Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne

The Index-Journal du lieu suivant : Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

Publication:
The Index-Journali
Lieu:
Greenwood, South Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
4
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

:1 ft Sight And Sound 4 Index-Journol, Greenwood, S. Nov. 18, 1967 Editor's Viewpoint S.C. Bank Debits Up In October A Good Harvest Of Entertainment 'Mayhem At High Noon1 i 1 --i COLUMBIA (AP) -Bank debits in 'all of South Carolina's major reporting business ijEy ED'CHAFFIN centers increased during Octo ber, compared with the same Everybody has his favprite story of the Carolina-Clemson game. One of mine involves J.

Rion McKis-slck, dean of the School of Journalism when I was at Carolina, and later president of the University, It occurred during month last year. The volume of debits mostly checking account business is an indicator of business activity. The Federal Reserve Bank says debits in the Columbia standard metropolitan statisti cal area increased 22 per cent, from 1513,520,000 to $628,115,000. Debits in the Charleston SMSA rose 19 per cent, from $282,010,000 to 272,058.000. Greenville SMSA debits gained nine per cent, from $387,005,000 game.

He sai on the Clemson side of the field for the first half and when he marched over to the Carolina side for the second half, a fight swirled around him on the field. The man just a heart beat away from the President's office came through unscathed, but it was a touchy moment. He saw little of the game In any event, as the book tells it. He had a box seat near the ground. "Finally he joined the throng, and at times was down on his hands and knees in front of the Carolina bench looking through a forest of legs at what was going on." There has been high drama In the game, played at "high noon" for many years.

The game was played at the old wood-en bowl in the Fair Grounds during my student days. I had the good fortune to enter Carolina as a freshman with the fabulous Earl Clary and the other standouts of the team that held Clemson scoreless for 1931. 1932 and 1933, the latter contest being the final one played in the old bowl. The freshman game was played the day before, and it attracted about as much attention as the varsity game. FRESHMEN were assigned duties of to J420.753.000.

Among the reporting centers which are not a part of a stand ard metropolitan statistical area, Spartanburg debits climbed 12 per cent, from IF YOU REMEMBER the great Beechnut ads, you'll recall the work of Fred Mogubgub, avant-garde film ere etor. Life is not always sweet for Fred, who lost the battle of Queens. 393,000 to $164,951,000. Ander son's bank debits rose 11 per cent, from 159,135,000 to 521,000. Coo Movie Sfory Debits In Orangeburg when By MARGARET WATSON FAMILY GATHERINGS, feasting and football occupy prime time for Thanksgiving week, but there Is also a good harvest of other entertainment roundabout.

IMPRESSIVE and provocative are fitting adjectives for the Greenwood Little Theatre "Death of a Salesman at the Village Theatre stage tonight, Monday and Tuesday nights at 8 o'clock. It is a membership production, second of the season, with tickets also available at the box office. The perform-" ance is recommended as serious drama well done. FOR ALL-OUT LUSTY HUMOR and lively action try the movie, "Taming of the Shrew," the Richard Burton-Elizabeth Taylor version of Mr. Shakespeare's comedy.

The movie is now playing at the State Theater and will run through Tuesday. While critics found many points to complain about, the movie still is enjoyable and colorful. MARIO MAYO FLAMENCO DANCERS bring the verve and grace of this Spanish folk art to the stage in Community Concert Association programs Nov. 26 in Aiken and Nov. 27 in Clinton.

Greenwood Concert Association members may attend either, or both if they are flamenco aficionados. The dancers will be at the Aiken Junior High School auditorium Nov. 26 at 3 p.m. and at Belk auditorium on the Presbyterian College campus Nov. 27 at 8:15 p.m.

NOV. 24 is the deadline for reservations to a dinner concert at Presbyterian College where Madrigal Singers will recall the shades of 16th Century England. The program will be given twice, Dec. 4 and 5, at 7:30 p.m. in the college dining hall.

A typical English dinner will be served in traditional style. Costumed Madrigal Singers, plus a court jester, will entertain. Singers are selected from the PC Choir. Tickets are $3 for an adult and $2 for a student Reservations will. be accepted through Nov.

