The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, May 22, 1970, Page Page 2, Image 2

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Not just an The last Issue.' For four years I've been hire f somewhere in The Gamecock of almost'all over. Just as four yea some of the most meaningful of There's a sense of strangeness. it ci Is. Perhaps, one of the things that departure also of two of the people greatest impact on my thinking du that I've been here. Don Bunc University that he' served as Mel years and Professor George Crutcl Letter to Mom Dear Mom, I am no longer the editor of The Gamecock. You will no longer be receiving the obscene phone calls in the middle of the night. You won't have to park the three cars in the two-car garage to prevent vandalism. I'm sending my asbestos suit home in the trunk with my bomb detection kit. Pleae. dot*poI in the plain -brown ack . It., contains grafitt I got S(the walls of the Ocampus restrooms. I am mentioned prominently. Don't tell anyone I have the walls, or .they won't let me graduate. 'If you get any letters from Dad, tell him he can come home now. ils son is no longer "rubbing the family name In Sthe dirt" at Carolina. I will be ~rubbing it in the dirt elsewhere. Otherwise I am fine. The tear gas is almost cleared out and " my hair is beginning to grow. hack. They've only burned one cross in front of my door this.. week, but that's because there's a Yaffer convention In Alabama. Don't open any boxes without the secret sign or anything that ~ ~ticks. Handle all the boxes with. rubber gloves because I think the conservatives have started using germ warfare. Love, Your Son, The Ex-Editor The' f a r..ck is published iri-weekiy during Iir'iri holklays and exam periods. C'hange 42 mal itemsI should he !.eni to IDrawer A. L8sc. (Col SIub%criiSmr rates are set per year or S:i per sem tii S ear r'e'eived S:i7.SNrn from She student act scripS son. So the paper. Officers of The Gamecock aheS is'*r'ity rampus. Phone!. are 777.x17N. 777. Columboi;a. S.C. The editor in chief is Jim Wanna Sihe l'nisers.ity ofl south C'aroiina. She opinion!. put of1 Sihe linivrsitS . She student body or She staff of Il iiu'ainess manager ScBl' Managing editor .r'5aik \dtvertising( manager Wodiine inst, managing editors Ssniis .Xssoriate editors ieKohln l4pars ito un.lim anna ers I Jhra'ian.ie Hloe e I - Woody uinkl susn or maw other issue he foi teaching acing a typewriter Gameco fice, and now It's Virginia irs that have been Mr. C my life are over, lust thai in't really be, yet it plans foi asked. A heightens it is the and our that have had the dealing i ring the four years - in tl ly is leaving the academl hodist chaplain for grou ifield is leaving his El Good eve dgen tlemen, th Mackerel with the k news. (Fa ut to a partly, smoo ish middle-ager sltti surrounded by a bev velies. He is selling 4 tional news, first, ixon has announced instructed the military begin a strike into the Egypt to destroy North se command posts from y are operating. ree hour telecast to the Man H The THUR HOPPE 'olumnist June 1, 1972 A h w York hard-hat const ers, led by Gen. se fall and spring semesters with the exception ol addre%s forms. subscription requests and other mbia. S.C. 2920na. ester. Hulk copies are $5 per I00. The f.amecock v-lty lund entitling lull-tim,e students to a sub. ire in Itooms :tis and :ill of the Russell Honuse on i289 and f77-l22. Second class postage paid at inaker. .\lthough the (iamecock is published by lished herein do not necessarl.r represent those e pa per. Ts Ke*lles ~liike tall isst. sports editor Taleddi liefiner New's I-dimors SI-flt t erks (hersl ilunning H-:i,a.heth Phillips ir yeu duties and position as advis ck for the position of head of a del Commonwealth University in RI has been the ideal advisor. That I - an advisor. Sure, he's had greA - the paper, but he only gave then nd, he's defended whatever right to do it. He' vith the c 10 a good o lain and the prie th houl public, carried by none of major networks, Nixon said move might "make it impossi for me to win re-election in 1 but I feel it must be done." He also said it should not considered a widening of the w but a move to end the war ev, sooner than his 1990 deadline last week when he ordered