The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 08, 1971, Page Page 4, Image 4

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whOre be fqsm i" the Traffic and Tran tie '0nter, Roberts Just fron two-e* study traffic systems in Pitt .e*rgb, Pa., Montreal, and five *masn cities - Lendon, Paris, Wu V barg and Stockholm. I-mon he rode on the Vic U Maanfl, an automatic subway Whi has no driver but Is guided by a computer center. South of Paris, Roberts watched test drives of a 70-foot vehicle that ides on a cushion of air between it and Its track. Besides seeing this "Progress in action," Roberts said he and 29 other American engineers at tended classes in each city con ducted by local transportation agencies. The study-tour was part of an institute for transportation agencies. The study-tour was part of an institute for professionals in urban transportation sponsored by Carnegie-Mellon University* in cooperation with the U. S. Department of Transportation. The institute began in Pitt sburgh, location of Carnegie Mellon, with lectures and discussions. They also observed Pittsburgh's system of using certain roads only for buses, preventing the buses from being slowed by congested traffic. The group observed Hamburg's canal through downtown which uses ferries as part of the city's transportation system, and in Stockholm they studied the two basic underground lines con necting the 15 islands which make up the Swedish city. Educath called fs z-,jsekg or, Ap elsetive for the spring semester? One student calls Education 565,' Survey of Rehabilitative Pofessions, "a wonderful change ftom the regular routine." The three-hour course meets twice a week. But one meeting takes place at an agency in the -Columbia area that serves the handicapped or disadvantaged. ' The class studies the skills used and services rendered by each agency. "lt's a fascinating course,'' Chris Thorngate, a senior psychology major, said. "One week we watched physical therapists working with children at the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center. An her time we saw classes in p~oress at the John G. *Richards School for Boys, a correctopi Institute." To sti y the Commission for the J.lind, iss Thorngate siad that the class ~served blind children learning to read braille, to walk with a cane and to make change. "We toured the Sheltered Workshop where the handicapped work to repair drink-bottle crates," another student in the class said. "The workshop ison the corner of Green and Laurens, just a rtme block from Don's, but most of us had never noticed It." The purpose of the course, ac cording to instructor Philip Mc South Carolina's L % to Selei 4--7 fwo Day 9: svh Day 12: Nhd Day11 $evenh Day12 4: Committe Twenty students have been elected recently to a student consultation committee for the foreign language department. Dr. David Speer, of the foreign language department, said the students will serve as a consulting body to the faculty. They will give us input as to their attitudes, feelings, and reactions to courses and various things in the depart ment. We will be able to reshape the department," he said. Two students will sit-in and vote with the faculty on problems concerning courses at the 101-202 level. The Ad vanced Understudies Com mittee, concerned with courses above the 300 level, will also seat two students. "We developed this com mittee to get some dialogue between the faculty and students - a means of com munication. By and large, the faculty is very much in favor of this idea. Both of these com )n course tscinatng Carty, is to introduce un dergraduates to the rehabilitative professions. He said other on location studies this semester included one institute for the mentally retarded and another for the emotionally disturbed. F"or their second class each week the students held discussions and hear lectures on the different agencies. They also hand in reports on the places visited. "Students have to get something out of this course," Don Chur chwell, a senior in the class, said. "You are either stimulated or turned off. And if you hate everything that you are exposed to, that is a value too because you have learned not to go into rehabilitative work." "Also you might find out that you are the type who would become too Involved personally if you worked with the handicapped," Chur chwell said. McCarty initiated the course at Carolina with a grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. He said that the federal government Is sponsoring about 15 similar programs for undergraduates across the country in an attempt to meet the shortage of personnel in rehabilitative jobs. McCarty said that the course Is open to students In any field and is especially good for those who have not yet formed their vocational goals. I' irgest Inventory of Bell' . Reduction :ted Merchar uicard & Mastercharge 1O AM.