24 by Charles T. Gaines, PC music department chairman. Checks should be payable to Madrigal Singers. THIS IS THE LAST WEEK for the showing of paintings by Leland Staven and sculptures by Roben Volgt at the Erskine College Exhibit Center In Due West. These works by young artists reflect new developments In their fields.

Both are now on the faculty of Berry College in Rome, Ga. up five per cent, from to $43,002,000. Rock Hill debits increased four per cent, from $47,247,000 to $49,317,000. How Queens Saved The Kids From Zet the fracas preceding the game in 1902. McKissick had a little pistol In his room, apparently a weapon being a stand-rd part of college equipment in those days.

When the fighting broke out at the Sumter Street entrance to the Carolina campus, students began streaming in that direction. "How many bullets do you have?" McKissick was asked. "Three." The very serious reply was, "Make every shot count." The version varies Just a little in the long-awaited volume, "The Carolina-Clemson Game: 1896-1966," by Don Barton. But there is little left out in the recounting of the 70 years of drama which has swirled bout this annual gridiron encounter. IN 1S4I, the first game after the return of servicemen from World War II, hundreds of bogus tickets were printed and sold.

This created utter confusion at the gates. "Tlge" Fletcher, then living in Greenwood, bought two tickets to the game Just outside the south end gate. About that time the crowd surged forward and he was pushed inside, still holding on to his tickets. It was estimated that 30,001 people Jammed the stadium and area surrounding the playing field right up to the sidelines, breaking all attendance at a sports event up to then. People actually were toeing the sideline stripes.

That year I sat in the press box, and from that high point it was impossible to see the yard markers. "Kippie" Cleland (Mrs. Sam Cleland) wandered around with a ticket and finally lat down on the player's bench the players having joined the crowd to see the game. A drunk wandered along and patted her on the shoulder, with these comforting words, "That's all right, honey. We'll put you in the game in a little while." JAMES F.

BYRNES, then Secretary of State in the Truman Cabinet, attended the MASONIC CALENDAR NOV. 18 An hour later he returned NEW YORK (NEA) "Paul, Paul Newman," gushed the television announcer at the and the lights were on. He climbed a precarious ladder to world premier of "Cool Hand start the projector, "it cold up Joppa Lodge 387, Ladles here," he complained to no one, for the Chrysler Airtemp next Night Banquet. Tickets available from officers. DEC.

2 Luke" in New York early in November. Resplendent Newman sauntered over and twisted his lips in a wry grin for the folks In places like Omaha, Louisville, and Queens, N.Y. to his ear drowned out his words. Then Anthony, the club's owner, stopped by. Mathews Lodge 358, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.

Election "I hear that there are nude The lights the dazzle the women in this film," Anthony said without inflection and installation of officers. DEC. 4 Greenwood Lodge SI. recu incredible glamor of a world premier filled Broadway as the beautiful filmmakers of Holly "Well, the film lasts an hour there're maybe 15 seconds wood stepped from limousines here and there of nudes. There lar meeting, 7:30 p.m.

Election and installation of offi has to be. The mvoie is a tour- keeping the fires going at all entrances to the campus, "guarding" it against raids by Clemson students. Anyone passing in an automobile and foolhardy enough to yell, "Give 'em hell, Tigers," immediately became the target for the collection of overripe vegetables gathered that afternoon from the old Market, then on Assembly Street. There were parades up Main Street to the Jefferson Hotel, where the tiger was burned and Carolina yells shouted. That sometimes brought on guerrilla raids by Clemson students, who swarmed all over the place in uniform.

The exuberance sometimes got out of hand, and more than one theatre audience has been startled by weirdly-dressed freshmen thronging down the aisles practicing school yells. It's all down in "The Carolina-Clemson Game." The book is dedicated to the thousands of players and coaches who have participated. Other countless thousands will have rich memories brought back by a reading of the 70-year recounting of what Jess C. Neely, former Clemson coach, called "mayhem at high noon." to see the beautiful Hollywood movie. de-force of modern life.

