The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 19, 1968, Special Edition, Page Page Eight, Image 8
Huggins
Elections
'ID Cards
Student IT) cards are the key
to voting in the spring student
body elections.
Procedure wvas outlined by Elec
tions Committee Chairman Charles
Brandenburg in a statement to
The Gamecock this week. Students
must present their I) cards at
the polls before they will be al
lowed to vote.
I)orm students will vote accord
ing to their residence halls. Town
students will vote by schools. (See
story on Page I for list of polling
places.)
When students present their
Ii)'s to the poll workers, their
names will be checked on IBM lists,
Chairman Brandenburg said. ID's
A:
Lee
Procedure
Are Voti
will be initialed by the workers,
and voters will receive an official
Digitex ballot form.
Poll caPtains and workers are
volunteers from student govern
ment, various sororities and fra
ternities and from the general stu
dent bodY. M e m b e r s of the
Elections Committee - Branden
burg, M a r g a r e t Craft, Susan
Lemon, Richard Morrell and Mike
Thomas-will oversee the polls to
make certain that correct election
procedure is followed.
The biggest advantage of the
Digitex form, Brandenburg said,
is that votes can be counted by
computer, enabling returns to be
posted within hours after the polls
Traylor
Outlined;
ing Key'
close.
Votes are counted at the Com
puter Center, with the aid of
Buddy Eisenstein. Results are re
corded by polling places and then
a final total of all polls. Branden
burg explained the advantage of
this system was to inform candi
dates of their "weak spots" in the
election.
Results will be posted by the
Elections Committee on the first
floor of the Russell House as soon
as they have been computed.
Candidates must receive a ma
jority of votes cast to be elected.
Run-off elections next Friday will
follow the same procedure as Tues
(lay's elections.
It's I
The tin
to relate efl
to hear thei
to react to
rights, and
it's time th
represent, s
lina.
DEI
STUlDE
3 Coeds
Vie For
Secretary
Three coeds are running for sec
retary of the student body. They
are Caroline Huggins, Mary Dozier
Lee and Pat Traylor.
Miss Huggins, a junior educa
tion major from Charleston, is a
member of the student government
staff, Young Republicans, Women's
Recreation Association and Kappa
Delta social sorority, of which
sha is athletic chairman. She won
the Kappa Delta Pledge Scholar
ship Award this year and was a
delegate to State Student Legisla
ture.
A history major from Sumter,
Miss Lee is a member of Alpha
Delta Pi social sorority, AI)Pi rush
chairman, member of the Student
Union Dance Committee and hall
president. She is a junior.
Pat Traylor, a political science
junior from Fayetteville, N. C., is
president of AWS, a member of
Zeta Tau Alpha, Angel Flight,
Pan-Hellenic Council and the Stu
dent-Faculty Relations Committee.
She has been a member of Stu
(lent Senate, Student-Faculty Dis
cipline Committee, and the Wom
en's Standards Committee. She has
been treasurer of the sophomore
class and president of Wade liamp
Ion residence hall.
line for
te has come for Stud
ectively to the indit
r opinions, to solve
their grievances, i
.o respond to their 1v
at Student Govern
erve and lead the s
ELECT
INY RI
NT BODY P1
Knobel
Knobel Rur6
Unopposed
For Position
Running unopposed for treas
urer of the student body is Barry
Wayne Knobel of Anderson. A
sophomore majoring in history,
Knobel is student government sec
retary for cultural affairs, a
mem(111ber of Kappa Sigma Kappa
Board of Pardons and vice presi
dent of Sigma Chi social fratern
ity.
lie has been freshman class
president, member of the student
Senate, delegate to State Student
Legislature, member of Men's
Towers Judicial Council, Sigma
Chi scholarship chairman, mem
ber of the Student Union Dance
and Concert Committee, orienta
tion counselor, co-chairman of the
1lomecoming Committee and an
Inter-Fraternity Council represen
tative.
action!
!ent Government
7idual students -
their problems,
o enforce their
ishes. In essence,
nent effectively
rudents of Caro
3YAL
iESIDENT