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Dorm Study By CARL STEPP News Editor Investigation of the possibility of coeducational dormitory complexes here has been called for by a newly formed Residence Hall Council. The group has also recommended studying the feasibility of "less rigid hours for all women resident students" and has urged the Uni versity "to make known to all stu Student . Gathers z Delegates from some 18 Pa this week for the spring sessi Legislature. The meeting was held W< general planning session for t] Wednesday afternoon sessi Rep. John W. Jenrette of Hon Meter Hours Are Changed All University - owned parking meters will be enforced from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Vice President for Business Affairs Harold Brunton announced this week. Hours of enforcement for Bull Street and South Building meters will be shortened to conform to Russell House parking lot hours. Brunton said the Capstone park ing lot nearing completion will also be policed from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Meters will be enforced Mon day through Saturday. I INQI QUESTION: Why are USC gir day night when the Beach since the concert doesn't st girls have 11 o'clocks on M, ANSWER: Assistant Dean of I The Gamecock that it has b Women's office to allow g curfew hour to attend cert at Township Auditorium. S1 to the coeds soon informi: hours. "We tell the girls to go it is over and come straigh Eccles said. She added that for those girls not attendin Dean Eccles said it is a: o'clocks on Monday nights. she said, is to have a spe< meetings. QUESTION: Why can't a flo( the Capstone cafeteria? The ness at night. ANSWER: "Gibbes Court is lighting would have to be n other residents," according dent for business affairs. to the attention of the City QUESTION: What happened t ANSWER: The column in ThE was discontinued with the ginning of the semester, ac< nax. The space is now beii interest to students on th4 Mullinax. MONDAY-APRIL 8th COLUMBIA TOWN IN PE IN CONCER1 STRAWBERRY BUFFALO SPI ALL SEATS RESERVEI BUY TIGCTS eIfe ~stemped dAnvSp forret Couni Of C( dent residents . . . their search and seizure policy and its rationale." In 14 far-reaching recommenda tions approved Tuesday, the coun cil dealt with matters ranging from coeducational living com plexes to evaluation of USC in firmary facilities. Other points made by the organi zation include: -that the University "develop a Assembly 4t USC Imetto State colleges met here on of the S. C. State Student !dnesday and Thursday as a ie student lawmakers. ons heard addresses by State y County, State Sen. Thomas ine G. Mason of Clarendon County, anl House Speaker Pro Tempore Rex Carter. Delegates honored the S. C. Gen eral Assembly at a reception at Capstone House Wednesday night. Workshops, seminars and a gen eral session busied d e I e g a t e s Thursday. Guests for the meetings included Sens. William J. Brock ington, John C. Lindsay, and Eu gene N. Ziegler; Reps. C. Heyward Belser, Isadore E. L o u r i e, T. Travis Medlock and Herbert D. Morgan; and Columbia attorney Matthew J. Perry. The SCSSL meets twice each year. The fall s e s s i o n includes meetings at the House and Senate chambers of the state Capitol. Bill McDougall of USC is SCSSL governor. JIRY Is having 11 o'clocks on Mon Boys are in town, especially art until 8:30 p.m.? Why do Dnday nights at all? Vomen Patricia P. Eccles told een the policy of the Dean of irls to remain out past the ain non-University functions hie said a memo would be sent ng them of Monday night's ;o the performance, stay until t back to their dorms," Dean hours would not be extended g the concert. n AWS regulation to have 11 The general reason for this, :ific time for dormitory hall >dlight be put at the back of Lt street is in dangerous dark a residential area and any aade without interfering with to Harold Brunton, vice presi "This matter will be brought of Columbia," Brunton said. o Hoppe? Gamecock by Arthur Hoppe change in editors at the be cording to Editor Carol Mulli rig devoted to issues of more Carolina campus, said Miss 8:30 P.M. SHIP AUDITORIUM RSON WITHE The hARM CLOCK IINGFIELDS I $4.75 $3.75 $2.75 UDNTORIUM c/e Twnhlp Audl9orlum. encies 11 Su )ed H( full understanding and apprecia tion of the student judicial sys tem." -that dorm governments re ceive authority to name their residence halls "where