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RATED'NEWI ALL-AMERICAN pON SPRING, 1963 (See Page 2) UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA CROWING FOR A GREATER CAROLINA VOL LIV, NO. 14 COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER 13. 1963 Students : Political. BY SUSAN LINDAU Public Opinion Analyst ? 1963 The G.,ec.ch If a presidential election wer, held on the Carolina campus thi week, President Lyndon B. John son would win. The results of a poll taken o1 this campus during the last wee] among 100 students support thi statment. The participants wer, asked who they would choose be tween Johnson and Goldwater Johnson and Nixon, and Johnsoi and Rockefeller. The results of the poll indicate that, despite the fact that Gold water had a large majority o the support before Nov. 22, muel of his support is undecided. Before Nov. 22 61% for Goldwater 38% for Kennedy 1% undecided The answer to the questioi "Which man would you suppor between Johnson and Goldwater? shows that the Republicans cai not depend on the solid suppor for Goldwater that was founi here when he was opposing Ken nedy.. The need for a counteractio1 to the Kennedy enigma has bee1 USC Students Give Concert Sunday Night A Christmas concert will b, given at 7:30 p.m. Sunday il Trinity Episcopal Church by stu dents and faculty members a USC and other Columbia mu sicians. "Jesu Meine Freude (Jesu Jo; and Treasure)" by Buxtehude an "Wachet Auf (Sleepers Wake) by Bach will be performed. The concert will be presente4 by the USC Department of Musi and directed by Asst. Prof. Davi< G. Phillips Jr. of the department The Buxtehude cantata will b sung by an ensemble composed o 12 members of the Universit: Chorus. Two student soloists wil be featured and two violinists, a1 organist and a bassoonist will pro vide instrumental accompanimeni New Buli USC Scha A new bulletin explainin ply for them is available to 1 of Students' office. The folc scholarships, their value, an Applications for scholars ning in September, 1964, must b received by the Director of Sti dent Aid by February 14. Eac application must be accompanie by the student's academic trani Sscript for the Fall, 1963, semei ter. Applications should not b made for a specific scholarshi because applicants will be cor sidered for all scholarships fc which they are eligible. USC is participating in th, C o 11 e g e Scholarship Servic< which requires applicants to sut mit the Parents' Confidentii Statement. Married students at required to submit an additioni separate statement. These formr are available through the Dire< tor of Student Aid. Students not eligible for lear under the National Defense Loa program may be eligible for loarl t hr o ugh United Student Al F'unds. These are private ban loans, repayable after gradui tion. The United Student Aid loan through which a student mu borrow up to $1,000 a year, ai based primarily on need and ri quire a student to have a 2, average and not be on probatio1 Copies of the bulletin and ib formation on United Student Al loans, as well as additional Ii formation concerning scholarshij may be obtained from the Direi tor of Student Aid, In the Admii istrative Annex. The telephor number 1. 766-3123. Express Reaction removed and with it the desh for someone as conservative i Goldwater. On Dec. 5 when Goldwater we asked what the affect of Ket a nedy's death would have on h: - chances for the presidential caz didacy, he stated, "I don't thin my support has changed froi C what it was." Since Nov. 22 56% for Johnson 27.5% for Goldwater 37.5% undecided Among those who supporte Goldwater before the death . Mr. Kennedy, 37% went to Johe f son, with 25% stating that the , are undecided as to their choic between the two. This large pe: centage of persons who cann< state a preference between tr potential candidates indicates ti start of a possible trend awe from the extreme conservativisi t previously exhibited on this can pus. Polls taken on this campus du: t ing past election years ha% i shown a strong conservati% - body. During the senatorial can paigns, a straw vote showe W. D. Workman, Jr. over Olin I - Johnston by a 2-1 majority. Th win for Workman reflects tr Conservative stand seen in a sim lar victory for Nixon during tr 1960 Presidential campaign. By moving away from the ft right the crowd is not necessaril going to a liberal point of viei The number of persons pushir e the center of the political spe I trum is definitely growing large - The results of the poll take t last week indicate that Nixon ha - only half of the support he he during the 1960 campaigns hei on the USC campus. Johnson Over Nixon 56% for Johnson 30% for Nixon 1 