The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 14, 1961, Image 3
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1961
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THREE
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Pinning
l^eremony
1
SWEATERS
Lola lincaa, National Poster Child
of Muscular Dystrophy Associations
of America, Inc., inserts an MDA
pin into the lapel of HEW Secre
tary Abraham Ribicoff. In a whirl
wind pre-campaign visit to
Washington, D.C., the seven-year-
old charmer from St. Louis enlisted
many political notables in tbe
March for Mnacular Dyttrophy,
now under way throughout the
country. -
•-•yv-.v;
“She’s the type that buys a sweater two r ises too small
and hopes it will shrink some.’
bhouid Girl Continue Pursuit?
T
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• \ •,
• •• ‘ '•
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X WRoxe HIM,
but dipnV
RECEIVE /vim
THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I was
dating this boy for two or three
weeks. I couldn’t decide whether
or not I liked him. So I went away
fcr a while. He didn’t want me
to go. While I was away, 1 realized
that I liked him very much, and
missed him. So I wrote to him,
but didn’t receive an answer. I
telephoned him, and he sounded
very glad to hear from me, even
said he was going to come down—
but he didn’t get a chance. I know
now how much I like him. Please
tell me should I keep trying or \
should I forget about him?”
OUR REPLY: If this boy likes
you, you will hear from him again.
Perhaps he had a good reason for
not being able to come to see you.
Be patient. Give him time to get
in touch with you.
When you ask if you should
“keep trying,” do you refer to
your telephone calls and letters?
If so, we say, “take it easy.” Most
boys don't like to be chased. They
may think it flattering when a
girl keeps telephoning and send
ing letters and notes. But. if they
don’t reply to the notes, and never
telephone, they might just be
laughing up their sleeve—and the
girl is just wasting her time.
It is perfectly all right for a girl
to call a boy if she has a specific
reason for doing so. If she wants
to invite him to be her “guest”
or “date” at a sorority party or
club social, this is fine. Except
for a special affair, however, the
girl shouldn’t “chase.”
It is not necessary for the aver
age girl to chase boys. If she has
a good personality; if she keeps
busy with studies, hobbies, sports,
church and school activities, she
is certain to be popular with both
boys and girls.
One reason so many girls have
“boy trouble” is that they worry
too much about boys, parties,
dates, etc. They seem to ignore
the fact that the most popular
girls in school are usually not only
top students, but also most active
in clubs and groups.
If yon have a teenay• problem yoa
want to dlsenoo, or an oboorvntlon to
make, address your letter to FOB
AND ABOUT TEENAGERS, NATION
AL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERV
ICE. FRANKFORT. KY.
That Men Appreciate
LADY MANHATTAN SHIRTS
MANHATTAN SHIRTS
INTERWOVEN SOCKS
STETSON HATS
SPORT SHIRTS
GRIFFON SUITS
PAJAMAS
LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS *
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... and many other Gifts for the Yuletide giving.
WE GIFT WRAP AND DELIVER
otf jammer
THE MAN’S SHOP
Jfnc.
3Se
OUTDOORS
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TIT HEN IS A boy did enough to
^ ^ start hunting? This writer,
under pressure from a nine-year-
old son who thinks he is ready
doesn’t have the answer.
A boy is old enough to go fish
ing when he is strong enough to
hold a small cana pole. Hunting
is quite another story.
This is not to say that fishing
doesn’t have danger possibili
ties. A small boy should be taken
to shallow creeks, lakes with open,
level banks, and kept constantly
in tow.
But, let’s not kid uurselves
Bunting IS dangerous. And, it is
equally dangerous for adults. The
careless adult can kill yon with
s shotgun or a rifle just as quickly
ss the uninstructed youngster.
The. wise thing to do is to edu
cate a youngster in the use and
handling of firearms before al
lowing him to go hunting. Nine
years of age is still a bit young
It won’t hurt a lad to wait a while
longer.
When he becomes old enough
start a boy out with an air rifle
Teach him how to use it properly;
how to carry it in the field; and
never to point, accidentally or ox
purpose, the end of the rifle at
ANYBODY or ANYTHING—ex
cept at a chosen target.
As the lad becomes older—anc
more safety-conscious—graduate
him to a .410 gauge shotgun.
Many parents believe a .22 cah
ber rifle to be the ideal gun foi
a beginner. The .22 has definite
advantages. It is ideal for smal
game. It is light in weight. Ammu
nition is not too expensive. But
the .22 has long-range power anc
should be handled carefully It n
far from being a toy
(ANDP.EA, HE’S /V 1
' PREAvAA J
T MET HIM AT
THE PARTY LAST
NIGHT, r-m—
A W\a.
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“ii
WE HAVE SO MUCH'
IN COMMON HE'S
A WRITER.
Tom—.
J L ' I
.AND OP COURSE.
X READ.
