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INQUIRY By HARRY SIMMONS Staff Writer QUESTION: Why did WUSC-AM go off the air before exan week? ANSWER: According to Assi Chief Engineer John Roberts the station went off the air be cause of technical problems tha caused a frequency exactl: double the regular 730 kilohertz In technical terms, we have t strong second harmonic. A second harmonic is agains the laws of the Federal Com munications Commission, so th< Chief Engineer took the statioi off the air as soon as the prob lem arose. "We plan to resum< broadcasting at the beginning o: the second semester," Robert said. QUESTION: I was told that Deat Cooper is chairman of the Stu dent-Faculty F o o d Committee Why, if he is chairman of thit committee is his name not listed on the signs that appear in th< food areas on campus? ANSWER: According to Univer sity food service sources, the name of Dean Cooper was jus overlooked and it will be adde< to the list in the various cafe terias around campus. GUESTION: Why can the emer gency escape hatch in the Russel House elevator not be opened? We were trapped in it and coulk not get out. With the frequen1 use of the Russell House elevatot immediate escape should be pos sible. Is there not a law to have elevators inspected? ANSWER: INQUIRY contacte< Jack Williams at the OTIS Ele vator Company to find informa. tion concerning this question It was learned that OTIS has a contract with the University t< inspect the elevator twice a month. Williams said that there was no law regarding elevator inspection and that owners were responsible for the upkeep. Escape in case of elevator fail ure is usually made through the main door. They are designed to be opened from the inside by pushing the door sideways into its normal open position. If the elevator is between floors the people may have to climb up or down to the closest floor once the door is open. The door on the roof of the ele vator is made to open from the outside, and is to be used only in case of an emergency, i.e., fire, smoke, gas, etc. Only trained persons should assist people out through the roof, such as fire men, police, maintenance men, and elevator technicians, Wil liams said. This is because there are high voltage electrical wir ing and cables on top of the elevator that could be easily touched in the ddrk. QUESTION: A story in The Game cock last issue said that no an nounced tests were to be given the week prior to final exams. Did the faculty know of this rule; if so, why was it not fol lowed? ANSWER: According to the office of vice president for Academic Affairs H. Willard Davis, the minutes of the faculty meetings have been reviewed as far back (See INQUIRY, Page 3) YOU CAUGHT 1 NOW CHA! PANAVISION1 Internatit Members of the Institute ai ment of International Studies a right, Olin B. Sansbury, instruct< instructor, Prof. Raymond A. Mo< L. Walker, head of the departme Intern ati Said 'Mo (Continued from Page 1) Jones declared the grant was a "major breakthrough" in the Uni versity's efforts to attract funda from large private organizations He called the grant unusual it that it was made to a departmen in the social sciences, whereaa most grants are made to the tech nical fields. The funds provided by the grani will be dispersed by Dr. Richarc L. Walker, head of the Depart, ment of International Studies anc director of the Institute of Interna. tional Studies. Walker confirmed that the fol lowing activities, suggested by the donors of the grant, will be under taken with the new funds: -Further development of the graduate program in international studies. -Research assistance, including relief of faculty teaching loads for members of the staff in inter national studies and for research associates on the campus. --Expansion of the Institute's program of research cooperation with organizations and scholars abroad, including joint research undertakings. -Development of further re search projects concerning demo cratic political strategy in world affairs to include expansion of the Institute's publication program, support for its monthly colloquia on world affairs and the visiting scholar program. -G.eneral support for the Insti tute to include such items as [DAY HE "PUSSYCAT".. E THE FOX! es, I' ~i) 10OR b elu a..... i ry onal Studies Person i of the Depart- the institute; I ire, from left to Lasile Gorgey; or; Ziaul Hashmi, Stewart, associn re; Prof. Richard Robert B. Mow it and director of onal Stud jor Breal travel, administrative and secre tarial assistance. Walker said he accepted the grant "as a challenge." He said the grant would enable the Insti tute, already recognized as a na tional leader in the Southeast, to take on a larger role as a national leader in the field of national security and world affairs. "If the United States cannot re treat from the world, neither can South Carolina," declared Walker. "There is a tremendous opportun USC Gets Scientific Equipment The University has become one of the latest institutions to receive material aid from the Western Electric Company