14% undecided New York's Governor Rock I feller has even less support c the Carolina campus than Nixo e In the choice between Johnsc f and Rockefeller, Johnson we , hands down. I Johnson Over Rockefeller 1 71.5% for Johnson - 17% for Rockefeller 11.5% undecided !etin Lists 0larsh ips g scholarships and how to al JSC students through the Dea ler lists general and specializc d requirements for them. hips_for the school year begii e - -_ _ _ _ a Debate Clash d Brings USC eWin Over Piti USC met the University< r Pittsburgh in a debate clash b fore seven area Pittsburgh his e schools last week. The Carolir 3, exhibition team, composed < Gloria Smith and John Wert I won the series 5-2. The USC d e baters faced two different P1 il teams with the topic "Resolve< s That the federal g ovyer nm er1 -should guarantee an opportuni for higher education to all qual 5 fied high school graduates." n Miss Smith Is majoring In hi dtory at the University. She wi k Class A state high school deba champion In 1962 and 1963. Wertz, a sophomore histoi major, was a member of the char "plonship team at the Camiellia D bate Tournament and has won tl Gonzales Award for original hi 0 tory. .The varsity debating team ne .competes In 40 major tournamen d annually and sponsors two collej ~events, Carolina Forensics In 11 a fall and the Camelhia Tourname in the spring. The USC team al -sponsors television debatem, a hij e school clinic and the state hij school deating finals. Senat To Y( k Last Tuesday night at Dreher I H i g h School Auditorium, Alpha r d Kappa Gamma, USC's honorary a leadership fraternity for women, p held its annual sorority Song Fest. y Pi Beta Phi, awarded the first t e place trophy in the event, won the honor with their choral presenta- h ot tion of "He's Gone Away" and a e "Fum, Fum, Fum," a Spanish s e Christmas carol. The sorority was y directed by Laurie Mosely. e n Second place winner, Zeta Tau - Alpha, sang "Lift Thine Eyes" and "God So Loved the World" under the direction of Peggy Ellis. Delta Zeta copped third place e with the songs "Milk and Honey" and "The Old Woman in the d Shoe." They were directed by Lynne Proctor. s Other participating sororities e were Alpha Delta Pi singing i. "What Child Is This" and "The e Holly and the Ivy," Delta Delta Delta singing "The Twelve Days r of Christmas" and "Stille Nacht," y and Chi Omega singing "0 Bone v. Jesu" and "Who Will Come to g Bethlehem." Also competing in the event was r. Kappa Delta giving their choral n rendition of "Carol of the Drum" A and "Sleigh Ride." d Each sorority was judged on the e basis of how well it enunciated, pronounced, appeared on stage, selected its songs, its over-all tone and quality. Judges for the event were Mr. Arthur Frazer, head of the music department at Carolina, Anti-Re Commi Communists are "the pirates, bandits, and guerrillas of the postwar world" and have "no re spect for diplomatic protcocol or international law," declared Dr. J. Fred Rippy Tuesday at USC. He spoke in Drayton Hall on "The Communist Challenge in the Caribbean" as the third lecturer in the current series presented by )- the University's Department of n International Studies. d Dr. Rippy is a visiting profes sor of history at USC, a long-1 - time student and teacher of Latini Amei ican affairs, and professor emeritus of American history at1 the University of Chicago. "Probably the safest and most satisfactory means of ridding the Americas of Castro communism [would be the overthrow of Castro and his cohorts by the Cubans >f themselves with the aid of a e-. combination of Latin American h allies," continued Dr. Rippy. La "The once-potent Monroe Doc >f trine is either dead or deefily z, dormant," he said, and the e- United States has substituted a tt policy of "coexistence and con I: tainment." t The containment, Dr. Rippy y said, Includes Inspection by air i.. and sea, a partial trade boycott, and an Alliance for Progress Sdesigned to "win the hearts and minds" of Latin Americans and prepare them" to defend them selves against subversion and military aggression from this yMajor Communist base in the Americas." Although he acknowledged that te estimates of the number of Com s- munists in Latin American na tions are "uncertain," he said w they "are presently numerous ts enough to constitute a menace re throughout the region south of te the USA." lit Nevertheless, he guessed the sO number of Communists in these rh countries: th Costa Rica, 300-400; Guate ma.n, 1,000-.,200 Hnuase and eVol )ung , Singing 4r. Alvyn Moore, minister of usic at Shannon Baptist Church, nd Mr. Sidney Palmer, executive roducer-director of WIS. Proceeds from Song Fest went o the AKG Loan