The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 18, 1963, Page Page Eight, Image 8
Coampal
GARNET AND BLACK
Friday, Oct. 18, is the last day
class pictures will be made for the
1964 Garnet and Black. Any stu
dent who missed his appointment
may have his picture made in
Room 206 of Russell House from
2 until 5 p.m. Boys should wear a
dark coat and tie, and girls should
wear a dark sweater and a blouse.
* * *
I. S. CLUB
International S t u d e n t s Club
meets Monday at 7 p.m. in Room
101 of Russell House.
* * *
STUDENT SENATE
The Student Senate meets Wed
nesday at 5 p.m. in Russell House
Assembly Room. The meeting is
mandatory for all student senators
and is open to any students inter
ested in attending.
* * *
WUSC-AM
Anyone wishing to join the staff
of WUSC-AM is urged to attend
the station meeting today at 5 p.m.
in Room 204 of Russell House.
* * *
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
International Relations Club will
meet Thursday at 5 p.m. in Room
204 of Russell House. All students
are cordially invited.
* * *
PRESS CLUB
Press Club will meet at 1 p.m.
today in the Azalea-Jasmine Room.
* * *
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Carolina Christian Fellowship, a
chapter of Intervarsity Christian
Orchestra Offe
For Stringed Ii
A string orchestra is being fori
USC.
Purpose of the organization
string instrumentalists to perforr
opportunities to play compositions
Dr. Arthur M. Fraser, head c
will conduct the string orchestra an
master.
First meeting will be 4-5 p.m.
Hall of McMaster School at the L
Membership in the orchestra iq
other interested musicians.
Additional information may be
201-A McMaster School, telephone
I LETI
(Continued f
on the criticisms of the ABA
syllabus which was p r e pare d
under the direction of Dr.
Richard Walker at the University
of South Carolina?
Although "objectivity" is a
shibboleth to which much lip
service is given, we know that
it is a luxury in which few have
the courage to indulge in this
era of unconditional conformity
to the "liberal" orthodoxy.
It was a source of keen disap
pointment to me that Dr. Walker
could not find a less trite retort
than "scurrilous and irresponsi
ble," with which to counter the
carefully documented and temper
ately expressed report of the
Mindszenty F o u n d a t i o n, sup
ported by the evaluations of Karl
Baarslag and Hans Sennholz,
which Mr. Fred Schlafly brought
to the ABA convention. Dr.
Walker might have been expected
either to receive the verdict with
a scholar's humility or to refute
it with a scholar's cool logic.
There was no personal insult to
him in a factual criticism of his
work. "Scurrilous and irresponsi
ble" is a knee-jerk exclamation,
like a reflex action, which is cus
tomarily the retort of a contro
versialist less equipped with the
skills of rational debate than Dr.
Walker should be.
But even more disappointing to
me than to see Dr. Walker drop
his academic calm and engage in
name-calling was the inescapable
implication in his indignation that
he is above criticism. Perhaps Dr.
Walker does not remember how
the poet, Tennyson, turned on his
host who ventured to object to a
poem which he thought perfect.
Flying into a rage, he retorted:
"Your wine tastes filthy, too."
Tennyson has been excused on
grounds of poetic temperament.
But Dr. Walker is not a poet.
His field is (or should be) facts.
As he has presented them, they
are capable of proof, or else they
are not. The stakes in terms of
this country's survival are too
high for this issue to be resolved
in terms of personalities or by
name-calling.
The issue here is not Dr.
Walker's ratingr in a nopularity
w Blriefs
Fellowship, will meet at 7:80 p.m.
in Room 102 of Russell House on
Friday. Students interested in the
study of the Bible are invited to
attend.
* . .
WESTMINSTER
Presbyterians and all other in
terested students are invited to
Westminster Fellowship for pro
grams and supper meetings Sun
days and Wednesdays at 6 p.m.
Sunday morning coffee hour will
be held at 9 a.m. with transporta
tion to church services provided.
