University of South Carolina Libraries
The tripd Sh 2.ATBodStriped Shaclt ithFrn silk twill tie. 3. Pin or not collar with tweed tie. 4. Dark-toned English broadcloth enlive: striping and monotoned tie. 5. Ribbed and darted strip shirt, Fren< and silk and satin ribbed tie. ____BRI' Open 1337 Gamecock Charge 2 HRS. F PARKRITE. WITI Students plow new furrow By LYNN RING Staff Writer Far from the hassle of hunting a parking space, 8 a.m. classes and waiting for service in the Gamecock Room, there is a farm. .a 150-acre mid-Carolina farm: fields of flowers, black pines, sandy roads, wooded paths -- and people. But this farm is different. The animals, as well as the people, are gentle and friendly. There's a duck that shares a pen with pigs; and a big black dog, Opie, who rocks himslf to sleep at night in the living-room rocker. There are as many flowers in side the home as there are outside: jars of flowers, glasses of flowers. Too, there is music. Dreams and ideas are planted and harvested here. Minds and music are cultivated. Apart from the noise of high-rise campus and city life, people walk down sandy paths to the lake, or stroll in the sandpits. There people are living close to the earth, to nature. They say they are growing and getting to know themselves. Together they are learning, sharing, giving, working -- developing their music. Music: something of themselves to share with others. The tune: that of a different drum. er Look I silk bow tie. ~h cuffs and a ned by white h cuffs, TITONS Main St. Opei Friday I REE PARKING AT Until - WASHINGTON ST. I PURCHASE .414 4. - k L7 It 0 iL 4, . - - - - . - - Gamecock photos by Elliott Borenstein 44 4w - . 4 -. . . .-. .f./. i 1r ite 9-cA p~~ .oo