Fund. During the intermission AKG eld its fall tapping ceremonies, n annual affair for the leader hip fraternity. Undergraduate membership is xtended to those women on the jarolina Campus who have been ecognized as effective leaders in he student body. To be eligible AKG TAPS ONE MORE: A C Kappa Gamma, women's honorarn held in Dreher Auditorium duri d Prof as 'Guei Panama, 500-600 each; Nicara gua, 200-300; Haiti and the I)o minican Republic, a "few hun dred" e a c h ; Ecuador, 1,000 1,200; Paraguay, "perhaps" 600; Bolivia, 6,000; Uruguay, "never exceeded" 4,000; Peru and Colombia, 6,000-7,000 each; some ".45,000 each" in Chile and Venezuela; "at least 70,000" in Argentina; and "perhaps as high as 100,000" in Brazil. "It should be carefully noted, owever, that - with the excep ion of Mexico which has five or ix thousand Reds among a pop ilation of 33 million - Peru, Co ombia, Venezuela, Chile, Argen ,ia, and Brazil are the largest mnd most populous countries oif ~atin America, ranging from even and a half million in Chile 'p to more than 70 million in 3razil," Dr. Rippy said. The Communist party wvas or canized in Cuba no later than L925, Dr. Rippy said, and he com nented, "It is a great pity that rarlier operations of Reds in the sland receivedl so little attention >utside of Cuba before the be tinning of the Castro revolt." Hie saidl this about the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba: "Invasion by Cuban exiles, USC Gets Grades-good or bad-will con students sooner this year beci now ultra-high speed data proce temn. Carolina will become the firi sity or college in the state to IBM 1401 magnetic tape data system, probably before Christ USC President Thomas F., the new digital computer will b, research, teaching, processing o: P 1 C eS l Righlight for tapping a candidate must have caught the spirit of the institution, and the value of her service must be unquestionable in that she has made the college a better place for having attended. Because AKG is in the process of petitioning a nationally recog nized senior women's honorary, this year only seniors will be tapped. These women rank scho lastically in the upper one third of their class. This is equivalent to a grade point ratio of at least 3.7. The following senior women arolina (oed is tapped into Alpha service fraternity in cerenmonies ng sorority Song Fest. Terms -rillas' provided with equipment and training by the Central Intelli gence Agency and military of ficers of the United States, was attempted and permitted to fail in April, 1961. "But the United States gov ernment now frowns upon this means of deposing Castro, and oppose even more vigorously in vasion of Cuba by the armed forces of the United States. "Hligh officials in Washing ton seenm to consider such dras tic action too costly and danger ous." lie said the result of this at titude is the policy of "coexis tence" and "containment." D)r. Rippy ear nedl the doctor of philosophy degree at the Univer sity of Chicago and taught there 30 years and at Duke University 10 years. lHe specializes in Latin Ameri can history, concentrating on contemp)orary politics as well as political and cultural history. Many of his books reflect these interests. The current lecture series of the Department of International Studies is titled "Dimensions of the Cold War" and is linked to a course offered in the department. New Data se to USC ing financial accoun muse of a The IBM 1401 ste issing sys magnetic tape, spir1 high speed to obtait problem, and just a at Univer- formation together install an sought. processing Information and mias. into the computeri Jones said after translation f structions. As man: e used for chine languiage" cha f students' on a single 10-Inch len includ.. "Prorams" of )ppo brat A Festival were tapped into AKG on Tuesday night. PRISCILLA ELDER - Pan-Hel !enic Council, Board of Publica tions member, May Court, Euphrosynean Literary Society (secretary, vice - president and president), Delta Zeta sorority (re -ording secretary and president), 1.3 grade point ratio. PEGGY FRETWELL - Trans fer from Columbia College, Home -oming Queen, Student Senate, Faculty Relations Committee. sec retary of student body, State Stu dent Legislature, Beta Gamma Sigma, orientation counselor, Pan (Continued on page 8) Dean And IFC Heads Go To NIC BY HENRY EICIEL News Staff Writer USC was represented at the National Interfraternity Confer ence in New York last week h". Dean of Men Eugene Cooper anc three of the top officers of Caro lina's Interfraternity Council. I is the first time that USC ha: sent representatives to the con ference. Bill Thomason, IFC president Gean Martin, treasurer; and Marl Alexander, secretary; accompan. ied Dean Cooper to the confer. ence, held December 5. 