+ s "
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Sunday services will be held at
Wesley Foundation at 10:15, fol
lowed by Study Classes. Vespers
and a forum will be held that eve
ning at 6:30 p.m. The service of
Holy Communion is at 7 a.m. on
Wednesday. Breakfast is served
afterward.
M M "
B. S. U.
BSU will hold its weekly meet
ing Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. The
meeting will be held in the Baptist
Student Union building.
s f s
L. S. A.
The Lutheran Student Associa
tion will have worship services at
the Lutheran Center Sunday at
10:30 a.m. There will be a meeting
Wednesday at the Lutheran Center
at 7 p.m.
" M t
CANTERBURY
Canterbury meets every Sunday
at 6 p.m. for fun, friends and food.
rs Chance
istruments
ned by the Department of Music at
is to provide an opportunity for
i on the campus and give them
that are infrequently performed.
f the USC Department of Music,
d Prof. John Bauer will be concert
Tuesday, Oct. 22, in the Rehearsal
niversity.
open to students, faculty and all
obtained from Prof. Bauer, Room
765-4280.
'E RS
rom page 2)
contest, but whether he or any
one else shall indoctrinate teach
ers with what Mr. Loyd Wright
has called "a preachment of Fa
bian socialism." The issue is
whether it is morally proper to
discredit "the good guys vs. the
bad guys approach" in teaching
American citizens the difference
between their own system and
one based on aggressive atheirm.
Dr. Walker is not entitled to put
his personal vanity above the
survival of America or even the
survival of America's m o r a I
standards. Nor should his friends
or his university put his personal
dignity above the safety of the
country.
Is it a fact, Dr. Walker, that
the syllabus omitted mention of
slave camps, broken treaties,
Communist espionage? Is it true
that it emphasized not the men
ace but the "appeals" of Com
munism? Let us examine the
syllabus itself, not the personali
ties in this case. And let us fight
for America, not for Dr. Walker's
"image"~ as a campus don.
Of course, I realize that it has
been made more difficult to
examine the syllabus, when we
even have it from the Charleston
News and Courier that Dr. Black-.
stock refused a copy to its Colum
bia correspondent. In view of
this refusal, does it not seem
ironical that Dr. Blackstock is
the one who is now suggesting
that the critics of this syllabus
have not read it? (The Minds
zenty scholars read it, Dr. Black
stock. Karl Baalag read it.
Hans Sennholz read it. Even I
read it. But I grant that if none
of us had read it, it would have
been through no oversight of
yours.)
We are awaiting the revised
version of Democracy's "con
frontation" with atheistic Com
munism. In the meantime, may I
offer Dr. Walker the~ same chal
lenge that appeared in the News
and Courier, August 27, 1963?
Will he give the name and ad
dress of a single critic (even one
will do) who pronounced his syl
labus to be "too hard and un
compromising" with Communism?|
MRS. LOIS NICHOLS
Atlanta, Ga.
'Coupli
By HARRIETIE HOLLAND
News Staff Writer
Appearing at Carolina Monday
and Tuesday, Oct. 21-22, will be
E. Martin B r o w n e and Mrs.
Browne (Henzie Raeburn), an
English couple who pioneered the
Henzie Raeburn
revival of religious drama in
Britain.
During their two-day stay here,
Mr. and Mrs. Browne will present
a public lecture-recital on "The
Plays of T. S. Eliot" and "The
WINTHROP MUSICAL AR'
and Dr. Jess Casey (right) of Wi
for violin and piano. They will
at USC, consisting of pieces from I
This is the first in a series of
among USC and other S. C. univ
sponsored by the Department of I
Winthrop Pri
For USC Facl
Two musical artists from Win
throp College will present a faculty
recital Oct. 23 at USC.
Dr. Jess T. Casey, pianist and
chairman of the Department of
Music at Winthrop, and Isaac M.
Ostrow, violinist and music in
structor, will perform at 8 p.m. in
Drayton Hall.