People do take their clothes off. Two days later it was Fred cers. DEC. 7 Mogubgub turn. There's certainly nothing sala cious about Fred Joppa Lodge 387, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.

"Cover the lens with your The world premier of his $250,000 underground epic, "The Day I Met Zet," was to be held that night Fred, a short, stocky man with sunglasses he flips up and down like a Jeweler's class. hands when those parts come This is a clean club," Anthony ft Greenwood High News said. was packing up the equipment The movie started a wild, in his h. 46th St. studio and kaleidoscopic montage of draw ings, live film and paint.

It con was about to head for Queens. Thanksgiving Program Next Week stantly shifted, as fast or faster Fred was' leaving the safety than the eye could keep up. George Washington appeared of Manhattan. He brushed back his long, stringy black hair, A THANKSGIVING program, Gail McDade, Betty Jo Cason, and his lips parted. A car emerged.

A Coke bottle dived meet Anderson Thursday, Nov. 23, at 2 p.m. for the last game picked up his cinematic bomb a home football game and holi shell and boldly faced East: Into a hole In the ground. The of the season. Nancy Anderson, Delaney Cannon, B.B.

Taylor, Joyce Size- more, Alice Ann Rollins, Ana Queens. "My God" Fred Empire State Building flashed thought, "they've never had New Books At The Library by, carrying a brilliant moon on Holidays are Nov. 23 and 24. CHUCK SEXTON, president anything but Jerry Lewis and its back, Wonder Woman en Cathy Charles. Substitutes for Dons Day movies in Queens, these helpers are Thomasine "The Day I Met Zet" was to tered the same door 20 times, a nude girl flashed by.

Three seconds after she was gone, of the Students' Cooperative Association, has named chairmen Week of Nov. 20, 1967 I A Place on Earth, by Wendell I Advantage Ashe, by Arthur days are on the agenda of Greenwood High students next week. The Rev. Mills J. Peebles, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will be the speaker at the Thanksgiving Assembly sponsored by the House of Representatives Wednesday, Nov.

22. Mike Tunner, speaker of the be shown in a Hullabaloo Scene Rodgers, Bonnie Crawford and Cheryl Arnold. of student committees for the Greenwood Public UbrzrylJgJ Ashe Jr. The story of the young months of World War Two. this WnM from Richmond, Va.

who teen club in Queens' College Fred Mogubgub made a vain at ti i i Point section. Mogubgub fig muse wuimiik unuer uio su tempt to cover the lens, but he fW. JJk. iis a storv about 8 Kentucky year. Heading the assembly committee is Chuck Beaudrot.

Allen Wade is in charge of the ured that if the kids dug it, he Negro stormed the exclusive world of tennis to become the U.S. rank covered only a quick picture ofJ pervision of Mrs. Nell Urqu-hart, secretary to the princl- pal, are Kathy Capici, Leslie Jack Benny, circa .1935 beautification committee. Re Anthony was back. I thought ing amateur.

sponsible for welcoming new could sell prints to hundreds of similar teen clubs across the country. The film, frenetic and souldless, would be a cultural liehtshow during rock 'n' roll Brooks and Sherrvl Ravencrarc. I told you to cover the lens," House, will preside. Paul Mas-sengill, vice speaker, and John students and familiarizing them he said without animation. "I ra town and the people who live there.

NON-FICTION Keep Going and Like It, by Marjorie Hillis. Tre author's approach to making a life for oneself after 60, 70, and even 80 covers health, fashion, trav FICTION The Confessions of Nat Turner, by William Styron. A biographical novel of an educated Virginia slave who led a revolt In 1931 in which more than 50 whites were slaughtered. Helpers in the office of D. -Herring, assistant principal, are Christopher Columbus: Navl with Greenwood High is Caro trying," Fred said honestly, hu lyn Ray, chairman of the hos sets.

Roark, secretary-treasurer, will give the devotion. The Glee Club will sing "Prayer and miliated at having to self-censor gator to the New World, by Daniel Carrison. Story of the Mary Dean Wilson, Lynda Andrews and Doris Phillips. pitality committee. Mack Stone World premier! An original his own work.