6. and in the Americana Hotel. The conference was divided in to graduate and undergraduate programs. Undergraduate pane discussions and groups headed b% outstanding fraternity l e a d e r talked over rushing, fraternity expansion, leadership and crea tiveness, and enemies of fraterni ties, said Dean Cooper. The graduate program begar with a meeting of national fra ternity secretaries and deans of men Dec. 6. Discussion groups went over fraternity standards dedication, image, leadership. and accomnmodat ions. A joint breakfast for graduates and undergraduates Dec. 6 was addressed by Dr. Irving D)illard retired editor of the St. Loui5 Post - Dispa tch and Professor of JTour-nalism at Princeton Unive sity. That night, Justice Tonm Clark of the U. S. Supreme Court addressed a joint banquet. On Dec. 7, individual fraterni ties held luncheons for their reop. resentatives at the conference All 49 national social fraternities were in attendance. Decan Cooper said, "NIC's ma. jor purpose is to allow fraternith men to hear the experiences o1 others, discuss rushing, and ge1 creative ideas. It seeks to im prove fraternities on the chapter University, and national levels.' The theme of the undergrad uate program was, "Instill Fra ternity Creativeness," and thi graduate program's theme was "Ideals." i Processi ting and cost studies. stored 0i res information on its repeat a s the tape at ultra- The IB what it needs for a Computei m swiftly puts the in- data pro< :o produce the answer recording volumes problems are inserted Althou n "machine language" equipmer1 rom conventional in- in such as 14 million "ma- denta' sj racters may be stored of the a reel of magnetic tape. as Its ar instrnetionaem .io pu to . -51ition lotion President Presents Resolution By SIG IIUITT News Writer Abolishment of two Congres sional committees as proposed by the USC Young Democrats was met with an opposing resolution by Student Senate at its meeting Wednesday. The Y.D.'s on Nov. 19 passed a resolution urging Congress to terminate the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the Senate Internal Security Commit tee. The resolution stated that the committees "have intruded upon the constitutional rights of free Americans through arrogant and abusive interroWration of their po litical beliefs." Che Vote Passes Passed by a close vote, the reso lution further stated that "the committees' activities are in viola tion of the Bill of Rights and are above the Congressional power of investigation." Introduced by Pres. Todd Wil son, the Senate's resolution recog nized the right of the Y.D.'s to express their opposition to the Congressional Committees, but put the Senate on record "as uphold ing these committees and con - mending the work they are doing for the safety of our nation." Copies of the Senate's action will be sent to U. S. Senators Olin Johnston and Strom Thurmond. Gov. Donald Russell. University Pres. Thomas Jones, the S. C. General Assembly, the Young Democrats, and the University news service. Tickets Debated Approved in other Senate busi ness was Sen. Larry Cline's bill asking that the president appoint a committee to draft a letter to be sent to persons who hold reserved seat tickets for the Carolina-Duke basketball game next M o n d a y night. The letter will express student support for the basketball team and its coach, and point out the fact that University students have also paid for their seats, but due to cramped facilities, all can not be admitted. The underlying rea son for the bill is the hope that b)askethall supporters realize the great need for a new campus field house. S e n a t e voiced approval on another bill introduced by Pres. Wilson. The resolution asked that no soliciting he' made on campus without permission from the Stu dent Affairs Committee. Donation Approved A m ot ion by Sen. Chuck Simons gave $25 to the De~al chap ter of the American Cancer So ciety in memory of Urban Glenn Milhous III, University student who died last week. The approved amount will come from the con .tingency fund. Forwarded to committee for ,further study was a motion pre sented by Sen. Jimmy Willis. ng System 1 tape, allowing the system to process whenever called upon. M 1401 will give the University's Center much more flexibility in easing, and increased economy of ,transporting and storing large of information in compact form. gh the new USC data processing t will be put to immediate use projects as preparation of atu ring grade reports, the full use ystenm will be obtained gradually ithmetic and logical functions arc -ork on successive problems.