University of South Carolina Libraries
Open Do seminar < By AMY SPIEGEL Gamecock Staff Write? ^What started as an ordina became an ordeal that change* Because she feels no one sh< has organized a seminar on ra 315. Russell House. The semin ana myths about rape. "The g awareness which will result in Rape victims will speak of 1 will be staaed to show how Nationally, only 10 per cent o! police sergeant. He said that c Carolina, 41 were cleared. "The victims feel guilty bec< questions and false accusatioi side," Maupin said. According to a pamphlet pr rape victims, one of myths r enjoy being raped. The pamp enjoy being assaulted and f< someone to whom she is not possibility of injury or even d< such a humiliating fabhion, i Another myth is that a ra] victim by change. In halt.tfre < Hon Charles, ^n instructor explain how to prevent and hoRapes double at night, and rapes can happen to groups Gi he said. The seminar will be open to i ll .1- 1 it mrougnoui me university m< Maupin said she believes ot! the seminar will help those ' feelings by finding they are College of Jouma Journalist m II& ^SRNK1' p < mm BSTai ^ ~ ^ ^ ^9? >^:' ^ "-V* v ^ ?V? j\*Lf-\-$31 i, 'mHU>r or offers on rape ry day for Jennie Maupin last Ji d her life: she was raped. mid have to go through what she di ipe to be held Feb. 8 at 7:30 p.m. in ar will deal with prevention, self-d< ;oal of this seminar is to create a g< less rape," she said. the trauma of rape* and a demonst it feels to be nuestinnpH aftpr the f rapes are reported, according to ? >ut of 81 reported cases last year in a use the police interrogate them wit is and they keep what has happer epared by the N.C. Memorial Hospi nost widely held by men is that v hlet said, "The idea that a woman orced into a highly emotional ac even attracted, that she could enj eath, that she could enjoy being tre* s absurd." pist is usually a stranger who pic zases, rapist and victim knew each : ? At ? m ^ in uie uenunuhig education i)i visit iv to defend oneself if attacked. * traveling in groups is no real dete f people as we!! as to girl? who are men because a general awareness c ly lessen its occurrence. tier victims share her fears and guil who have been raped to deal with not alone. lism's Mark Ethridgc changes proi ^SBKktL/ ^ ?& *-.. tW^ia. i -'fe. *1 *Mj 3hhH??^! :'r "^1 ?? a miii mi iiiiiiii i ily 28 d, she room efense eneral ration s fact. i local South hugly _ led intal for vomen Busy pair could As restoration on the in College of Social Work continues, John Duffy (foreground), vice ks his president of Campus other. and Continuing >n will Education and Paul Stanton, Coastal rrent: Carolina's dean of alone. academic affairs stroll by oblivious of the if rape activity. It, and i their : Jr. fession after 1< By JIM PHILLIPS Gamecock Staff Writer After more than 30 y Iproiession, two Pulitzer Pr achievements, Mark Ethri teach journalism. Raised in Georgia, Ethr nalistic background. His fa was publisher of the Louis' of the nation's outstandi; mother, Willie Snow Ethrid] I man i& dooks ana essays i Ethridge attended Prino jnajored in history. "I was journalism," he said, "I Princeton had an outstand AFTER GRADUATION, I One,was from the Washing the Winston-Salem Journal Ethridge stayed at the P because, "I realized tto obituaries for two years, s Winston-Salem paper." He copy editor for the Journa "I would recommend a ! Journal to anybody who wj nalism was all about. You than if you started out for a While at the Journal, E received a fellowship to w London for a year. a a rm?a it* *\ m. m w m r m m mm Ii*ir, uailv m/iiL was real sensational news of th< similar to the penny press, was sort of a New York E "The Daily Mail tried to higher class than that, but would lose anybody. We d instance, but we would m L&Wt mcWrigU ?H?nMMiBBiliii II - ^ Vr ' JrieSl Atjl I \ >BBra i^ ,m *.tfrflRI I ong, illustriou Englan tremenck newspapx ears in the newspaper and occa izes and numerous other "We h dge Jr. came to USC to reporters and cut; idge comes from a jourither, Mark Ethridge Sr., WIIILt ville Courier-Journal, one copy desl ng newspapers and his and pack ge, is an author with more into abou to her credit. "I was tiun Liinvti oujf wncic iic space. ' torn between history and else on tl chose history because said. "Ar ing history department." theopinic story or d he received two job offers. I was los jton Post, the other from first. Yoi I. He chose the Post. those re<j ost for only three months When I it I would be writing went bad _ V A A. _ u i weni 10 worn ior me reporter worked as a reporter and While i 1. looking f( small newspaper like the anted to learn what jour- ETHRI can learn so much more awarded rarge paper," he said. editorial Hhridge applied for and Lx>ng IsU ork for the Daily Mail in "Thea^ public sei that pack s the official paper to the had a goo *. world," he said. "It was that my t nn Ii iio/v/1 W#* am11a#1 'A A ao iv u3cu iu uc u?ncu. 11 wriier of >aily News. He staj i think of itself as a little by the ovl ; not so high class that it paper. H< lid cover Parliament, for bought tY uch rather have a story in West \ rr yr" ; if K ' ' ' g|yi RH**YMydE|AafrW(*?4^j|^5^Q^^MBv Arlene Morgan THE GAMECOCK ls career d at that time was experiencing a his paper shortage and the average jr on weekdays only ran about four .pages sinnallv siv RthriHcrp cniH ad only about four pages and about 40 he said, "so everything was cut and cut there wasn't an extra word in the paper." : WORKING as the youngest person on the k, he was given the short stories to rewrite age under a news briefs column which fit 111 inches of space in the paper. ; snnnnspH tn opt ift nr on itomc ;? WM|r|rww^?? p-WV AW VI awina 111 Uldl When the first edition came out, everybody le desk got a shot at editing my copy," he lybody who could take a word out which in >n of the copy desk chief either improved the lid not hurt the story won six pence from me. ing two and three shillings a night there at li learned and you learned quickly to get lundancies out of there!" Cthridge returned from England in 1951 he k to the Post for one year, working first as a and later as assistant city editor. at the Post he learned that Newsday was >r an editorial writer and got the job. BGE WAS involved in a Pulitzer Prize to Newsday in 1954 for its major news and campaign against labor racketeering on ?nd, N Y. ward was to the whole paper for meritorious rvice. I wrote nil (hp wHtftrioio *k??* * :-a VIIdL WCIIl UllO age," he said. "The news department also d deal of input. It was a team effort. It's just earn was small since I was the only editorial t the paper." fed at Newsday for three years until asked mer of the Raleigh Times to be editor of the e stayed at Raleigh for a few years until he le Ravens wood Times, a weekly newspaper ftrgijiia, where he was managing editor for Jm . ^ * fee EimntSfe, ** 5