University of South Carolina Libraries
use holds service for Kennedy By JOHN MILLS III Staff writer About 150 people assembled in Rutledge Chapel on the Horseshoe Tuesday, Nov. 22 to honor President John F. Kennedy on the 25th anniversary of his death. U.S. Representative Elizabeth Patterson, D-S.C., of the fourth district, was the guest speaker at the service. "We are commemorating the death of a great man. But we are also celebrating his life, for it was his life and what he did with it that make him so memorable to us all today," Patterson said. Kennedy, who founded the Peace Corps in 1961, wanted people to give something to their country, Patterson said. She spoke about his famous statement. "'Ask not what your country can do for you, but rather what you can do for your country.' He created an atmosphere in this country that has yet to be duplicated. He gave new and higher meaning to public service. He made people want to contribute to the greater cause of their country," Patterson said. Kennedy made all Americans, but mostly the young, more patriotic, she said. "I was one of those young people. We as a generation were motivated by him. But he moved not only the younger generations. He moved the entire country to a new level of patriotism," Patterson said. She said Kennedy had the charisma and sharp wit that make a president a good man. Kennedy once said he wanted only to be remembered as being a good and decent man, said Patterson. "If John Kennedy can say one thing to those he left behind, I believe he would tell us not to mourn his death but to keep his legacy alive," she said. Patterson quoted John Gardener, who said Keep hope alive." Kennedy did just that, she said. The hour-long service included hymns by the Crayton Middle School Chorus, prayers by Father Jerome Vereb and readings from Kennedy's speeches by people associated with the Peace Corps. WUSC-FI* ?aain ?? I ATTENTION BS CLASS OF 198 The Air Force has a special progra 1989 BSNs. 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Liz Patterson, D-S.C., speaks Friday during a ceremony commemorating the 25th an of John F. Kennedy. I AWESOME ALTERNATIVE 90.5 ite Boards. jriences ^ ^ ^(D E19 j & Whole A ?ded to see rogram for r s. Inc. '.Suite 105 2009 GREEI 29204 FAST-F 57 DELIVi ???LIMITED DELIVi MON.-THURS. 4 PI S - FRI.-SAT. 11 AM - 2 AM SI . help you ^Copies ent ID card. * J ANY 12' FS PIZZA ?, $1?0 0, ^ j One Coupon Per Offer Exf AONi'fi 252 Siin^i _ sift Orgaifiz Dcjdlinc for anno fez HI HF 4^-- * . - ' TEDDY LEPP/The Gamecock in the USC Rutledge Chapel iniversary 01 ine assassination Unite Like Horse Like To Ride H BROAD Rl FARM English or Wi saddle hor: for hire or li Scenic trails, minutes from Call us today fi information 786-97 I Fku I k 252-1231 ) / ^ ST. Che. REE One Each ERY * Delu ERY AREAS (Pepf VI TO 1 AM SuPe UN. 11 AM - 1 AM I Coca-Cola? in 12 oz. cans 50$ (tax included). V J? "1 r ANY ONE ITEA $4.9! >ires 12/31/88 One Coupon Per Off* 1231 .ftQNifc 2 atioij )rnamenl is Thursday, December i at The Uni\ McKissick honors JFK By DAVID L. EATON Staff writer John Fitzgerald Kennedy is remembered at the McKissick Museum Broadcasting and Communication Archives. "We here at Mckissick are going to show the com mercial production 'Four Days in November.' The film deals with the days immediately preceding the Kennedy assassination, ending with the funeral," assistant archivist Mel Jenkins said. "We also have assembled a photo display of Kennedy when he was on the campaign trail and when he was here at USC for the 1957 commencement exercises." Kennedy was the keynote speaker at the 1957 commencement exercises. The event was covered by WISTV and local radio stations, although it appears as though there is no audio or visual evidence remaining, Jenkins said. Although the formal program the museum organized ended on Tuesday, Nov. 22, all the materials that the broadcast archives have accumulated will be the permanant property of USC and the McKissick Museum, Jenkins said. "We have made use of all the facilities which USC has to offer, including the South Caroliniana Library, the USC Archives, the Cooper Library, and we have also received substantial support from the Kennedy Library in Massachusetts," he said. "USC now has a Kennedy file, and we will continue to add to it. All the information we had on Kennedy was in various places around campus. Now it is unified into one area," assistant archivist in the USC archives Mark Smith said. Area commercial broadcasters are becoming more interested in the Broadcast and Communication Archives because of the recent research USC has done involving Kennedy, Jenkins said. The prime goal of the Broadcast and Communication Archives is locating lost radio and television programs made here in South Carolina or those that are about South Carolina, Jenkins said. "We find many things by accident. Somebody may have something (recording of news broadcast or radio show) and not realize that it's important," he said. JN (jr rhg rgi AidlantK ^e sPea^er 'n the picture on pag< Nov. 21 was incorrectly identified a torney I. S. Leevy Johnson, who ???? desegregate the USC Law School in The Gamecock regrets these error; p 71 |-*3S lorses? 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He compared the use of toy guns in certain circumstances to someone yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. "I think anyone 17, 18 or 19 years 1 ?1 J t uiu kiiows wny mat s uangerous ana illegal," he said. USC officials have tried to limit the use of toy guns on campus to reduce the chance for accidental shootings. "We've had a number of requests from students who want to raise money playing Gotcha," said Dennis Baker, assistant vice president for Law Enforcement and Safety. 'Gotcha' is a game that involves the use of guns that shoot paint pellets. "We've had requests for it, but we've done everything we could to discourage it," Baker said. He added that requests to start a campus "assassins" club, which entails members "hunting" one another with plastic dart guns, have similarly been discouraged. "I think you get into a very fine line when you try to control behavior and try to label it (as dangerous)," he said. "I don't think anyone is out there wanting to take fun away from people, but when you start talking about weapons and weapon-lookalikes, that may instill fear, and you may cross over that line." Some USC students crossed that line Oct. 31, according to an internal memo from Crotty to Dennis Pruitt, vice president of Student Affairs. At about 10:45 p.m. Halloween, a student walking between Snowden and Douglas dorms was shot in the neck with a pellet from an air rifle. Three students admitted to the shooting after first claiming they didn't know who did it and that the rifle had been stolen. WiMMM < MM? ?81 i i two of The Gamecock on Monday, s James Solomon. He is actually atwas one of the students to help 1973. >. } Salop ^ 10 Wolff Tanning Beds G SPECIALS * [TED FOR $40.00 IMITED FOR $89.00 NT NECESSARY* Plenty of Parking Both Locations 3461 root PIq-to Woct rnliimhin 1077 I i. 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