"You better," Anthony said, "because a girl avant garde film by Fred will be responsible for devo The library assistants include Praise" by H. R. Wilson. Students are making contri Mogubgub creator of filmed ust asked why we re showing Italian seafarer who succeeded against tremendous odds. The Count Who Wished He Jeanne Carley, Carolyn God el, even relationships with chil- Th fn-Ordlnitnr hv Andrew commercials (we may remem dirty movies." Fred grimaced.

tions betore all school gatherings. THE STAFF of volunteer stu frey, Jackie Devore, Mary Nel butions to buy food for Thanks York. This is the world of Jonas dren and grandchildren Keep them nudes covered, son Boone, Lynn Rush, Dianne giving boxes to be distributed ber the great Beechnut ads). Would Mogubgub stand up to Anthony said tonelcssly. "This Burnett and Louise Showalter.

to needy families in Greenwood Wilde, professional killer, where nothing is what it looks like, and no one is to be trusted. dent office helpers is complete. is a clean place. Queens, or would he crash into the rockhard wall of bourgeois by the Salvation Army. Students working in school of Were A Peasant: A Life of Leo Tolstoy, by Morris Philipson.

Joan Of Arc, by Jay Williams and the editors of Horizon Mag The picture cranked back up. CLYDE SIMMONS, safety di Our Polluted Earth, by John Perry. The naturalist-author is concerned about man's survival in an environment which he manipulates to serve his needs. Mrs. Mary Jo Roper and fices receive activity points.

indifference? Mrs. Annis Herring are spon Student office helpers working The first thine that haDDened rector of Greenwood Mills, spoke to members' of the Diversified Occupations class of sors of the House. with Mrs. Grace Ambrose are after Fred got to the Hullabaloo It was a marvelous work it took Mogubgub a year to make. Art students worshiped at his feet.

Documentary film makers came to record his doings. His azine. Beautifully illustrated The French Girls ot Klllinl, by Arturo Vivante. Twenty-one short stories, in which the narrator learns to make his peace The Greenwood Emeralds Carolyn Ray, Betsy Mickey, club was a general power fail with paintings, maps, illumina Frank Russell Monday. His top Missile Base Beneath The Sea: The Story of Polaris, by ure In College Point.

DeeD in tions, and drawings ic was "Safety Attitudes." the recesses of the blacked-out film, an intensely humorous and J. J. DiCerto. The history, pres teen-age pleasure dome he sat Marco Polo's Adventures In ent activities and future aims MRS. DOROTHY WISE, soph brooding.

In the darkness, he personal view of life, flickered onward toward the next one-second nude 10 minutes in the nuclear submarine China. Another Horizon book, of the U.S, omore counselor, and Muss Top-Selling Records In Greenwood This Week could see the shapes of teen by Milton Rugoff, describing program. agers moving. Two boys pum- Mary Gallman, junior counselor, attended a guidance semi future. Fred wasn't fast enough meied a set of drums.

The He kept trying to cover the lens, Marcos four-year journey to China and his 17 years in service to Kublai Khan. nar at Presbyterian College pounding annoyed his mind, but missed, covering only Won Friday afternoon. Dr. Frank with the world. My Brother Tom, by James Aldridge.

A tender love story, set in the harsh climate of bigotry and misunderstanding. Operation Time Search, by Andre Norton. Science fiction, about a young American photographer precipitated suddenly from the 20th century into a prehistoric age where he is a prisoner in Atlantis. der Woman's struggles with her This Land of Israel, by Andrei Sedych. The author narrates the past of his ancestral homeland, with his observations of Israel today.

