The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 15, 1963, Page Page Four, Image 4
ON WROCKS
WITH
WHAT IT WERE
Howdy, out thar, Frens 'n' neighbors! I done come out
of hidin' in them thar hills to write up this hyar column.
Yep, I floated down the Congaree on my flat bottom skiff,
landed at that purty bridge and brung my humble words
to the folks down home. Right pe-culiar thing happened
on the way to the Gamecock Office: I ran into a plenty
slick politician who stopped me and ast me was I for it. I
said heck yeah and started to go on when he ast me what
I's gwine do 'bout it. (I thought that went without speak
ing about in these parts but that I'd wait to see what he
thought about it.) He swears that it is the greatest thing
going since the Coloseum in Rome and I thought that was
a funny way of putting it but I couldn't help but agree.
Anyway he's right anxious to larn if'n I was 21 and I
wondered what that had to do with it then I remembered
some statutory or other'n what says you have to be a
certain age to get by with it. Then this feller says he
fanatically: REGISTER!!!! Wall now, thet clone it - I jest
laughed and thunk to myself he didn't know the half of
it and made a note to tell my good friend and buddy Dean
Cooper that even those Richland County Democrats were
on his side about them dam fraternity parties.
STORY TIME
Now children, teacher has run out of stinging retorts
(I-N-S-U-L-T-S) and today I am going to plagerize
(S-T-E-A-L) from a dear old man that lived many years
ago. His name is Mister Aesop. And remember. Could
fables and fairy tales written over one thousand huge long
years ago have any significance today? Of course not. He
wrote a harmless little ditty that I am going to call Enough
Rope. Once upon a time fourteen Bulls fed in a field to
gether in the greatest peace and amnity. A wolf had long
watched them in the hope of making a prize of them but
found that there was little chance for him as long as they
all kept together. Two of the Bulls got caught outside the
fence one day and the wolf gobbled them up. Then he
began secretly to spread evil and vengeful reports of one
against the other, til he had fomented a jealousy and dis
trust among them. The wolf danced a jig of glee. (Picture
this.) No sooner did the wolf see that they avoided one
another and said Na Na Na Na Na about each other, than
he feed upon them singly, and made an easy prey of them
all. Moral: It is tar better to unite and become friends,
than to furnish food for the wolf. The end.
MICKEY
HAYRIDE
The list of social events for Saturdlay, November 9th,
alleged that the Phi Kappa Sigs had a Hayride at the
J1 and J Ranch. Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. ,Jennings, the chaperones,
admit they wer e there. Now we will tell what happened on
the hayride. The following songs might have been sung:
Turikey in the Straw, I'm Only a Bird In a Gilded Cage,
H1ey Lolly, D)o Lord, (Cam ptown Races, D)oesn't Anybody
Want a Sweet 01(1 Fashioned Girl, the Carolina Fight Song,
the Fight (arolina Song. .. ..
SweetheartmFl
Of Sig Ep SE
Serenaded FL
The Sigma Phi Epsilon socialWIHHS
fraternity serenadedl its new sweet-FRNHRIS-TR
heart, Miss Norma Nance, who isALYO
pinned to Lou DiM uzio, and two
other lovely pin-mates of SPE's.
These were Miss Mary FrancesNon'i
Reed, who is pinned to Ray Corde
andl Miss Lynn Proctor, pin-mate
of Capers Brazzell. Tfhis took place
Nov. 12 on the front steps of Sims RSARN N
Dormitory. Each girl was pre
sented one dozen long-stemmed red Lmmr a ugyAeia
roses. The new sweetheart then
presented last year's sweetheart, Cre fSaeadBosmSa
Miss Cherry Taylor, an engraved
silver tray, on behalf of the fra- CYE .C
FILI
Glimpses Into
Past Carolina
Society News:
News our mothers read in the
society pages of the "Gamecock" on
Voo. 17, 1944:
With the enrollment of 770 girls
for the fall semester, the enroll
ment of coeds has reached the
highest figure in the history of the
University. Now the number of
-irls is just a little less then
hat of boys including the Navy
program.
The top figure of Columbia girls
has been reached and there is a
;reater number of C o 1 u m b i a
Freshman girls than in preceding
years. Mrs. Arney Childs, Dean
of Women, states, "To me this in
Jicates the best thing that could
happen to us here at the Univer
siy."
