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Rated SMTIGJS ALL-AMERICAN AIN'TERIGHT FOKS by Z >C Associated Collegiate Press See Page 8-A UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Vol. LVIII, No. 7 Columnbia,~ South Carolina, October 20, 1967 :lf4. I3 Caroil Beauti Weekend - Activities Schedule FRIDAY Pep Rally, 7 p.m., Horse shoe. Homecoming Dance, 8 p.m., Field House. SATURDAY Alumni Coffee, 9 a.m., president's home. Alumni Association Awards Ceremony, 10 a.m., Rutledge Chapel. Physical Sciences Center Dedication, 11:15 a.m. Homecoming P a r a d e, 3 p.m. A I u m n i Association Tea Dance and Buffet, 5 p.m., National Guard Armory. USC-Virginia Football Game, 7:30 p.m., Carolina Stadium. Student U n i o n Concert, 10:30 p.m., Township Audi torium. Senators To Study Seating Iy MIKE AITAWAY Chief Reporter The power to hold hearings re garding the distribution of foot ball tickets and to summon persons to such hearings wa* requested Wednesday by the Student Senate Athletic Affairs Committee. The bill, if approved, would also allow the committee to investigate the student seating arrangement for the basketball games in the Coliseum during the 1968-69 sea- I son. The hill authored by Richard Thomas is on the calendar for consideration at the next legisla tive session. The S e n a t e unanimously ap prvda resolution to request tihe Student A ffairs Committee to sub) mit to thle .\onetary Affairs Com mittee thle minutes of meetings for tile past two yearsi, as well as 'list of all allocations and re Viuests for allocations recorded by tile committee. Introduced b)ut not actedl upon by tihe Senate was a bill which would allow the selection of chleer leader nominees b)y a "Boardl of E:xperts" consisting of the Cheer leader AdIvisors, D)irector of Ath let ics, D ire'(ctor of Sports Informa tion, the Vice President of Student A f fairs and the preceding chleer inIg, footb)all, andi basketball cap F'rom tile nominees six male and five female chleerleaders will be chiose'n by popular election. The hill, aIuthoredl by Toney Lister, re quests thait ''more audio eqluip)ment he. furnished at Carolina Stadium so that the (cheerleadlers may be hleardi by all the studlents." In other action the S e n a t e pass5(ed without dissent a resolu tion whllichl requests a faculty "self im posed( proh ibitioln of qju izzes" thle we(ek before final exams. Tihe bill was introduced by President Pro Te(m pore D on Koplen. A resoultion to i ml p r o) y e the lockers in tile R ui s a e II House authIoredl by Parks Coble was re ferred to the General Welfare Committee. Absent from the sixth legisla tive meeting were Senators Arm strong, Bond, Blurnette, Callahan, James, Kennedy, Knie, Thomas, ia Homc es, Cone A Touch Members of the football team lend loneconing Queen attendants Ti (left) and Barbara Huitt (right). Queen, Nancy Moore (center), and he Carolina Homecoming 1967 is a combina- be featu ion of many things-the nostalgia The cav. ,f alumni returning to a rapidly- :it M c hanging Carolina, the electric-like through chool spirit generated by an ex- return t iting football team, the happiness Street. f a newly-crowned queen. Greek "Carolina '67" is the theme for .re Sign in activity-filled weekend of par ies, (lances and renewal of old riendships. Festivities get under way tonight at 7 with a pep rally on the Iforse shoe at which the 1967 Home coming Queen and her court will be presented. Schduled to speak at the rally ire Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D S.C., an alumnus of the USC Law chool; Dr. Hugh T. Stoddard, IIOL rtesient of the Alumni Associa- La m b tion; and USC President Thomas t I>elta D) I. Jones. .Members of the Game- D)elta TI -ock football team also will be on Kappa hand. Del.ta F Following the rally at 8 p.m., Spider Turner, Gene Chandler andl - The )rifters will entertain at a free (lance in the field house. Saturday morning's activities inludd an alumni coffee at the president's home, an Alumni As sociation a w a r d a ceremony in Rutledge Chapel, and the dedica tion~ of the Physical Sciences Center. A 54-unit parade, the largest 'W ever at a USC homecoming, w'ill W _._ _.. - ------ of .nju: Rap Br Coach Diletzel o figur Injures Knee Coach Paul F. D)ietzel ra was hospitalized Wednes- pl)icies day for the removal of a dressed torn cartilage. in Dra: The accident occurred at a g the varsit y scrimmage late 'pr og i Wednesday a f t e r n o o n several when D)ietzel rushed to Imoverm congratulate a player on a (;am?? the execution of a play. SI'cCh. Dietzel later j o k e d , "I've always said the other coaches could get along thir o without me. Now they'll injusti< have their chance." iviti Dietzel is expected to be atvt on the sidelinies for the N )ear Virinia ganme.