Sievers, principal specialist. Wonder rope. which was pondering such questions as: "If anyone trips on the wire to the projector, It's going to fall down." Guidance and Personnel Serv "Get out or here." Anthony ices, Office of Education, Wash said, appearing from nowhere ington, was keynote Retreat To Victory, by Clifford Lrndsey Alderman. The life of Nathanael Greene, Revolutionary general who led the siege against Star Fort at Ninety Six. After an hour of drums in the Those attending were given a Fred gritted his teeth, turned off the projector, and got down darkness and of breathing the sharp odor of Clearasil and The following half dozen biographies will have special appeal to teen-agers and young adults: tour of the Presbyterian Guidance Center.

from the Icy aerie of the Chrys ler Airtemp. Queens had won. As Fred turned to go, he said, Heaven Scent, Mogubgub lert for a beer. At least in Caesar's tavern, though the beer was warm, the chill fingers of the 10. WHERE CAN I GO TO GET SOUL, the Swmgm' Medallions.

LONG PLAYS 1. DR. ZHIVAGO, Soundtrack. 2 PICES, AQUARIUS, CAPRICORN, AND JONES, The Monkees. 3.

GREATEST HITS, The Supremes. 4. MAKE IT HAPPEN, The Miracles. 5. GOLDEN HITS, DIonne Warwick.

C. FAREWELL TO THE FIRST GOLDEN ERA, The Mamas A Papas. "Where's my splicer? Where's my $200 splicer?" It was not to power company's technological be found. AT LEAST $12.5 MILLION SAID WASTED IN GROUND EQUIPMENT FOR PHANTOM breakdown could not reach Top selling records in Greenwood as compiled by John B. Lee "For Music" are SINGLES 1.

I SECOND THAT EMOTION, The Miracles. 2. DAYDREAM BELIEVER, The Monkees. 3. MAKE A LEFT AND THEN A RIGHT, Johnny Jonie Mosby.

4. I'M IN LOVE, Wilson Pickett. 5. KEEP THE BALL ROLLING, Jay fc The Techniques. I.

IN AND OUT OF LOVE, The Supreme. 7. SHAME ON ME, Chuck Jackson. 8. BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE, Bobby Vee.

I. YOU MEAN THE WORLD TO ME, David While Fred was trying to cov- er an occasional innocent back except for some specifics and said corrective measures are side which the kids weren't even looking at, someone was The GAO. in a report to Con being taken. busily swiping his $200 splicer. gress, also said the Air Foroe The GOA said some or the Mogubeub slunk back to the RECEIVE $97,222,581 COLUMBIA (AP) Growers received $97,222,589 on South Carolina tobacco markets during the 1967 season.

State Agriculture Commission er William Harrelson said Fife day the marketing season ended with sales totaling 150,956,534 pounds. This was the highest since 1962 when 163,753,831 pounds were sold. The average price this past season was $64.40 per hundred pounds, compared with $69.51 during 1966. and Navy should have better coordinated their needs and equipment in question was In 7. LOVE ANDY, Andy Wil sanctuary of Manhattan, his McDonnell Douglas Corp.

of SL Louis found: Screwdrivers costing $26 each went unused in favor of ones costing 20 cents each. A total of 109 of the expensive ones were bought for $2,840. liams. should have bought common storage when it could nave been put to use. The reason, said world premier over.

Ufa nave to be satisfied with the praise 8. SOMEWHERE MY eouiDment LOVE, Ray Corailff. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Defense Department and a major aviation contractor agree with the government's financial watchdog agency that at least $12.5 million was wasted in ground support equipment for the F4 Phantom II plane. The Defense Department said Thursday it will act to curb the waste. The General Accounting Of of artists, students, critics of filmmaking but at least GAO, was poor Inventory procedure, poor screening of requests t.

GREATEST HITS, The On another subject, the GAO said the Defense Department failed to use millions of dollars Cleaning equipment bought mnA tnaripmiata rnntrnt tn fl- the virtue of the youth of Righteous Brothers. at a cost of $225,000 was found 10. ELVIS CHRISTMAS sure policies were being carried Queens had been preserved. worth of equipment it already to be unusable much of the ALBUM, Elvis Presley. out (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) time.

possessed to fulfill aid requirements abroad. Again, the De McDonnell concurred with the Defense Department that there fense Department, joined by the fice said its study of $265 million in defense contracts with the Army, agreed with the findings had been waste. Hanoi Appears To Be Sitting In The Middle Of Soviet-Chinese Struggle For Influence THE INDEX-JOURNAL Greenwood Journal established Aug. 1, 1894; Greenwood Index established Nov. 7, 1897; The Journal and Index consolidated Feb.

