter. it Now published by the Legion si for the Survival of Freedom (it a was formerly published by the ti Defenders of the Christian a Faith) it is appropriately en- E titled The (New) American of Mercury. Former Major Gen- b eral Edwin A. Walker has re- c n Smith W We Face h arles de Gaule's desire and de- k ral economically, politically and tl i) is an important factor in the e; b restock producing export regions A nning to feel the effects of the ti European Common Market on l A exports to West Germany fell ti si tural exports have received the L pon us by the Common Market. I trade barrier continue, every us the American economy as a tie barrier.0 ad States once held in the policies ii ng post-war hegemony, has now tn e of the violent attack upon our g rn away from the United States? s lower comparable to that of the r. S< .p trade agreements with Red w revolt can we hope for a United f, ad into an isolationist policy in si ir face of strong allied opposition mntries and the United States? cc one now being pondered by the " made quite clear; this is the q, United States adopts a policy is affairs, it may regain no more g that it once held in the affairs i eently become the Military Editor tI oCf the Mercury.p CLOSER to the Center, the a newsletter Human Events first began publication in 1944. In its own words the weekly pub lication is not impartial but k "looks at events through eyes ws &G 3) ridicule by the national press. p 4) avoidlance by business and in dustry, and 5) dlegradlation of the value of an education at the in stitution involved. Segregation a continuance, on the other hand, 0 means little more than holding yt on to the questionable andl prej udlicial customs of a backwardl past. Yes, northerners, there are i many here in S. C. who weara shoes and (do not seek to perse- J)I cute others because of race alone. ar Respectfully submittted ul Roy Lucas. A D)ear Editor: 01 The Philadelphia Inquirer re :-ently carried the tor of pro __4 ci nd inivdul freo. Esen (Photo by Heyle) it iat are biased in favor of lim ed constitutional governments, bates rights, private enterprise nd individual freedom." Essen ally published for the conserv tive businessman, H umns I vents reports from Washington n politics, labor, taxation, and usiness. Though certainly con rned with the threat of Cor unism, the newsletter seems ore interested in promoting a on ser a tive economic policy ehich would benefit the business itn who are its readers. The National Review is per aps the most respected and well nown of all the periodicals of ie Right. It also has the larg 3t circulation. Founded in 195 y William F. Buckley, Jr., the at ional Review regularly fea ires such columnists as James urnham, Frank S. Meyer, and ussell Kirk, possibly the only -ue intellectual of the Right be des Buckley himself. [ HE National Review is not Lonly the biggest of the con rvative magazines, it is also ne of the most responsible. Like s editor, however, its effective ess is sometimes spoiled when ie syntax becomes too clever or lib. Utilizing regular column ts, a movie and book review eotion, and commentary on cur mnt events, this weekly has >mething for everyone. Liberals ill find it entertaining and In >rmative, and every true con brvative should include this sen ble and responsible publication his readling. Perhaps the closest thing the nser vativyes have resembling an ~gghead" magazine for the in Ilectuals is Modern Age. This iarterly "conservative review" published by the Foundation .~ r Foreign Affairs. Its first sue appeared in the summer 1957 declaring that its purpose as "to stimulate discussion of ie great moral and sooial and litical and economic and liter- '. ryv questions of the hour, and search for means by which the gacy of our civilization may be apt safe." Next week: The Center. 'ows >sed integration at Carolina. I n both p)leased and proud my 'llege is planning this peacefully 1(d in accordanc.e with the law. uir church here is praying with >u in this undertaking of equal lcation for all in the state. It is with pridle we South Caro inn away from home read out such plans as yours, the aceful integration at Clemson, d WVhile' A mnerica Slept's trib e to the late Major Rudolf ndlerson, Jr. It's a great state d its wealth is its marvelous ople. P - Yours truly, Betty J. Strom Melville (USC 1na6-48)