-ea comin g erts, Ra 5 8 I.. 1 00 Of Beauty And. support to were elected by the sti ca Brissey Oct. 11. Announcern The 1967 at the pep rally tori r attendants crowned Saturday ni '67 Is N< red Saturday afternoon. Competing ii lca(de will start its trip I Kappa Phi ar ,1 a s t e r College, travel vision are Ma downtown Columbia and Town Men's o c a m p u s via Sumter: Associations 1 South Dorm. teams sponsoring floats 1 Alpha Phi aa A 1 p h a Epsilon, Phi :ernity will bt Epsilon Pi and and Student I Kappa D e l t a; sor a float. Kappa A 1 p h a, The parade S ig ma C hi, he set up opt Delta Zeta and Judges for Kappa Kappa Steven Vance, Gamma; Sigma Department; Nu, Sigma Phi of the School Epsilon, Alpha and Mrs. Rali Epsilon Phi and USC athlotic Pi Beta Phi. At 7:30 1 Also, Ph i1meets the Vir LIN(;S K a p p a Sigma, Atlantic Con: I a Chi Alpha and Delta iHalftime act Ita; Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi lighted by t heta an(d Chi 0 m e g a; 1967 Hlomecol sigma, Chi Psi and Alpha Following i; Alpha Tau Omega, Pi iGlenn Yarbo: rnng: Riots >rth Is As By MONA G;AILT hink they Asst. News Editor leers) moved places where are not trying to sup)pre'ss poorly wer ues so much as the climate (communicatic ;tice which produces them. jNegro." own dlidn't create the ghet- Young sait New York. UnecmpJloyment e s were not createdl by Ca rmicheal ." Whitney M. Young Jr., W .e director of the National League, summedl up the of the League. Young ad a crowd'm of about ton Hall Monday night in ismester's G;reat Issues m am. Young touched upon aspects of the civil rights YOUN( nt in his sp)eechi and (luring pathy were eok interview hefore his before they would not h~ 'rning the city riots, Y'oung The audie lost Negroes op)pose having Young said, w homes burned down. No as many hi -e justifies e a g a g i n g in mental illne es that d e s t r o y Negro' we hecome1 ty ad lives." Hie added, "In catch up." k, the riots were handled "Some sa: ..o,ly. In Itmit, I (lon't before we es Scombinc 11y And C V u Staff C Brawn For '67 Hon ient body in elections held ntonies by Dr. I nit of the Queen was made Alutnni Associ. ight. Miss Moore will he Coach Paul F. ight during halftime cere sta1gia, Jo 4. the independent di- concert at Township Auditor .d Zeta Tau Alpha. The Student Union sponsored e xey-Coker; Preston; is free to Carolina students. Ti and Town Women's for tonight's dance and Satur( mid Columbia Ilall- (lance must be picked up at Omega service fra ild the queen's float, Omg evc r-dl h ue' a,Jnion also will spon-D. E si reviewing stand will iosite the Horseshoe. instructor in the Art l. CAROL M"I.IJNAX Dr. Judith R. Joyner Managing Editor of Fducation faculty; )h Floyd, wife of the )r. Elsie Tahor will receivi business manager. D)istinguished Alumni Award >.m. Saturday USC urday with a note of precedel ginia Cavaliers in an she is the first woman to re at Conference game. the honor since its establish vities will be high- six years ago. he crowning of the I )r. Hugh T. Stoddard, pres ning Queen. of the Alumni Association, wil the game at 10:30, sent the award at an a I u ough will p)resent a awards ceremony to b,e hel In North Meal Bad As South aw enforcement offi- I(otare"Yugsae quickly enough. Thephtalyli'mniedth riots were handlletdo rjdc ebdse whee terewasnoAmerican soldiers in Viet n between white and a (1(d i n g that prejutdice w-a deeip-seatedl in thte U. S. "We that a white bankter theit capacity to change our m in another city Of the Urban League, had just t (1d( said. "We are trying to wil him t h a t he tories, trying to address our Shad 1 o s t symi- to causes oif violence and i pathy with the protests by getting jobs and< civil r i g h t s tion. mn o y e mn e n t "Riots in the North do not because of the that the North is worse th: r i o t s. Young South but that the North t o I d the USC hadl as the South." a ui d i e n e e, In a more hopeful tone, he "If peopIle who said, "I have predicted that have lost sym- future, Southern c i t i e s v doing s o mn e t h i n g better cities for the Negre lost s y mn p a t hi y we Northern cities." ave had riots." Asked what