First in a series of four faculty
exchange programs among USC
and other South Carolina univer
sities and colleges, the recital is
sponsored by the Department of
Music at the University.
The program consists of Sonata
Fraternity
Inducts Prof
For Chapter
SIGMA PI EPSILON
HONORS DR. BUB
Dr. Douglas F. Bub, head of the
German Department at USC, was
formally initi
ated i n to the
* Alpha Chapter
of Sigma Phi
Epsilon fra
ternity Monday
night, Sept. 14.
As an honor
Dr Bub ary active of
Sigma Phi Epsilon, Dr. Bub is
serving as faculty adviser to the
fraternity.
Dr. Bub was born and raised in
Philadelphia, Penn. where he
obtained his A.B. d eg r ee in
German at Temple University. Fol
lowing this, Dr. Bub studied at the
University of Penn. and received
his master's in German. From
1942-45 he served in the army and
then taught for a short period at
Temple University.
Dr. Bub was awarded his Ph.D.
in German at the University of
Bern in Switzerland. It was there
he met and married the former
Trudy Hoffmann.
Resuming his teaching career in
America, Dr. Bub t a u g h t at
Princeton University for th re e
years and then joined the faculty
at USC. He has been with the
University for more than ten
yars.
Pres
'Iure Beekets (Eliot, Anoal,
Fry)."
These recitals, open to the pt
lie, will be held in the Russ
House Auditorium at 7:30 p.
Monday and Tuesday. Admissi
is $.50 per person. Their visit he:
part of a tour under the joi
auspices of the Danforth Found
tion and the Association of Ami
ican Colleges, is sponsored by t
chaplains on the USC campus.
Mr. and Mrs. Browne will ala
attend Dr. Christophersen's clam
MISS G & B CONTEST
Carolina's annual Miss Garne
and Black Contest will be hel
Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 8 p.m. I
Drayton Hall. Twenty-six contest
ants, nominated by fraternities
sororities, and girls' dorm, wil
compete for Miss Garnet an
Black title. Pictures of the winne:
along with three finalists, will ap
pear in the yearbook. Results o:
the contest will not be announce(
until publication. A luncheon wil
be given Tuesday at 12:30 i
order to acquaint judges with thi
contestants.
Blue Key, men's honorary serv
ice fraternity, will tap new mem
bers during intermission.
4. 1
ISTS: Prof. Isaac Ostrow (left)
throp College review a composition
present a faculty recital Oct. 23
lach, Piston, Webern, and Brahms.
four faculty exchange programs
ersities and colleges. The recital is
lusic at USC.
fessors Play
clty In Recita
in C Minor by Bach, Sonata f<
Violin and Piano (1939) by Pistol
Four Pieces, op. 7 by Webern, a:
Sonata in A Major, Op. 100 1
Brahms.
Dr. Casey received the B.S. di
gree from Southeastern Louisiar
in 1948 and the master's and do
torate degrees from Eastma
School of Music, Hie is a memb
of the Music Educators Nation
Conference and National Assn.
Schools of Music, and is preside
of both the S. C. Music Educato
Assn. and the S. C. Music Counc
Prof. Ostrow received the B..
degree in Music from Brookl:
College in 1956 and the master
degree from Ohio University:
1962. While in the armed force
he was a member of the 7th Amr
S y mp h ony Orchestra. He hi
played with the Portland Syr
phony Orchestra, the New Yoi
Philharmonic and the New Yoi
City Center Ballet Orchestra.
Prof. Jack Tait, pianist, of WIl
throp College, will perform at tl
University of South Carolina<
January 30. In return, Asst. Pro
John Bauer, violinist, and Gord<
Beaver, organist, of the USC D
partment of Music will presei
programs at Winthrop College.
ents L4
In Modern English Drama Monday
morning at 10 a.m. at which time
b.b they will discuss "Contemporary
ell Christian Dramatists." A d u t c h
M. luncheon will be held for the
on Brownes Monday at 1 p.m. In the
re, old faculty dining room.
nt Following the luncheon, th
a- Brownes will show slides and giv
r- readings of medieval myster
he plays.