invasion of Israel. The Eastern Hemispherii War, which at one time was tip Vietnam War, then the InIN Chinese War, then the Southea* Asian War, then the Pan Asi" War and then the Southeast ln<l ppe onlyj Barry Goldw formsis public o ned f~ Pakist are fortt inva e Nepalese in 4 ently predicted S ongressman) Men he shouldered his pa 4 -. invasion was proposed days ago by Sen. (now Cp) ohn Stennis. "We must invade Nepal," argued on Face the Press," I er to protect the flanks of in Pakistan whoa eflanks of our boyst boys - protecting thed Vietnam so tha t our boys can con e home sooner." Sen. Stennis was, of course, immediately drafted under the new Volunteer Army Law. The law, sponsored by a coalition of D)oves, sailed through Congress last year. The Doves noted that the Features: 2:45 - 5:00 .- 7:15 .. .' }~ ~~ ~we .t Be N"ring jA ; - 4r. - ftgge Payme in dw cbet. Lrs are or of The those thought-pri artment at questions and he's, chmond. done a lot of things Is he's been here at Carolina. V it Ideas and being done. Workin i as he was Now others are doli -- longer needs to. ms a sham de thei ade ideas a -ews opean War, has progressed isfactorily, Nixon said. ntlally, he continued, the Viet .,Ag will be driven to the Atlantic an. Nixon discounts rumors t American boating interests engaged in trade with the Viet n the local front, the University South Carolina campus was t again, for the 12,387th day. h'omas Jones, in a telephone rview from Jamaica, said he Governor Robert E. McNair is g "a bang-up job" of running institution. It is estimated ther three hundred' Nati(pl ft ad qpos t only far efai Selective ~vice Sy would produce afar m y. 2"A soldier who hi S>1ted out, "will ~jh grea ter enthusias doesn't." 7he logic of both argu Jved overwhelming. The pub r oig uneasy about the morality o, *. ting reluctant young men to told men's wars, supported the *4sure wholeheartedly. hHawks in Congress had p ay against the bill at have had ev odwa ter, KW4fr~ is to employ this disclaimer in their enthusiasm that got them drafted. The Hard hats were ('ailed up when they shouted "Nepalize Nepal!" while clobbhering 501 peace demonstrators with their crowbars. A near crisis resulted when the Vice President attacked the peace $1. JON BCaV" X - 9:30 *Ja *AXI *Ke OVOer over Dveking sermons, he's asked miweys been willing to listen. He's during the years that he has been hen he first came here little was g with students, he started things. ig thoee things and the church no e for both of them to be leaving. r mark here and we doubt that It on. Ours Is more doubtful. We can ersity community seek the ideal ring minds - open to new tioning all. Guardam duated at exercises J r reports they will be ighway Patrolmen, w sa the entrance exami Finally, this the Tricentennial. Only rs after the three h niversary celebration mont Center has been the public. Visiting will to clear days until the r completed. Goodnight, and reme heaviest concentrations of are around Pickens Street, forget to keep those mas [opted;A demonstrators as t purveyors of s pleonasm" for" tools of America en with their heads.' stily explained that e he idn't like pea tors, it 't mean war. y of war ted, proved a result, it rise when the um last month t similar to the U. S. hina and other nations following suit. is has led to the hope in some uarters that these new armies, composed of all human beings who like wars. will meet in some place like Antarctica in one magnificent final battle -- a battle fought to the very last man. Such hopes are expressed only in private, however. Unfortunately, under the new Volunteer Army Law. no one in his right mind would admit publicly to liking a war such as that. (p.vright Chronicle Pueblishing Co.. I970>. WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS Irduding BEST PICTURE. eats 25' Now e Showing The story of a young men trying to make .. . And th, young girls who help himi "HOW TO SUCCEED WITH ETN *- 8V TH *F. Yw inMWdcar IRI. 6 MAW9A677 6 MMPUGH~FOiW "'M*AS sTheAbest 0** -.American*war* A cmey snc --auhe e 00- 3:00-5:00 7:09P WHEN A WOMAN HUNGE RS FOR L.OVE. DYrs E ASY FOR A MAN TO USE HER '~'IUEUIWSMATMECCm SHOWS 1:20-3:15 5:30 -7:05..9 p.m. 4 FEARSOME FOURSOME OPEN 7 p. mA HRR-THON S't..' '__ MASTERPIECES OF