lhe thought o1 nee hi u c k I e d when tin L uther King's stand< "Negroes dlon't hav'e Viet Nam war, Young repl P p i s and as much think he has the right to *ss as whites, but ns Negroes have the right to iore civilized we may wise or as stupid about it as whites. I don't think thi rit ill lie generations rights and Viet Nami ought ~o gt rid of nrejuiae. eonfused." ition: A 0 i ridiron I A Na e i Aike Que; " I'res crow tiav r by I dent Ru 'Tica Nu f it v. cour I )(in. hers >lor Photo by Chief Photographer Chip Galloway J; ecomitng t " lugh T. Stoddarl, president of the tion. To Miss Moore's left is Dietzel. A , Spirit 14 mnr Sun ium. Russeli House information desk. firs vent Chairman of the Homecoming uat -kets conmittee is Jte lobson. a junior \ lay's journalism major from Arlington, I~tt the Virginia. atte ,e Tabor Re Associatlion Rutledge Chapel 10 a.m. Saturday. I)r. Tahor graduated from Car, thr ina in 192. with a B. S. degree :n Sat- b i 4) g y. II Owe Vt 1. she was no ntweomer to the campus. HItr c - father, I >r. Stephen Tabor, was meat t-ad of (eology and Geography at l' S(' for a number of years and .en I )r. Tlabor grew upi on campus. pro- 1l>r. Tabor later receivetd an M.. mi n ifrom Stanford U niversi ty in Emi d in bryology and a Phi.1). from the ~niversity of Ciaoi no crinology. Ciaoi no In i t;5, l)r. Tabor became the ri frst woman at the Mledical College of Southi Carolina to receive the itlet of full professoir. A ffiliated with the Mledical College s i n e e 1948, she teaches anatomy antd - embryology andi is activye in re I em - sea rch. Slhe has deli veredI and pubi lack lished numnerobus resea rch papers mtong in c-onnection wvith research grants. Nam, s not L.IFE MEMB1IERSHhlPS havt e rna atddition to t he 1ist inguished nins''." Alumn i Award, thle U n iversity is .oung awarding five honorary life miem ivic- hershiips to the Alumni A-ssocia st-Ives sio n to anongratdua tes of V SC who 'cess have miadie outstanding cotntribu 'duca- t ions to the U niversity. H---ipients of the awards are mean l.ester L . Bates, Sr., mayor of \4 .n the Columbia; D r. Thomas F. Jones, tui is as U SC ptresidetnt; Mr. Silas N. Pear- op man, Clh i e f H ighway Ctommis -later sioner; Pr. Lawrence L. Smith. in theii former professor of geology and fr ill lit head of Depart ment of Getlogy andst than Georgraphy (nowv retired) . In Wil mington, Del., a representative (of Mlar- ,ISC will present the award to " n the Walter S. Carpenter, Jr., former al ed, "I presitiet-i anti honorary chairmian a. speak. of board of the DuPont Corp. cc he as From 9-10 a.mn. Saturday, an a e war Alu mni-Faculty' reception will he t civil hebt. At the annual meeting of the to be Alumni Association, new officers'8 ImI I. lash iss Moore o Reign s Queen ncy M e o r e, a junior from I Inaj.rmg m J) 1-t:cal scince, reign as 11'1: Homecoming n. ss M1ore, sponsorei in last 's can us-wv ae elections by .on lCsidence Hall, wvll be neu at the halftime of Satur light's Carihna-\'1rginia game r. H1 ugh T. : td dear(i, presi of the Au inin Association. nners-up to M:.ss 1oore are Br: isiy, jp.ns 'redtb Sigma raterl:ty, an.l Barhpara 11uitt, srei by Kappa I wlta Sornr Includii in the hol:.ecomll:fig t are Suzanne Brooks, Jane ngton, G(irgia Cox, Ann Mc ild and Anne Stephens. ;.rts for Miss MIwre" an,i :.ch her if her court will be mem of the Air For-e R<)C :taff. -th (',eper, daughter "f "-SC ~ if \len and Mr.s. L. l'ug."ne r. IIl h." cr,w'.vn hew rer, and r learer w v ll be Ie I W h \'.tt en, of \'ic I'resab-l'nt f.-r 'Iudeti't irs andl Mrs. C. H. W.'tten. 5s \l4ore' plans to enite r tI the' will have m.'". er' Intrests :n.lu11e '."lost -ytling. I'm razy a'C ur n",, trae l ani p'e ple' and i i.e fi. Brs is a jun:.r el' tarv tedu iin m a I , r fr unit, N. J. '.. i,an:, to teach t or secue, ::b- aft ra on. ,5- }Iu.lt.: s T--l: , from Clhr N. C., plans t be a nur:e r iia ioaticn. ceives Award ~pen House t Capstone s Planned a yi s t C n e HIous'e, Caredhna men's hionoir doerm, is bing fe'a -edi this weeke'nd in a series of n hoeuses. Open hounse Tlhursday, Oct. 19, m 6 to 9 p.m. was for faculty, ff and the coenstruction crew. Today froem 5-9 p.m. Capstone is en toi studlents, facul ty, taff andi umni. It wcill be open from 10( m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Hlome ming dlay, for faculty, students. umni andl staff. ThIe open housec from 4 to 6 anay will be open to the general iri maybn orpoanl) public.