and Bell Tele phone Laboratories. The equipment, donated by the Bell System's College Gift Pro gram, consists of 246 types of electrical and scientific apparatus, part of a -.tained commitment to higher education." Each year the manufact.uring research arms of the Bell system donate to more than 600 colleges and institutions. The surplus and industrially obsolete equipment in cludes oscilloscopes, wave analyz ers, tube testers, and power sup plies. D)uring the program, gifts have ranged from thermistors small enough to take a grasshopper's temperature to a microwave an tenna large enough to register radiation from the stars. The program, now supplying over 500,000 bits of scientific equipment, began in the 1920's with the donation of 18 oscillo scopes to several northeastern schools. Starts '1 4 1 ' "People Are 0 Talking About 'VI and Start Talking "YOU ARE GOING TO E 'ALFIE' VERY MUCH" -LIFE Magaz PARAMOUNT PICTURES present AL] (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES MICHAEL CAINE sALFIE RI ND-MAL ELECTRONICALLY IICAYrn nel Confer rof. Donald E. Weatherbee; Prof. Dr. Nestor Moreno; Col. Matthew C. te director of the institute; and it, instructor. ies Grant through' ity here to grasp leadership in this I vital area." A special guest for the luncheon was Frank R. Barnett, president of the National Strategy Informa tion Center in New York and a long-time friend of Dr. Walker and other Columbians. Barnett, Internationally recog nized as an expert on communist strategy, said the USC Institute of International Studies already ranks along with the Hoover Insti tute of Stanford University and "other leading thought centers in the country." Calling the USC center "a major national asset," Barnett said that within five years no serious dis cussion on national security or world affairs would be held in the nation without consulting and in cluding the talents of the USC In stitute. Barnett concluded his remarks with a challenge to local civic leaders to develop an organization x to complement the efforts of the t International Studies Department. f Heading the list of dignitaries and University supporters attend ing the luncheon were former Gov. I James F. Byrnes, Lt. Gov.-elect I John C. West and Rutledge L. Os borne, chairman of the University i Board of Trustees. c Trapped WUS( Turn To Singii WUJSC announcers Chrvs liar- d1 ris and Stan Carpenter turned from playing records to singing spirituals Sunday afterznoon when they claim to have been trappe'd in the Russell llouse. elevator for 25 minutes. h Among their favorites were "Save' Me" and "Nobody Knows a the Troubles I've Seen." Tfhey report that at 3:45 p.m. s the safety on the elevator stop stoppedl it as the vehicle descended too rapidly. Opening the inside q dloor they were able to see feet on the third floor, but were unable f to reach the cateh for the outside k~ "ODAY* sing To Stop iGINIA WOOLF About 'ALFIE' " NJOY mie IN - COLOR - ALL SEATS $1.25 Columbia's New Air-.Flo RockIng Choi, Th.ea.r IS Ch Growti When Dr. Richard L. Walker came to Carolina in 1957 to estab lish the Department of Interna tional Studies, the only thing that lay ahead of him was a lot of hard work. Now 10 years later, the USC de partment has seven faculty mem bers and is recognized as the top International Studies Department in the Southeast. With the announcement last month of a $210,00 grant over a three-year period for the Institute of International Studies, of which Walker is director, the USC de partment is expected to grow even more. "Five years from now," Walker predicted, "there won't be a con ference on national security or world peace anywhere in the coun try that won't include a represen tative from the University of South Carolina." Walker, a nationally recognized expert on Chinese affairs, came to the University as a result of ef forts by then President Donald S. Russell, who supposedly read a book by Walker, invited him to Columbia and persuaded him to become a member of the faculty. Walker attributes much of the success of his program to the vision and foresight of Russell Lnd South Carolina elder states nan James F. Byrnes. He noted that their awareness of .he growing importance of rela ions with other countries and the ,tate's opportunity to participate Letively in the field provided a irm foundation for the depart nent. According to Walker, two im )ortant aspects of the program at JSC contribute to its success. First, the program is predicated mn a regional approach. Success ul efforts have been made to nake Carolina the Southeastern enter of expertise on public pol cy in foreign affairs. USC is the only school in 15 iouthern states which has a doc orate program in international re ations. Supplementing the regional ap >roach has been the second im >ortant concept of the program: he exchange of scholars and in ormation with foreign institutes. Within the next three years cholars will be coming to USC rom three of these centers to take >nsitions on the Institute's staff. Walker's future plans for the nstitute and the