The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 17, 1967, Page Page Two, Image 3
Folk-Rock At T
Singer-composer Raun Mi
the Golden Spur student nigl
Kinnon will present both th(
floor shows each night at 8:
$1 per couple.
ODK Im
(Continued from Page 1)
Robert Alan Johnson of Fall
Branch, Tennessee, has a 3.833
GPR. lie is a member of the In
stitute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers and is treasurer of
Compass and Chart Ilonor Society.
John Carroll Jones is a member
of Alpha Phi Omega service fra
ternity. A journalism major, he
was editor-in-chief of Chanticleer
at the Coastal Carolina campus. A
senior from Charleston, he has a
GPR of 3.54.
David Gerald Laurey of Colum
bia has a 3.780 GPT? L.urey, a
senior accounting major, is a mem
ber of Phi Beta Kappa.
C I y d e Burns Livingston is a
junior from the town of North.
An accounting major, he has a
3.128 GPR. Livingston is v i c e
president of the P r e a t o n Area
Dorm Government and president
of the Inter-Dorm Council.
Henry Martin Jr., a varsity bas
ketball team member, is vice presi
dent of the Carolina Fellowship of
Christian Athletes. A s e n i o r in
biology, he has a GPR of 3.414.
Columbia is Martin's hometown.
Francisco G. Moreno is p)resident
of the s t u d e n t chapter of the
American Institute of Chemical
Engineers andl secretary of the
Southern Conference of AIChE. A
senior from Columbia, he has a 3.1
GPR.
Hallowed tre
of "pinning"
up-dated by
Sprite bottl4
According to an independ
ourselves), a startling ne
widespread on some college
Suddenly, fraternity men
the lovely young things th
Instead, they reach for
tingling Spri
l* theobjectc
through the ceremony of oper
It fizzest Roarsl Buzzes!
All of which makes for
than to simply "pin" a gir
Then, too, the intimacy
in the act of opening a bo
leads to strong emotional
Capped off, of course, t
few moments of delicious a
tingling tartness of Sprit
The beauty of the ideai
of true love does not run
to go to the trouble of ge
You just buy another bot
SPRITL
AND INGLING.
1T-QUIET.
'he Golden Spur
tcKinnon will be featured at
it club Nov. 20-22. Miss Mac
folk and pop sound for two
30 and 10:30. Admission is
ducts 21
A junior majoring in interna
tional studies, Joseph Hugh Pate
has a 2.89 CPR. lie serves on the
Academic Affairs Committee of
Student S e n a t e and the service
committee of Alpha Phi Omega.
Pate is from Marion.
Stuart Reynolds, a senior his
tory major with a 3.95 GPR, is
president of Phi Eta Sigma and
tre-surer of Circle K. He is an
exchange student to Warwick Uni
versity in England.
A member of Phi Eta Sigma
Honorary Fraternity, K e n n e t h
Castles Shull is a junior in Biology.
He is from Columbia. Shull's GPR
is 3.043.
Boyce Luther Smith is an
economics major from Chesnee. A
senior, he has a 3.7 GPR. Smith
is president of Omicron D e I t a
Epsilon and a member of Phi
Beta Kappa.
Allen Griffith Taylor Jr. is a
senior in international studies. He
has a 3.1 GPR. Taylor is from
Camp Springs, Md. He is NROTC
battalion officer and a member of
Compass and Chart.
Robert Lewis Wilson Jr. of Han
over, Pa., is an electrical engineer
ing major with a 3.453 GPR. He
is a member of the NROTC Drill
Company and the C o m p a s a and
Chart Honor Society. Wilson is a
senmor.
tdition
a girl is
a caps.
ent survey (we took it
w practice is becoming
campuses.
are no longer "pinning"
at catch their eye.
a bottle of tart,
~e--and proceed to "cap"
f their affections.
Why has this
come about?
PPrhaps because
of what happens
when you go
ing a bottle of Sprite.
Tingles I Bubbles I
much more moving moment
1.
of two people engaged
ttle of Sprite in itself
involvement .
y the sharing of a
bandon. (Tasting the
s, that is. )
s that if the course
smooth, you don't have
tting back your pin.
tle of Sprite.
Carolin
To Pre
"The Making of a Tradition," a
documentary m o t i o n picture on
USC, will premiere tonight at the
British Embassy in Washington,
D. C., and at Forest Lake Country
Club in Columbia.
