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VOTE Pick -p Vol. LIX, No. 16 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia, South Carolina, Tuesday, November 5, 198 Founded 1908 Miss G & B To Be Selected By IRBY KOON Staff Writer liss Garnet and Black for 196 will be chosen Thursday night a 7 from among 28 contestants it the Capstone Campus Room. The pageant is sponsored an nually by the yearbook staff, and will be emceed by Jim Crosby, Greeks editor of the Garnet and Black. The contestants will appea once in a suit or dress ensemb< and again in an evening gown Ten finalists will be chosen am will be re(uired to answer question extemporaneously. Froi the 10 finalists four runners-ul will be chosen, and the successoi to Lucille Sligh, Miss Garnet am llack of 1968 will be crowned b) 'niversity President Thomas F Jones. A tea for the contestants wil be held at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday ir the faculty lounge of the Russel House where the judges will con. duct personal interviews with th( contestants. Entertainment for the pag eant is to be provided by Dwight Spencer, guitarist of Airport High School, and the Panhellenic Washtub Band. Floral arrangements are being donated by Shandon Greenhouses trophies are donated by Dixi( Trophy Co. and Rice Music Co. will donate the organ. Tickets for the pageant are 5t cents and will be sold Monday through Wednesday and also at the door. The contestants and their spon sors include Betty Bishop, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Brenda Bowers, Town Girls' Association; G r a e e Chastain, Preston; Ann Cobb, Chi Omega; Ann Coleman, Sigma Chi; Patsy Craig, Delta Delta Delta; Sue Cyr, Lambda Chi Alpha; Di anne Dormers, Sigma Nu; Cindy Ellen, Zeta Tau Alpha ; and Frankie Gwen, Capstone. Also running are Linda Hair, Men's Towers; Linda Haiti wanger, Sims; Martha Handy, Phi Kappa Sigma; Angela Hill, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Kathy Ann Hummers, Pi Kappa Al pha; Dianne Hunt, Kappa Al pha; Dianne Latimer, Alpha Epsilon Phi; and Margo Mala nos, South Building. Susan McElrath, Alpha Delta P'i; Beverly Neely, Chi Psi; Ida Nelson, Pi Beta Phi; Joanne Oit tinger, Phi Delta Theta; Evelyn Pierce, South Tower; Mlarilyn Pi gott, D)elta Zeta; Joan Ligon Simp son, Alpha Tau Omega; andl Suz anne Stokes, Kappa D)elta, are By NANCI QUESTION: Why do campus Windshields Instead of the ANSWER: According to Wi neows bureau, some cars d< the tickets onto. Campus Windshields for lack of a put them. QUESTION: Why doesn't tl1 Hlow often are rings orderi ANSWER: The Campus Sho only for men. According ager of the shop, wome Profitably because too fey women students frequenti style of class rings and or Orders for rings are Four Tickets On Four Seaso The Four Seasons, pop-singing recording artists, will present concert here Nov. 16. Sponsored by the Student Unior concert committee, the concert wil he from 8 till midnight at Town ship Auditorium. Tickets, at $1.50 each, go on salf Wednesday at the Russell Hous< information desk. The Four Seasons have recorde such t u n e s as "Sherry," "Rag Doll," "Walk Like A Man," "Big Girls Don't Cry," and "Let's Hang Pearl Bu Pearl Buck, Nobel Prize-winning authoress, will speak at Carolina Nov. 19 as part of the Student Union lectures series. She will speak Nov. 19 at 8 p.m, in the Campus Room at Capstone. Miss B u c k won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932 for her novel, "Thc Good Earth," and became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in 1938. Among her works are "Fathers And Sons," "House Divided," "Pa vilion of Women," "Dragon Seed" a n d "Imperial Woman - Biog raphy." A lifelong h a m p i on of the American - Asian children, she is founder of the P e a r 1 S. Buck Foundation, which was created for their b)enefit. She says "these children grow up stateless" because under Asiani law they belong to the father, aind E MEDDIN police put some tickets on the door? lam A. Collins, head of the > not have door handles to tie policemen will place tickets on better, more secure place to e Campus Shop stock rings? p does stock class rings, but to Marion WV. D)antzler, man n's rings c'annot be stocked( coeds ordler them. Secondly, 'do not like the conventional Ier an onyx style. sent to the company once a months for them to be filled. Seasons Sale For ns Concert On." They last were in concert Carolina in April, 1967. The concert committee is at planning next year's entertainmei schedule and will open a poll : ginning Wednesday. Students will be asked to cor ment on this year's entertainme events and to make suggestions f< future attractions. Committee m e in b e r s will pc students in the dorms by a doo to-door survey. ek To Sj under American law they belon to the mother. "If they are in ti fortunate 50 percent