AMERICANA College Notebook
Kent State University
THE HANDY FAMILY
WE NEED A DESK AT
OUR CLUB HOUSE,
CVLD, BUT WE CAN'T
SPEND MUCH MONEY
ILL SHOW
VOU HOW
TO MAKE AN
INEXPENSIVE
DESK IN A
JIFFY, JUNIOR
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HEADLESS MONSTERS? . Actually, these are only
on the way to school, with raincoats raised dyer their
keep off the rain. Scene; Paragould, Ark. •
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Kent State University at Kent, Ohio, was founded May 19, 1910 by
an act of the Ohio General Assembly as a two-year teacher training
school. In 1929 Kent was r uthorized to establish a liberal arts cur
riculum, grant both bachelor’s and master’s degrees and change its
name from Kent State Normal School to Kent State College. By 1935
a bill was passed by the Ohio legislature elevating the college to
the rank of university.
dads QUICK-MADE DESK
DOOR WITH MAHOOaNY
VENEER,WITHOUT HOLES FOR
LATCH ,
^ SAND, SHELLAC
f AND WAX
TWO-
DRAWER
F1LINO
CABINETS
The University is governed by a
seven-man Board of Trustees: one
appointed each year for a term
of seven years by the governor of
Ohio with the consent of the
senate.
Under John E. McGilvrey, first
president of the University, Kent
became a pioneer in the develop
ment of extension education and
health and physical education.
When the first classes were held
on the campus, 47 students an
swered to roll call. This fall, more
than 8,200 full-time campus stu
dents answered roll call, making
Kent the second largest institution
of higher learning in Ohio.
The University is composed of
five divisions—the Colleges of
Arts and Sciences, Business Ad
ministration, Fine and Profes
sional Arts, Education, and a
Graduate School.
They offer courses in a wide
variety of fields leading to two-
year teaching certificates and
bachelor, master and doctoral
degrees.
From its limited beginnings
more than 50 years ago, when it
had two buildings on an 85-acre
campus, Kent has grown to in
clude today 34 major buildings on
a 475-acre campus. In addition,
the University owns a 200-acre
airport.
It provides 25 music practice
rooms, 15 teaching studios, a 500-
seat auditorium, a 350-seat recital
hall, facilities for a 1,000 watt FM
radio station and a closed-circuil
television system and equipment
for speech and hearing therapy.
Scheduled to be completed this
fall are two residence halls hous
ing 750 men. Within two years,
halls housing 1,500 single students,
plus 100 married couples, are ex
pected to be completed.
The Golden Flashes of Kent
State University, a member of the
Mid-Arnerican Conference, en
gage in 9 intercollegiate sports-
football. basketball, baseball,
wrestling, swimming, tennis, cross
country, track and golf.
Syracuse University was estal
in 1870 as a coeducational
institution by the Methodist Episcopal Church, with financial help
from the city of Syracuse. It began as a privately-endowed liberal
arts college.
The University grew out of Genesee College, in Lima, New York,
which had been operating for twenty years. Dissatisfaction with the
location prompted the move to Syracuse.
Classes began September 4,
1871, in a downtown office build
ing. The move to the present
campus was made in 1873, and
the first structure was the Hall
of Languages, still the home of
the College of Liberal Arts.
Today, Syracuse is made up of
eighteen degree-granting schools
and colleges, including the State
University College of Forestry at
Syracuse University. Syracuse
has become ' an internationally
known education center with phys
ical assets valued at more than
S70 million. *
Undergraduate enroUment is
approximately 8000. The expand
ing graduate and adult-education
programs bring the overall enroll
ment to nearly 18,000. The Gradu
ate School has grown from less
than 500 before World War II to
more than 5000 students.
The adult-education division.
University College, offers aca
demic programs in its downtown
Syracuse headquarters, in cities
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and towns throughout New York
State at Luke Chautauqua in the
summer, and in three University-
owned Adirondack Mountain cen
ters.
Fifty miles east of Syracuse is
the Utica College branch of Syra
cuse University, founded as a
libera) arts college in 1946. Syra
cuse’s main campus now includes
1640 acres, in addition to 108 acres
at Utica, and 34,000 acres of forest
preserve. Syracuse also fourr ad
Triple Cities College after ” Id
War II in Endicott. Since that
time, the college has been sold
to the State of New York, and is
now Harpur College, the liberal
arts campus for the State Uni
versity of New York.
Besides offering courses m lib
eral arts and the humanities,
Syracuse offers programs in art,
architecture, business administra
tion, engineering, forestry, home
economics, music, nursing, speech
and dramatic art. education, and
journalism.
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Some new cars leave you hazy
about which is which?
Yon don’t have to look twice to tell
a Wide-Track Pontiac!
SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER
KIRK PONTIAC - CADILLAC COMPANY
2100 NANCE ST. NEWBERRY, S. C.
WIOC - TRACK PONTIAC
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