The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 21, 1977, Page Page 11A, Image 13
Photography by
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Bob Griffin I
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A rare moment at CSC, when
students actually group
together and enjoy traditional
college feelings often lost on a
big city campus such as DSC,
occurred last Friday at an art
exhibition sponsored by the Art
Dennrtment.
Students iooked on as
classmates and strangers
dipped bare arms into an oil
drum filled with porcelan
"i;ook." The almost solid
mixture that was often compared
to warm puddin' was
washed off the arms of many
students that afternoon, after a
failure at finding a piece of
cellophane with the black dot on
it: the one that would justify the
$2.00 prize.
A helium sculpture was
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over again. The wind ripped it
up and down its area. The holly
hushes, lining the ramp extending
over Pickens Street
where the exhibition was held,
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aluminum foil many times . . .
almost. Only because of concerted
efforts on part of the
anxious and excited students
was the structure raised, semisuccessfully.
In general, it was a beautiful
afternoon, the sun shone
brightly, but not enough to melt
the icing on one student's cake
sculpture project. The
collegiate atmosphere loo often
absent from USC's campus was
welcomed by the faculty
members enjoying the show,
even more so by students just
passing by on their end of the
week trip to the HA Building for
that last class.
The Art Department certainly
added a nice touch to the end of
a long fall semester. Kven if
nobody ever did redeem the
cellophane with the black dot on
it, nobody cared. Besides, that
would have !>een too iner
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