Mr. Browne was educated at
Eton College, and at Oxford Uni
s versity where he took honors in
History and T' ology. For three
years, begln..ing in 1927, he
t a u g h t speech and drama at
Carnegie Institute of Technology.
In 1930 he became the first Di
rector of Religious Drama in
Britain, in the diocese of Chi
chester, was Honorary Director of
the Religious Drama Society of
Great Britain until 1939, became
Chairman in 1948 and president in
r 1961. From 1948 until 1957 he
' was director of the British Drama
League, the world's largest society
concerned with the theater.
Mr. Browne's principal publica
tions include adaptations of Medi
eval Plays, The York Nativit:
Play, The Play of the :4aid Mary
The Play of Mary the Mother
The Sacrifice of Isaac, and Th
Story of Christmas in Mimi. He i:
SC Deans
To Hold
Meeting
Dean Clotworthy
Hosts Counselors
By SARA ELLIOTT
News Staff Writer
The S. C. Association of Womer
Deans and Counselors, founded ai
Carolina twenty - five years ago
will hold an anniversary meeting
here Saturday, Oct. 19.
USC Dean of Women, Elizabeth
M. Clotworthy, will be hostess, anc
Miss Doris M. Seward, Dean of
Women at the University of Ken.
tucky, is guest speaker.
Deans and high school counselors
will meet at 10 a.m. in Souti
Building for registration and a
coffee hour. Mrs. Thomas F. Jones
will pour coffee for the group
assisted by student dormitory lead
ers and hostesses.
At 10:40, the association wil
move to Russell House for business
)r meetings. At 11:20 a.m., Presideni
a, Thomas F. Jones will welcome th<
dgroup to the University in Russel
iy House Assembly Room. During this
meeting, the association will elec1
e. officers for 1963-64.
a A luncheon will be given at onm
e- o'clock to honor charter member!
n and former presidents of the asso
er ciation. Dean Clotworthy, presideni
al during the school year 1960.61
>f along with Mrs. Arney R. Childs
it first president of the S. C. Asso
rs ciation of Women De.ans and Coun.
il. selors, will also be honored. Mrs
1. Childs who was USC Dean oi
rn Women from 1935 to 1957, wil
's speak on the Association's growth
n Mrs. Childs has written a his
Story (1938-55) of the South Caro
ty lina ass aocei ati on which wai
as organized in March, 1938, at thi
SUniversity of South Carolina anc
kis affiliated with the Nationa
Association of Women Deans .anc
a. Counselors.
ie During the meeting, Miss Hattii
n Be!: Lester will add records os
1955-63 to the history. Miss Lestei
in
-is Dean of Women at Newberrl
it College and a f o und er of thi
deans' and counselors' association
SRI TAIN'S ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
3 BEST ACTRESS
LESLIE CAR 01
"A beautiful and refreshing
film. A masterpiece of
candor and sensItivIty."
-Tim. Magorine
S$ex Ie notfobIddenii llr
Icture
Advisory Editor (England) and a ,
regular contributor to "Drama
Survey."
Hensie Raeburn (Mrs. Browne)
has had a career of her own as
actress and authoress. She was
educated at Queens College in Lon
e don, and had professional training
e as an actress. She appeared at the
Shakespeare Memorial Theater,
Stratford-on-Avon, and the Every
man Theatre in London.
Their engagements as Danforth
Visiting Lectures will take them to
20 colleges and university cam
puses in all sections of the country
in order to help "strengthen the
intellectual, the- religious, and the
cultural aspect:; of liberal educa
tion in the United States."
Bailes E:
Danced.