For years after Wade Hampton
was first opened as a girls' dormi
tory, the total of boys has always
been greater than coeds. Since the
war, the number of girls has
slowly gained on the boys. One
year the total of each was about
equal.
"The March term will probably
be the first time that the coeds
will outnumber the boys at Caro
lina," says Mrs. Childs.
Belle Howe
Serves As -r
ADPiHead
4-1
MISS IWLE JIOWE
by JANET SMITH
Society Writer
(Editor's note: This is another
in the series of articles about the ~
lcaders of our women's organiza- P
tions on camipun.) -2
The capable president of Alpha ..
D)elta Pi sorority is Belle Howe, a-1
Senior. She' graduated from Rivers~
High School in Charleston, and is
now majoring in Secondary Educa- -a
tion. Belle intendls, after gradlua- ___
tion, either to teach high school or --
to g~o to Gra:duaite School.
The brown-eyed brunette says
ler favorite pastimes are sewing,
water skiing, and playing tennis.c
Belle enjoys being aroundl people,
especially people who smile. She
statedl that she could not think of
anly dlislikes at all.
The petite president explained tr
that her duties include "'a lot of nou
work, a little bit of honor, and(le
some fun too.'' As p)residlent, sheJo
"coordhinates everything within the J ac
sorority, andl presides over the lie
meetings andl fifty lovely young M
ladies." JTer
Belle, whose interests are varied, sr
is Vice-President of Alpha Kappa -
G;amma honorary s o c i e t y, and -
Pi.e s i dI e n t of Epsilon Epsilon M
Epsilon. She also holds the office
of Vice-President of Pan-Hiellenic
Council. The popular co-edl serves
on the Student Senate, the Student
Union Committee, and the Artist
Series Committee.
H
IAL
JDER
ET 4'i
I PUPPIES
A R SA UCE - LEMON
CAN EAT
MIidnight
Jornion3
MOTOR LODGE
ElF
'Misery Is
In The In
BY EVE H
Society %
An instructor who is nine m
An alarm clock at 7:00 a.m.
A term paper.
Etussell House coffee.
Discovering your fourth cut
A pop quiz.
4onday morning.
math professor whose nam
3eing a second semester senic
listory 11-for the third ti
rhe fourth quarter of a USC
Crying to say goodnight to yol
rhe day after Christmas vacf
k roommate who is pro-Rei
oldwater.
i roommate who is a recruiti
['he morning after a fraternit
3eing called on in a class of I
i green card.
i fire drill at 6:30 a.m.
liology 11 lab.
Vaking up at 9:00 for your 8
)orm meetings.
eeing your pinmate with son
;omeone bumming your last
.osing the homework assignn
>n.
Vatching a couple make out f
aturday night.
To mouthwash when it's time
Iell week for a fraternity plei
wrap-around skirt on a wir
oint of view.
E. night in the infirmary.
t. check that bounced.
living on the top floor when
Yrear.ing madras on a rainy di
i finky blind date.
tunning out of ink on a quiz.
igma ChiPi
elects Strif
'he p)ledges of Gamma Nui chap- Bi
of Sig~ma Chii fraternity an- 141
neCe theiri officers for the fall R
ester. They are: President,
n Strifling; Vice - P'resident,
k Limehouse; Secretary, Char
Henderson; T r e a su r e r, Bill
ant; and Sergeant - at - arms,
ry Barnes. Bill McGannon wvillL
re as Social Chairman, Henry
,In
SHIRTS 101
Wil
"SLEEPING
FITS WELL!
STORES
LO4
One Day Service I
LA U NDRY &
MAIN AT I
ACROSS FROM THE I
L
on
pr
wl
sh
va
) "/V
th
do
to
tie
ha
he
sti
Ra
wli
va.
A Night ac
firmary' a
g"al
ORNE
riter tb
inutes late.
ru
"cl
se
is your fifth cut. leg
e begins with "S." L
r with a 1.9, g.p.r.
me.
football game.
r date in South dorm lobby Lil
.tion. ne:
medy when you are for Str
qui
ng member of the BSU. p
party. sta
50 students. re7
am
a ;
acc
:00 o'clock class. par
Bo
ieone else.
cigarette. of
shi
ent you spent four hours be
rom your dorm window on of
gra
to come in. un
Ige. ing
dy day - from the girl's ha
lib
Pu
a r<
the elevator is broken.
ly. lib
edge Class
ring Prexy
venas as Athletic Chairman, and
rr (Donut) Richardson will be
sh Chairman.