-7 PM Mon de (I Elsd sod CapUmi NA AMINAON SCHDUL 0AM. MWF 8 TTh 30 TM 11:40 TThi 6:30 TTk -35 MWF All $ctions o Os MWV All $ections o All Sections o 10 MWF All $ections o 5I MWF All $ections 20 MWF 3:30 T 25 MWF 2:30 MWF 30 1Th 2:00 TTh :40 MWF 5:00 TTh e seats sti mittees requested students on their committees," Speer said. The students were elected by fellow students and represent all levels and languages on the undergraduate level. A chairman pro-tempore has been elected until permanent elections at the beginning of the semester. "I think the committee has great potential and will do a lot of good work. The point of the committee is to get student Rose: By MARGARET SWENDSEID Staff Writer Flames on his cheeks, lavish mellow poses flashing to proprietous arched brows: Leonard Rose could have played his face. He chose a cello (C. 1662 Amati). For the most part his concert was technically rich and vibrant. His bow hand attacked, drawing beasts of double. stops and loops punctuated by easy holds, forcing a -leverage to open his excitement. His Teft hand was more tense, sometimes escaping the vibrato or pitch. The underlying tone of the performance, however, was too deliberate and anxious. His treatment of Fran coeur's Sonata in E ma jor missed a gaiety and lightness; Bach's Sonata in C Major lacked a contrast in depths. Brahms' Sonata in F major, Op. 99 and Debussy's Sonata, though accurate, did not allow one to close his eyes and flow. Perhaps part of the edged intensity sIfted through Staff for sale call 8178 s and Body Shirts s On idise - Sat maa47 :f P.M. English 101 and 102 r eotogy 101 (Fail Sem.) fozin L.anLe ,102 101 an 102 idents Ideas and on how to improv the culrrculum," said memb4 Susan Prescott. Members of the commlttq are: Susan Hayes, WaItc Salley, Claudia Zaachry, Susa Prescott, John Edwards, L Cooney, James Eckstron Alfred Vang, Eileen Friersoi John Shupper, Rene Ferre Barbara Young, Jo Ann Blackmon, Joslyn Tuckei Brian Boger, J. Hoffman, Jir Fougerousse, John Fernande; Claudia Hunger and Mik O'Connor. oncert revie 'rich, v: Cellist Rose ~DUTCH SQUARM Open 9:30-10 thru Dec. 'NMon.-Sat. The South's a Greatest Post 70-S Thes, Thurs.-F ri.-E 1. Carpenters List Price 2. Led Zeppelizi List Price 3. Chicago List Price 4. Abbey Road List Price 5. Santana Abr List Price I Module 'The Office of the Governor of South Carolina has announced a five-day exhibition of the al Columbia, command module frvm p the first manned moon landing. al The Columbia arrived Wed- U nesday afternoon and was set up on the grounds of the State House t immediately north of the main M entrance. Preparations for a] exhibition were carried out by to NASA crewmen with the aid of c( state workers. This morning at 9:30, the official ribbon cutting was held. It was pi preceded by a press preview. The in e Governor presided at the Of ceremony and the exhibit was m opened to the public. A The exhibition will be open every n day at 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. through te n the 12th of January. z Arrangements for group tours 0 can be made through the Office of M the Governor by calling Tour M * Director James Carby at the - Downtowner Motel. cc Also on display will be a bample of moon rock brought back by the a e astronauts. a SM F] be Ur brant' ofl in from the pianist ac- 9 companist, Samuel San ders, who, though eager, se was often too mechanical. of sc After finishing the an Debussy sonata, Rose soft- to spokenly explained the e piece as Debussy's ex pressions of a drunk sailor m( making love to his ini girlfriend, marked by the M pizzicato or plucking sounds on the strings. pa Hi Rose's spirit and langour (B came through in Chopin's P1 Polonaise brillante, Op. 3, Co and his Nocturne, much 13, more loose and fluid than Ha the other works. His reputation as a master :4 cellist managed to fill p4 Drayton Hall almost to capacity, which is certainly Ha unusual for classical music Mi at this University. on Rose has recorded Ko Dvorak's Cello Concerto and the Tchaikovsky cor, "Rococo Variations" with sell Ormandy and ' the on Philadelphia Orchestra, Art ''Romantic Music for Hir 'Cello''' collection, and "The Complete Trios of Brahms" by Stern, istomin Th and Leonard Rose, on are Columbia Records. off ~argest and Most Co Hits of 1970 ale e Great Hits of 1 >at. 6. 4.98 SALE s3.29 III 7. 5*.8 SALE '3.99 6.98 SALE 499 ayas 5.98 SALE 83.990i inNews briefs set for ex] MALE GLEE A new performing musical group USC, the Male Glee Club, will t esent its first concert tomorrow U 8 p.m. in McMaster Hall on the i SC campus. 