6, 1919 Published Dally except Sunday by THE INDEX-JOURNAL COMPANY Corner Phoenix Street and Fair Avenue 29648 scabs." honor, the Order of Lenin on Ho Pekinsr rnuM vtrar an Chi Minn. ftAP News Analysisft extended in the name of "unity" R. FRANK MUNDY President and Business Manager as support ior Moscow ot the notion that international and Advertising Director By WILLIAM RYAN AP Special Correspondent A carefully polite North Vietnamese rebuff to Moscow this week hints that Hanoi is uncomfortably in the middle of a Soviet-Red Chinese struggle for influence. The development could -mean message, "while thanking you with all my heart, may I ask you to postpone the presentation of that infinitely high and noble award until the day our people have driven off the U.S. imperialist aggressors and completely liberated our fatherland.

Then, on behalf of all my compatriots, I shall receive with and J. E. CHAFF1N, nism must take steps to end the ered tantamount to an endorse Editor splintering process in the movement provided by Red China's ment of Soviet leadership of in The decree said the award was tn recognition, among other things of President Ho's contributions to "the unity and solidarity of the socialist camp and the international Communist movement." The Russians said the award "manifests our conviction that the parties and the people of our two countries will continue con ternational communism and of ft WATSON-187M958 J. S. BAILEY-1883-1935 ARTHUR LEB-1886-1960 uissmence.

What Pekfaff think nf the Soviet contention that unity of the world Communist camp is, in these days, a matter re UlUBO efforts is abundently clear. For ii joy the order bearing the name of the great Lenin." The florid prose softened a reply which otherwise could be relatively, little but it could mean a good deaL If, as some Americans persist in thinking, the Soviet political leadership is actively interested in creating a quiring urgent attention. Hanoi quickly announced that Ho sent a reply to the Soviet solidating and developing our considered a sharp rebuff. Ha party's central committee, tell ays me nave oeen denouncing Soviet efforts to bring about a world Communist conference. They have accused the Soviet leadership of using the Bolshevik celebration as an excuse for calling "an anti-Communist, anti-China, antipeople counterrevolutionary sinister climate for negotiations in Vietnam, it could indicate that fear of Peking plays an important tag of his "boundless emotion" noi is not in a position to affront Moscow, whence comes the bulk of North Vietnam's economic Second Oats Postage Paid at Greenwood, South Carolina Rates by Area 1 wk.

1 mo. 3 mos. 6 mos. 12 mos. Carrierboy 40c $1.75 $5.20 $10.40 $20.80 Motor Route 45c $1.95 $5.85 $11.70 $23.40 Mail All Zones Same as Carrierboy lne Index-Journal is not responsible for money paid in advance to carriers MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Make All Remittances To: THE INDEX-JOURNAL COMPANY, Greenwood, S.

C. Comer Phoenix Street and Fair Avenue 29646 The publisher assumes no liability for merchandise Incorrectly priced through typographical error jmdjnjpentwilljabilityj assumed where good art soS at Incorrect price. cooperation in the struggle against imperialism, as well as in peaceful creative labor." The decree itself described Ho as a "staunch fighter for socialism and Soviet-Vietnamese on learning of the decree, but adding that in the circumstances of the Vietnam war, and military support. But Ho's role in Hanoi. In connection with the cele bration of the Bolshevik Revolu "my mind would not be at rest meeting or renegades an big neighbor, Red China, is looking on and likely would be irked should he accept an award from those Peking currently tion's 50th anniversary, the Su should I accept now the partial-larly great honor." on preme Soviet decreed the scaus wnuse purpose would be to condemn China as the splitter of the movement of the Soviet Union's highest those terms, it could be consid- "For this reason," said the calls "revisionist renegades and.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

À propos de la collection The Index-Journal

Pages disponibles:
673 030
Années disponibles:
1919-2024