WANTED:
Coeds with initiative, will
ing to work 30 minutes a
day. Write P. 0. Box 1645,
Columbia, S. C.
~rting T he Gamecocks
Their Own Backyard
3K SHARPA
rH
COLLARS"
B
WELL!
)KS SWELL!
ly Request...
CLEAN ER S
ILOSSOM
SEN'S DORAAITORIES
)oes Har,
ilack Dor
(Editor's note: This article ap
ared in the "Daily Californian"
Monday, Nov. 4, and is re
inted here.)
Reports of wild parties and free
ieeling sexual intercourse have
aken the hallowed halls of Har
rd University.
A report distributed by Har
rd Dean John U. Monro alleged
at visits of girls to Harvard
rms have "come to be a license
use college rooms for wild par
s and sexual intercourse."
The report written by Dr. Gra
m B. Blaine, Jr., of Harvard's
alth services was based on a
dy of students at Harvard and
dcliffe, the women's college
ich shares classrooms with Har
rd.
Quoted in the Harvard Crimson,
ich subsequently termed the
:usations "exaggerated" in an
torial, Monro warned students
ainst "orgiastic parties" and
bandoning girls in the houses."
He said that intimacies "be
een unmarried individuals is an
use the college cannot tolerate."
He said violation of dormitory
les are bringing the college
oser and closer to outright
ndal."
Che Blaine report, entitled "Sex
res in Transition," said col
es "unwittingly encourage this
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rhe scholarships, each in the
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'ticipates in the State Library
ird's scholarship program.
anuary 1, 1964, is the final (late
application for these scholar
ps. Recipients will be announced
ore May 1, 1964.
tecipients, who must be citizens
the United States, must be
iduates of four-year colleges or
versities of recognized stand
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ry school. Each applicant must
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vard Have
m Rules?
trend toward pre-marital relations
through relatively liberal rules.
Colleges put themselves in a
unique position by allowing girls
in boys' bedrooms."
Under college rules, Harvard
men may entertain women in
their rooms from 4 to 7 p.m. Mon
day through Friday and from
noon to midnight on Saturday.
Radcliffe girls are allowed to
have men in their rooms for a
total of 25 hours per week. From
their sophomore year on, they I
also can stay out all night without
asking college permission.
Radcliffe President Mary Bunt
ing said there was "no cause for
unusual concern about the activi
ties of Radcliffe girls."
The Blaine report also stated
that the trend toward pre-marital
sexual relations is going up and
that "this trend reflects a cultural
change in the United States."
According to the survey, 35 per
cent of college women in 1938
were not virgins, and 50 per cent
were not virgins in 1950.
Blaine said, "The trend in sexu
ality is due partly to the accessi
bility of bedrooms in college
dormitories and many students fall
into sexual relations for which
they are not ready."
Harvard s t u d e n t s say that
things are not as bad as Monro
and Blaine picture them.
Ire Available
'cience Work
county or regio'nal library serving
either completely or partially a
rural area. The sponsoring library
will provide a staff position for
the scholarship recipient upon
completion of graduate studies.
The recipient must agree to at
least two years employment with
their sponsoring library.
Several former recipients of
State Library Board graduate
scholarships have taken part in the
Board's program of library intern
ship, in which qualified under
graduates work full time during
the summer months in public li
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training offers college students a
chance to investigate library op
portunities before deciding on li
brarianship.
All requests for information con
cerning the g r a d u a t e Library
Science scholarships should be sent
to the South Carolina State Li
brary Board, 1001 Main Street,
Columbia.
You, like many of us, may be
reaching out in an effort to iden
tify yourself properly, - to learn
who you are and where you are
going. We believe we have found
the answers to these questions in
the Christian Science textbook,
Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures by Mary Baker
Eddy. You can find them, too.
We invite you to come to our
meetings and to bear how we
are working out our problems
through applying the truths of
Christian Science.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
OR GA N IZAT IO0N
University of South Caroline
Columble
Meeting time: S p.m. Fridays
Meeting piaeae a.....u H..... Rm. 1o2
Science and H eaIth is avallable at og
chiri tanSnce Reading Rooms and al usanff