that live b yond the age of five . . . thes 'unwanted' children receive no edi cation and have no hope for ol taining a job. They are forced beg in the streets." Moyers' Spec Public BY CARL STFPP Ass.t. Managing FEdit What America nleeds5 tore a weak p)residIent but a st Bill Mloyers saidi here Satul "It would be a great mist man who is elected Tuesday a laissez-faire attitude wh sumes office." But, Moyers adlded, a f t Americans have tended tc men with "narrow, impre weak views of the presidlen< And, he said, such an a "nthe public mood now.' Regardless of who is ece notbe bletogive America This country has expel "remarkable run of bad luck said, and its citizens are"t a modlern version of Mterlin cian . . .to (do for us what do for ourselves." "No mian, of the thre runnling, will be able to 4 p)robJlemsI in the way I think to deal with them." Meoyers, former piress see Pr,esidentt I .yndon B. Johns the al ienation of youth, th over' Vietnam and the thw good lansf for a bet ter soc ie the elements in America's streak. lie said the present camj been marked by "excessive a ingless rhetoric." "Iwould advise all cand tone (down the exuberant Mloyers saidl, because many tial n)oenls "ow out of Electi< Politic By DON CAUGHMAN Staff Writer Hundreds of Carolina students will vote for the first time today as the nation's voters go to the polls to choose a president, vice president and numerous state and local officials. Although polls give Republican Richard M. Nixon a substantial lead nationally, the former vice president is facing a tough chal lenge in South Carolina from former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, the American Indepen (lent candidate. Vice President Hubert 11. Humphrey, the )emo cratic candidate, is expected to make a strong showing in the Pal netto State and is given an out side chance to capture the state's eight electoral votes. 'I he race for representative from he 2nd Congre.sional District has cr(ated much interest among USC students. Incumbent Republican A lb e r \Vatson, a six-year veteran of the House, and I)emocrat Frank Lt Sloan both have spoken several imies to campu)1s groups. Watson ;o1has won election three times-the first as a Democrat-with relative e. ease and is again rated the favor ite. However, Sloan has conducted 1- a vigorous campaign and is ex. It pected to make the race close. >r. The closest race of statewide ignificance should he between 11 )emocratic Sen. Ernest F. Hol r- lings and Republican Marshall Parker. The race is a rerun of the )eak Here g A noted authority on C h i n a, e Miss Buck says, "We are the most P- hated nation in China today." She e says this hate is perhasl) justified because we broke off communica - tions with China just after the communist takeover. "We rejected them when they needed us most.' ch Mood F4 ference between the rthe pecople as raised(i andl the p)erformance< ay is not he gets into office." rong one, How the presideni -dlay. dIepends on several fa ake if the to Moyer. ...takes Ry far the most imj nJ he as. is the character of th< one essential element e r crise's, ing, leaves all the othe turn to O) t h e r factors M :ise' a n dI cluded : -.--the man's concep titude is president may be a n innovator. ted, Moy-. fM idlent will the lead-. H E ienced a ," Moyers oking for the magi we can't E k who are leal with we need retary to on, listed a turmoil srting of ty among had luck aign has ndl mean idates to ~ ~ rhetoric," p)residlen the riif )fl Cli, al Aci 1966 contest when Hollings, a former S. C. governor, defeated the Oconee County dairyman by about 12,000 votes. Members of AWARE, campus political interest group which voted recently to affiliate with the controversial Students f o r a Democratic Society (SDS), say they will picket polls in the Co lumbia area. The organization issued a state ment last week calling the presi dential race a "Great Hoax" and members have been wearing but tons urging voters to "strike" all three candidates. Other campus political organi zations-Young Democrats, Youth for Wallace, Young Republicans and Young Americans for Free domn (supporting Nixon) have McCauslt To Begin Pete McCausland thinks "this is the year to begin" in extending the rights and powers of Carolina students. Because of this belief, he pre sented bills to Student S e n a t e Wednesday calling for a faculty student senate, liberalized curfews for women, students on the Board of Trustees, and students on the campus police force. McCausland's bills have b e e n assigned to committee. He pre dicted the curfew measure had the best chance of passage. The bill calls for lifting curfews for all women who have completed 30 hours of work and are in good academic standing. "If you go to school and you've been here a whole year and are doing well academically, you're ma ture enough