department in lude: Announcers rig Spirituals oor because it was too high. They saidl that the serews on die emergency escape hatch were ainte.d so tight they were unable >reach the catch by climbing out te hatch. They rang the emergency alarm, ut saidl that the frequently layedl-with device attracted no ttention. They sought to per Jade persons on the third floor to ?ek help from the radio station, ut were unsuccessful. At this oint they began to sing while tting on the floor of the elevator. Someone eventually wvent to the oor below and brought up the ey to open the outside door from utside. The elevator was at the e level of the tall announcers 'quiring them to pull up and -awl through the narrow opening. MATINEES 2:0ad 5:0 "Devi'l may-care dogfights in the skies... *, , devil- may-care love affairs on the ground!~w SStudents $10 With I.D Ceads .ief Ex 1, Futu -High-level academic co ences dealing with problem political strategy for demo< societies. -A regular program of fa and student exchanges with 1 world centers of internationa lations research. Examining Assoc. Prof. William E. pology and Sociology examim 3,000 to 5,000 years old, at i the Wateree River. Six weeks finally dislodged the craft frc attempt will be made to deter: radioactive Carbon-14 tests. EXAM . Date 9:00 A.M. 2:00 January 16) 9 TThS All : TTh January 17 'J MWF All 2 M.1WF January 18 NO January 19 11 MWF 1:30 4 MWF All January 20 10 MWF 8:00 3 MWF All January 21 8 MWF 12 T I MWF All January 23 11 TThS 12 3 4:30 TThS All : January 24 10 TThS Mak< * No exams will be held on thi: the administration, because I will be active in the inaugu A student who is absent fr grade of "F" on the course uni able to the Dean of Men or VI symbol "X." Examination conflicts will (example, 8 MWF) will take pi all sections of English 101 & those scheduled later (example take precedence over TThS exa giving the exam to be resched the student either on the regul convenmence. Examinations for classes n a week, and night classes will deans during the regular exam No deviation from this prin prior appiroval has been obtaine Students may be transferre the same course by consent of Law Review The South Carolina Lawv Rev has largely "taken to the air," to the legal efforts of three torneys. D). Kerry Crenshaw, C'harles attorney on active dluty in U. S. Army, has penned " p)lanles in the Admiralty Jur'is, Lion: A Short Hlistory," while Lorney Pearce Fleming hasc I PERI RM NCE 0 - NIGHT S at 8:00 6 "Wild and exciting with fighting biplanes! Absorbing!" [S ~SO~ROI E eANB[mS amines re Aims nfer- -Expansion of the graduate s of program of training and research ratic at the University. -Seminars and conferences for culty business and industrial leaders in iajor the Southeast, where economic ac I re- tivities are taking an increasingly international flavor. Photo by William Gettys, Jr. Ancient Canoe Edwards of the Department of AntIuo , an Indian canoe, estimated to be from ts former resting place on the banks of of muddy effort headed by Dr. Edwards m its clay surroundings on Nov. 8. An nine the exact age of the canoe through ;cHEDULE P.M. ;ections of English 11 & 12 ;ections of History 11 & 12 EXAMS * TTh ections of Biology 11, 12, 13 TThS ections of Foreign Language 11 & 12 Th ections of Psychology 11 & 12 [WF ections of Mathematics 11 up exams plus any other exams d date, by an official announcement from ,he members of the ROT' units at USC ration activities. om a final exam;nation will be given a ess he has not offered an excuse accept omen. If excused, he will he given the be resolved as follows: "hourly" exams ecedence over "group" exams (example, 102); early exams take precedence over 8 MWF" with 11 MWF); MWF exams ins, regardless of time. The department u!ed will schedule a make-up exam for ar make-up day er at the department's ot listed above, classes that meet once he scheduled by D)epartment heads or ination period, excluding Sunday. ted schedule is permitted unles.s specific di from the dean of the school concerned. di from one exam section to another of the instructor. Takes To Air iew t.ributed an article dlealincg with (due 'Aircraft Noise: A Taking of at- Private Property.. ..".The third contributor is Julian L. Stoude ton mire, who (leals with the need for the Airport zoning. riI- The articles concern p)rogress in ie- aviation and the ensuing public at- private legal issues. OI~In imt,roducing the articles, the p)ublication's staff commented: "This state is on the threshold of what could be one of the most progressive eras in its history.... "By constantly striving to dis cern the line between public and private interests, it is felt that the result will be . . . most bene ficial to all interests." WANTED Port time advertising salesman for Columbia. Some experience is needed. Send full resume to P. 0. Box 246, Columbia, S. C., 29208. ISTUDENTS If you desire pictures of your friends (or yourself) appearing in the GAME. COCK, call Chip Galloway, 765-4907. Portraits, such as of Garnet and Black beauty con testants, are also available.