84 Dr. Wesley McCoy, conductor of hJ e group, said the Glee , Club's embership includes singers who i so can play various instruments v provide combinations of ac- fr impaniments for the singing U 'oup. Its initial concert, to which the d iblic is invited at no charge, will di clude the South Carolina premier D a patriotic work for brass and Ir ale chorus titled "I Hear nerica 'Singing" by James e thel of Jefferson City, Tenn. h Two works by another con- 0 mporary composer, Randall a iompson, "The Pasture" and t itopping By Woods on a Snowy vening," using familiar texts by a )bert Frost, also are scheduled. y cCoy calls the two songs A ..among the most' beautiful ci impositions for male voices S 'itten this century." Also on the program are sg rangements of "A Psalm For L day," "Do You Know the Way to M in Jose," "Waters Ripple and th ow" and "Linstead Market." C CHAPTER APPROVED at A chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, W ktional Music Honor Society, has en approved for USC and will be ' "icially installed tomorrow. Dr. William Weichlein of the C iversity of Michigan, national W esident of the organization, will at Icially issue the charter to USC W ceremonies at McMaster Hall at 1.m. %4embership in Pi Kappa re mbda recognizes students for I iolarly achievement in the field a music. Its purpose is to foster se iolarly interest in theoretical d historical phases of music and Is stimulete achievement in re rformance, composition, music st ication and research. st 'ixteen USC students, faculty da embers and alumni will be its tiated Saturday, Prof. Wesley L. M :Coy is prisident of the group. d PANISH DELIVERS dC 3r. Ted M. Panish will deliver a per entitled "Existential or ch rmeneutic Phenomenology? ch y Way of the Body)" at the at iilosophy Department's thi lloquium Wednesday, January ha at 4:00 p.m. in Room 101 milton College. "l lefreshments will be served at tho i5 and discussion will follow the th !sentation of the paper. fre TiE PRICE ON SALE r'he Columbia Chapter of to Ldassah will present Arthur ne Iler's newest play, 'The Price,' fi' January 23 and 24. Frank Harris ge I direct a veteran cast of Lou do plan, Ruth Gottlieb Moore, Tom bin and Johnny De Hart. ['his drama of two brothers who me together aftEer many years to of their parents' property opened cli Broadway in 1968 and starr1ed ad hur Kennedy, Kate Reid, Pat gle and Harold Gary. ne Jurtain time for this play will be no .0 p.m. The drama will be do rformed at Fort Jackson's eatre Four; tickets are $2.50 and thi available at the theatre box co Ice. ap plete Record and ' 970 at Sale Pi Open Cosmo's Factory List Price p4.gg Joe CockerMad ] List Price skg,gg Crosby, Stills, Na List Price 5,93 Sweet Baby Jams D2ist Price p4.98 L WOODSTOi kibition I LARD TO LEAVE Dr. Francis A. Lord, director of le Lancaster Regional Campu of SC will be on administrative ave-of-absence during.the spring Nnester to be visiting professor of story at the USC main campus. Dr. Lord, who will teach courses Civil War history, is the first siting professor at USC to come om one of its regional campuses, niversity officials say. Mack Samples, assistant rector at USC-L, will be acting rector during Lord's absence. r, Lord will return to Lancaster the summer. A native of Los Angeles, Lord Arned his academic degrees in istory, the B. S. at the University Massachusetts and the M. A. rid Ph. D. at the University of lichigan. Before accepting the Lancaster spointment in 1965, he spent 14 ears with the Central Intelligence gency- as a research analyst mcerned with science in the wiet Union. A noted author and scholar ecializing in the Civil War, Dr. )rd is a fellow of the Society of ilitary Historians, an advisor to e national headquarters of the vil War Centennial Commission, id a consulting editor of "Civil 'ar Times." He has written four major works i the Civil War: '"Ihey Fought Dr the Union," "Civil War llector's Encyclopedia," "Civil ar Bands and Drummer Boys" id "Civil War Sutlers and Their ares." G RASS IN THE BL)OD Marijuana has been found to main in the bloodstream for ore than three days, according to report by a group of government lentists. The report, published in a recent iue of Science Magazine by searchers of the National In tute of Mental Health, further ited that it takes more than eight ys for the human body to rid elf of all the chemical traces of arijuana. 'he scientists concluded that pe and its chemical byproducts iccumulate in tissues with ronic administration"--is used ronically. This is not to say such affect is necessarily harmful to a user. It merely means it ppens. 'his fact of "accumulation" ly provide one explanation for a unusual "reverse tolera at marijuana produces in quent users, the scientists said. 'hat is, instead of developing a erance to marijuana and eding more of it to get high, quent smokers report they can stoned on increasingly small ses. Arthur S. West of the University rice of admissions was recently osen student selective service visor. "I was chosen because they eded someone on campus who rmally deals with students. I .West said. Nest's office is to be located In East Campus Center where anseling will be available by pointment from 8:45 to 5:00 p.m. O pen 9:30-10) . thru Dec. ~gi~ r'ape Stores rices 10:00-9:30 SALE s3.29 )og SALE :7.25 sh, & Young SALE s3.99 SALE 3.2on