By ANN V
News Staf
Spain with all its color a
House Wednesday night when
opened the Artists Series wi
song, as well as piano and guita
enthusiasm in the colorful see
The dancers took us to the
province of Navarra where the
typical and p o p u l a r folkloric
dance, the Jova, takes place. This
is a dance of strong people and
requires great physical stamina,
boundless enthusiasm and extra
ordinary agility.
Later, Jose Molina and his lead
ing lady, the graceful Maria Del
Rocio, take us to the heart of
Andalucia where a gypsy boy and
girl meet secretly every night.
They make much love, but they are
of different tribes; tribes whose
codes forbid their ever finding
happiness together.
One of the highlights of the
evening was Guitarra, a guitar
solo played by Carlos Martinez.
The piano performance by Silvio
Masciarelli was excellent, espe
cially when Sr. Masciarelli played
"El Pelele" from Granados' work
"Gayescas."
Singing and dancing are spon
taneous at the conclusion of the
show and build to a frenzy which
becomes contagious to the point
where audience and performers
become one.
The show was accepted with
great enthusiasm and applause by
the faculty and student members
present.
Parade
(Continued from page 1)
the s eeo n d by Phi Kappa
Sigma, Kappa Sigma, and DZ,
and the third by PiKA, Lambda
Chi Alpha, and Alpha Delta Pi.
Sigma Nu, Phi Epsilon Pi, and
Tri Delta will sponsor the fourth
float. The fifth is sponsored by
Kappa Alpha, Phi Delta Beta, and
Kappa Delta, the sixth by Sigma
Chi, Pi Kappa Phi, and Chi
Omega, and the seventh float is
sponsored by Alpha Tau Omega,
Chi Psi, and Pi Beta Phi.
CAMPBELL'
PHARI
Cornell
DRUGS - SCHC
NOTIONS - SO1
Sammy's Lu
LUNCHES a.
5'
One Meat, Choice
Bread, Butter,
Try our deli
T-BONE
RIB STEAl4
CUBE STEAK SAM
ABOVE SERVED WI
SALAD, BREA
Series
E. Martin Browne
pano1es
At USC
INCHELL
f Writer
,nd gaiety came to the Field
Jose Molina and his company
th Bailes Espanoles. Dance,
.r solos aroused the audience's
nes of Spanish life.
Nominees
(Continued from page 1)
Wheeler, Steve White, Johnny
Workman, James R. Young, Bill
Youngblood.
Student Senate - Arts and
Sciences: Larry Parker, Mike
McCarthy, Ned Self, Dot Whit
tington.
S t u d e n t Senate - Graduate
School: John G. Breland, Muham
med Sahli, Larry Williams.
Disciplinary Board: Margaret
Byrd, Linda Hanberry, Carl
Hendricks, Dana McClendon,
Nora Teague.
The Homecoming Queen will
also be chosen in the election.
Homecoming Queen candidates are
allowed only one poster, to be
placed in the Russell House. Can
lidates and their respective spon
;ors are as follows:
P a t t y Richardson (ADPi),
Ruthie Henderson (SPE), Polly
Richardson (KD), Peggy Fret
well (Phi Kap), Susan Mat
thews (ZTA and Kappa Sig),
Sandy Swink (Chi 0), Betty
Kennedy (SAE), and Lynn
Fishburn (Pi Phi). Linda Han
berry, sponsored by )Z, entered
the race too late for her name
to appear on the ballot. She will
run as a write-in candidate.
SPRING LAKE CLUB
PAR 3
Special Student Rate
W'/I.D. Carda
9 HOLES $1.00
18 HOLES $1.40
ALL Day $1.75
SAT. * SUN. * HOL. $2.00
1 MI. NORTH OF FOREST
LAKE ON TRENHOLM RD.
5 CORNELL
AACY
Arms
OL SUPPLIES
[)A FOUNTAIN
ncheonnette
ud SUPPER
of 3 Vegetables,
rea or Coffee
cious steaks
95c
85c
JDWICH 69c
TH FRENCH FRIES
bD, BUTTER
re- Ian To....e