Sir Patrick Dean, British ambas
sador to the United States, and
Lady Dean will be hosts for the
Winter Ball
To Feature
Miller Band
The Glenn Miller Orchestra will
entertain at a Carolina Winter
Ball, 8 p.m. to midnight, Dec. 9.
The Student Union Christmas
(lance will be at National Guard
Armory across from Carolina Sta
dium.
Dress will be strictly formal.
Men will wear complete tuxedo or
full-dress milita'ry uniform. Women
may wear short or long formal
(tresses.
The (lance is free to Carolina
students but limited to 750 couples.
Tickets will be available toward
the end of November, according to
Debbie Hutchinson, chairman of
the Student Union Dance Commit
tee.
A photographer will be on hand
to take pictures of the couples.
Miss Hutchinson said that pro
fessional decorators from Charlotte
will prepare the armory for the
dance.
USC Players
Now Touring
'Spoon River'
"Spoon River Anthology," latest
production of the University Play
ers, is on tour this month to four
USC Regional Campuses and to
North Carolina.
The Edgar Lee Masters play be
gan the tour Nov. 6 at Gardner
Webb Junior College in Boiling
Springs, N. C. Tuesday the pro
duction was at Coastal Carolina
Regional Campus at Conway.
It moved to USC's Union Cam
pus Thursday, Nov. 16, and will be
at the Beaufort Regional Campus
Friday. The final stop on the tour
is Salkehatchie Regional Campus
on Nov. 30.
In the play, ghosts of Spoon
River, USA, citizens tell their tales
through ballads.
COKE CAMPUS ACl
SATURDAY, N
Student Union Dc
The Catalinas - 8 P.M.
Football - University of Al
BEAT AL
SUNDAY, NC
Student Union Movie, Asse
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roc
BEAT CL
MONDAY, N4
Lectures Committee of
Dr. Wade Batson, 6 P.M., Asi
BEAT CL
TUESDAY, NC
BEAT CL
Shirttail Parade and Til
Meet at Rus
Student Union Movie -
Assembly Room, Russell
WEDNE!SDAY tN
Thanksgiving Holiday
BEAT CL
SATURDAY, N4
BEAT CLI
Carolina-Clemson Foott
you ne
a Docui
miere
premiere in Washington.
Consul-General T. C. Sharman
of Atlanta, Ga. is expected to be
Great Britain's senior representa
tive at the Columbia p r e m i e r e
which will be attended by mem
bers and wives of University Asso
ciates, an organization of a r e a
leaders who are interested in and
support USC.
Both the Washington1 aid Co
lumbia events will begin at 6 p.m.
with a reception to be followed by
the showing of the film.
In Washington, the senior USC
representative will be President
Thomas F. Jones and among the
guests will be prominent alumni
and other supporters of the Uni
versity from the Washington area.
Hugh Weldon, president of Uni
versity Associates, will conduct the
Washing
All Part
By PATSY OLIVER
Special Writer
A beauty contest winner who
holds a private pilot's license plus
a few years' experience as a "line
boy" absorbed in the workings of
airplane engines doesn't adhere to
most stereotyped ideas of univer
sity coeds.
And Dadre Traughber, 20-year
old USC student, isn't limiting her
self to just these distinctions. She
spends her spare time working on
a commercial pilot's license and
additional instrument-rating and
multiple engine-rating licenses.
"Most little girls grow up with the
idea of someday becoming nurses or
something like that I guess," said
the former Miss Aiken. "I always
wanted to be a pilot. I was about
nine when I first flew, and I felt
just like a plane or a Pegasus."
Undaunted by the $16 per hour
rates of lessons, Dadre paid for
them while working as a reception
ist, secretary and general "all-girl
Friday" at an airport near her
home. At the same time she at
tended classes at the USC Aiken
Extension.
"I (lid everything from gassing
up airplanes and washing them to
working as a grease monkey when
they needed me," the brown-haired
art major recalled. "It took two
years of being a weekend pilot to
get my first license but it was sure
worth all the time."
Obtaining a private pilot's license
entails 40) hours minimum flying
time, a rigid written exam and a
flight test administered by FAA ex
~IVITIES CALENDAR
OVEMBER 18
ince, Field H ouse
- 1 l.D. Card per couple
abama - Away 2:00 P.M.
>VEMBER 19
mbly Room, Russell House
"- 3, 6, 8:30 P.M.