permissible" under advisement from the Vice President for Development. -that the "application of the 'in loco parentis' concept by the University be brought into proper perspective, especially with regard to the students of legal age." DORM OFFICERS The Residence Hall C o u n c ii, functioning under Asst. Dean of Men William Klepper, consists of dorm government officials who at tended a recent meeting at Penn State of the National Association of College and University Resi dence Halls. Their recommendations are being submitted to the Vice President for Student Affairs, the )irector of China Scholar To Lecture Here Monday Dr. Jurgen Domes, one of Ger many's leading authorities on modern China, will discuss "Chi nese Communism and its Role in the Chinese Revolution" Monday at 7:30 at a Young Americans for Freedom meeting. Domes is a visiting associate professor in the USC Department of International Studies. He serves as Academic Councillor and Head of the Research Unit on Chinese and East Asian Politics at the Free University of Berlin. He was recently a featured speaker in Atlanta discussing the impact of the Chinese Cultural Revolution on the armed forces of Red China at the "China Seminar for Southern Journalists." The public is invited to the meet ing, which will be in Room 302 :f Russell House. Tryouts Planned Varsity cheerleader tryouts will be held from 4-6 p.m. Mon (lay through Wednesday at the side of the Undergraduate Li brary, according to Rusty Bur ress, head cheerleadler. Ten boys andl eight girls will be selected to run for cheer leading positions in the up)com ing student elections. Any stu (lent with a 2.0 GPR is eligible. 'The very model of a cool sadistic Mod movie!" STUDENTS With Discount CARDS 7 _ _ THE BLOS Devine c In S Points Igests )uSln Housing, the Dean of Men, and the Dean of Women. In calling for study of possible coed (orm complexes, the group recommended "that the University investigate the possibility of the Cliff residence hall complex being coeducational and the present resi dence hall complexes adjusted to coeducational living." The organization said a resi dence hall council should be formed "to link together the various gov ernments in such a way as to encourage governments to attempt new projects with a greater under standing, to facilitate the necessity of coeducational (orm complexes, and to act as a liaison committee between the University officials and the residents they represent." 'PUBLISH POLICY' Publication of the University's search and seizure policy in the Carolina Community was recom mended, and student members of student - faculty committees were urged to make bi-semester reports "through the student press as to their progress." Evaluation of the "ongoing ef ficiency of the infirmary services" was suggested, to be conducted by a student-faculty committee. Other recommendations included that "the 'living-learning' concept in residence halls" be established; that residence hall governments "work toward more uniform pro cedures in their judicial boards and that the University, likewise, de velop a full understanding and appreciation of the student judicial system"; that a "residence hall living" booklet be provided each year; and that the council join the National Association of College and University Residence Halls. Ceremony I Senior Cla4 P l a q u e s recognizing senior class projects will be dedicated (lur ing a ceremony at Russell House April 19 at 3 p.m. Attending the dedication will be President Thomas F. Jones, Vice P r e s i d e n t for Student Affairs Charles H. Witten, and other USC administrators. The past and pres ent presidents of the alumni asso ciation wvill also attend. Two p)laqlues will be dledicatedl (luring the servi~es. A permanent marker to be placedl in Russell House will be unveiled by Stan Juk, president of the class of 1967. It will have space for plates ex If what happens in "The happened to you... wouldn't want to * talk about it either! It's so easy when you SAY IT WITH FLOWERS from BOK SHOP t Saludo 254.8105 . Phot Cliff J Nearly 550 ment will he ho House complex which is sche4 The dormitory is expected to New D, Construction is scheduled to be gin next week on what will be the connecting link between Carolina's main campus on Sumter Street and the Rex Enright Athletic Center on Rosewood Drive. The University received ap proval last Wednesday