to regulate your hours." McCausland said he thinks the current Student Senate is "virtual ly powerless" and that a faculty student legislative body would be Etvors 0 expectations of -the circur n the campaign a strong n >f the man once ure., he needs what he has I will perform -his persor e,ors, acconinsg day must comi television as >ortant, he said, pearances. man. It is "the Mloyers, wh( which, if miss- the inaugurat rs insufficient." Payton as pre yers listed in- lege, sp)oke he the Student of the job. A mittee. oderator or an The f o r mn publisher of N maxes, LivitieS'1 been active during the campaign. The groups sponsored a debate Friday night between representa-: tives of the candidates and have manned tables in the Russell House lobby to try to get student support for their candidates. Several straw polls on campus gave Nixon a substantial lead over Wallace and Humphrey. Parker and Hollings were rated about even. In the House race, Watson has been running on his record, em phasizing his work as a member of the House Committee on Un-; American Activities. Sloan has lashed out at what he termed Watson's "negative" voting record and said the district needs a man who will "do more than vote no on bills and proposals." ind: 'This Extendin more effective. "If you give a student a sense of responsibility," M c C a u s I an d added, "I think most of them will live up to it." McCausland advocated appoint ing students to the campus police for parking enforcement, concerts and night patrols. The senator, who is also sopho more c I a s s president. said the Board of Trustees should have stu-! International V Foreign Art, I Plans are underway for Week at USC Nov. 18 to Nov. The activities will include a val in the Russell House. An international gift bazaa be set up on the Russell House The annual banquet will f< lowed by international entertai be bought from officers of th< or Berkeley Egenes, Box U-131 7eak Prf nstances. "Before even he felt ] ran rise to his full stat- change r a crisis to bring out Vietnam o offer." make ag ality. A p)resident to- hw nunicate effectively on cag well as in public ap- chatge was in Columbia for The P ion of Dr. Benjamin right, bi sident of Benedict Col- to undlel re at the invitation of saidl. He Union Lectures Coin- "more re for theil r administrator, now more delh waday, newspaner. said lution. Moyer: from the reasons: triotic. He we - man per taking and abu ev-er wit Second tion vict sible for after his But, r gested, it was t thlecam Once i self froi ~*4d 4~'~the war And Joh tion fron Vietnam( 4 litically: V "I thiu aside cori ingness< Moyes a Elections Night Party Carolina students can wait out election night in a fes tive atmosphere tonight at the Russell House. The Student Union will sponsor an elections night party from 8 to midnight on the second floor of the Russell House. The build ing will remain open until 2 a.m. Each of the three campus political groups, the Young Democrats, the Young Re publicans and Youth for Wallace, will have a room with a television to watch elections coverage. Free food and drink will be served in the Assembly Room. A band, The Up setters Review, will provide music from 8 to midnight. Is Year g Rights' ient members. A similar proposal was submitted to the board by Student Body President Tom Sa Lane and a board committe was ippointed to study by-law changes -which could lead to closer con tact between students a n d the trustees. "They tried to appease T o m with the committee to study it," McCausland said, "but I feel the :ommittee won't be too fruitful." Veek Features 'ilm Showings celebration of International 23. n art exhibit and a film festi .r and foreign snack bar will Patio. !ature international food fol nment. Banquet tickets may International Students Club :sident' 'resident Johnson would not luch of what he has (lone in if he had the decisions to am. per, Moyers said, he might his "techniques," including ide toward dis'.ent. resident still thinks he was Lt couldl not get the ,people stand his motives, Moyers also said Johnson might be silient and open to Congress support," andl would seek ate on the Tonkin Gulf reso saidl he felt LBJ withdrew presidential race for three personal, political and pa .s "weary . . . a wounded tonally," Moyers said, after one of the most sustained ive attacks" any president istood. ly, he felt a very thin elec ry "might make it impos him to govern," especially landslide win in 1964. lost Importantly, Moyers aug. Johnson pulled out because e President, not his policies, pali centered around. he President removed him n consideration, dissent to vas toned down, Moyers said. rison could not get coopera. Hanoi as long as the North se felt his actions were po notivated. k the fact that he stepped tributed directly to the will >f Hanoi to come to Paris," aid.