>VEMBR 20
Student Union Presents
tembly Room, Russell House
NEMhBER 21
per Burning 7:00 P.M.
sell House
"L.ight in the Piazza"
House, 3, 6, 8:30 P.M.
IOVEMBE 22
s begin at 5:00 P.M.
EMBER 25
>all 2:00 P.M. Cockpit
has the taste
}Ver et tirerd rP
ne ntary
Ifonight
program at F o r e s t Lake Club
where the senior USC officer pres
ent will be Senior Vice President
William H. Patterson.
"The M a k i n g of a Tradition"
was produced at the request of the
University by S. C. Educational
Television Network. It is a full
color sound film, 28 minutes long,
and designed primarily for use as
p u b I i c service programming by
commercial television stations.
Robert Frierson is the producer
and David Smalley the director,
both of ETV.
The production is a documentary
which gives some of the back
ground of how USC acquired its
mace, but which mainly depicts the
events which took place on the
campus on the day the mace was
adopted by the University.
- And Gr
Of Coei
aminers.
"You wouldn't believe how many
COW pastdres I've landed in," she
joked but hastened to explain that
most people don't realize this is
an important part of any pilot's
training.
There's a c e r t a i n fraternity
among pilots, according to Dadre,
unique to that group.
"At the airport you meet people
from all walks of life-from mil
lionaires to plumbers," she com
mented. "Everybody feels a type of
unspoken fraternity among the pilots.
It might come from that taste of
freedom you get when you're flying.
It really makes you a better person,
and it'a one of those times you have
to really be honest with yourself."
Asked about the safety of her
avocation, Dadre replied she'd never
had a serious scare during her four
years' experience and "most little
planes are much safer, relatively,
than cars."
The former Queen of Carolina
Sea Island and this year's first
runner-up in the Miss Augusta
contest has found some discrimina
tion among airlines hiring charter
pilots.
"People seem to prefer having
men pilot the plane and I don't
think they're going to change their
ideas," she explained. "All the air
Let
Marce
put yoi
driver
Modern Libi
50th anniv4
Sit
EASY
At last! A contest for :
without moving their
zine subscriptions. ga
or entry fees. Just rema
avisit toyour favoritel
quick work with a pei
Yes, YOU can be
owner of this brand ni
line, 1931 Ford Model
(a "GLASSIC", cop
latest developments
lights, side curtains,
and steering wheel).
Who warns to give
1931 Ford? Why, you
THE CAMP!
Her Ow
Not only a beauty queen I
Dadre Traughber, USC coed,
money for flying lessons. Shi
mercial license.
asing Ph
Flyer's
lines think that men are so much
more stable and that the public
just won't reconcile itself to the
idea of a woman flying jets."
With the prospects then of pilot
ing professionally rather lint, what
PEULNI
I Proust4
twin the
'sseat!4
ersary contest.
right down and start-no
-FUN-QUICK-SIMPLE,
>eople who readl book s tore a nd
lips! No mraga- liouse, pubIlishi
sohine coupons, ILibrary. You see,
onat~ble Ii teracy, comes t he p)itch
ookstor,some. Modern I .ibrary
ical and you... best of thu woi
the bewildered hard-bound edil
:w, fresh oIl the prices. During II
A Touring Car Year, we want to
ete with all the andl sell a few e
mecluding head- we've putt togellI
unming hoards, contest opent to 4
you this 1967- h fca n
friendly local or theft necessar
IS SHOP-BOOK DEl
RUSSELL HOUtSE
9u
Staff Photo by Elliott Boreastala
n Pilot
iut a licensed pilot as well,
worked at an airport to earn
is now working for a corn
ines Are.
Uraining
does the Carolina junior plan to do
with her avocation?
"Enjoy it for one thing," she
said, adding, "I may fly charter
flights after I get my commercial
license and possibly teach."
WMRN
("What
we've
got here
is a
failure to
communicate.")
Students with
Student $1.00
Cards .........
Without Cards 1.25
ETC.
friendiy Random
-rs of Tht Modern
ever sin:e 1917(here
, ight? r ight!),The
las beetn ollering the
Id's best books in
bons at paPerback
lis 50uth Anniversary
say' thank you (sure,
xtrad books) and so
ier a mlind-blowing
-veryonle. Why don't
ir bookstore landl get
form (no purchase
v).
>ARTMENT