from the federal department of Housing and U r b a n Development (H UD) to award a $2,542,000 bid on Cliff House, the 10-story, three-tower men's residence complex in the 300 block of South Bull Street. According to Harold Brunton, vice president for business affairs, the facility will be constructed with student bionds, with money to be borrowed from HUD. The complex is to be the cor nprstone of the University's South Fo Dedicate '1I1 s Plaqluesa qu;4q plaining projects beginning w%ith that of last year's class. Plates will be added until 1987. A second marker, to be placed behind Russell House, will note that funds for the Russell House beautification project were pro vided in part by the Class of 1967. Pat Naylor, president of this coectisngo lass, beille alibn manf capso permtrettoandip Thenniersie eaceved a U r a Deelomen '68) t awarl a$2e52,00rd onck ithffm Hose ct e 1-tr.. tree-towe mel's esdenewope sinsi th 0 A or g trunk. $16.o t"SUCCESSywil bcoSTRY"...oni tuetboygswisi with shirrt b nstonel t Univerity'rs Sout tht Bfoath year' Class.12 Plte A secon mare,iobn pae )eindRusellHoue Dwlnte vi(l inpart y th Chla ne 197 i AA o Copy by Chief Photographer Chip Galloway louse used in the three-tower Cliff luled to he begun next week. be completed by fall, 1969. orm Go Campus, said Brunton. Eventually a viaduct will be constructed to connect the main campus to the new men's dormitory. Plans are also being made to connect South Campus with the athletic center. "Tlhis would get the students away from crossing B l o s s om Street," Brunton said. "The fight has gone on too long between cars and pedestrian students. The time has come to separate the two," he added. Housing a total of 549 men, the three towers are expected to be ready for occupancy by fall, 1969. Attached to one of the towers will be a separate one-story kitchen and cafeteria. The towers will be joined by open balconies. To give the rooms the appearance of living rooms rather than bedrooms, the rooms will con Beach Boys Three of America's top sing ing attractions will appear in Township Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Monday. The Beach Boys, the Buf falo Springfield, and the Straw berry Alarm (lock headline the program. Tickets may be purchased from the auditorium at $2.75, $3.75, and 4.75. Singer Joan Baez willi ap pear in Township in c<neert Wednesday n i g h t at 8:30. Tickets are on sale at the audi. torium. APES * * ea azyon. ill Cigarettes, Cancer Connected A warning to smokers was given here Monday night by a widely known authority on cigarettes and cancer. Dr. Norman J. Doorenbos, a pharmacist at the University of Mississippi, told the USC student chapter of the American Pharma ceutical Association that "if one smokes one pack a day, in 12 months a cupful of tar is deposited in the lungs.". More than 20 different chemicals in tobacco smoke are responsible for growth of cancer in the mouth and lungs, he said. He added that pre-cancerous cells disappear five to seven years after a person stops smoking. He said the biggest factor for the increase in lung cancer has been the free cigarettes given GI's after World War II. "At the end of the war there were a lot of smokers we didn't have before," he said. ing Up tain day couches instead of beds. Five different room configurations have been provided for by Cliff House designers. Republicans Choose Five New Officers Meeting Monday night in the Russell House, USC Young Repub licans chose new officers and pledged to campaign to elect "a whole new team of strong, respon sible leaders" this year. Newly elected officers include Joseph Bath, president; Gail Pri vett, vice president; Susan Ross, recording secretary; Beverly Mills, corresponding s e e r e t a r y; and Peggy Ann Robbins, treasurer. Tribute was paid outgoing presi (lent John Carbaugh and his offi cers in the form of a unanimously adopted resolution. Carbaugh reviewed the achieve ments of the club since its reor ganization in October, noting that speakers such as Sen. Edward Brooke, Gov. Claude Kirk of Flor ida, Harry S. Dent, Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller of Arkansas, J. Drake Edens, and others have been on campus. "Our' activities have been edluca tional, social andl political but our p)urpose singular: to teach that t rue freedom requires responsibhilI ity," Carbaugh said. *** e e-e e s A een A* a n Al