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cZMr eMr ME A F*CE Cd CLEA SALE. Now through Saturday summer sale stock to y half off. Many items ai came in last week for a Our spring summer sal so make a trip to all th bargains from each sele HALTERS SHORTS PANTS SKIRTS BLOUSES KNIT TOPS SWIMWEAR PANTSUITS BLAZERS STRAWBERRY PATC1 town/ 254-2445/ 10 an SHOP FOR PAPPAGAI Downtown/ 252-1201 / TRULA'S EAST/ 3153 10 am to 6 pm TRULA'S WEST/ 1023 798-0278/ 10 am to9 g Private Charge/ Mastercharge/ I No Lavawavs on sale merchanrc /( MINb H M 7H/S IS... I A C4MEAEM. CE-Ne!' LANCE 7th we offer our,entire Du one-third to one ,e new arrivals which just I summer wear. iapplies to all locations - a shops to pick out the best ction. LONG DRESSES DAYTIME DRESSES 2 PIECE DRESSES ENSEMBLES at Pappagallo only) -IGH AND MEDIUM HEELS VOODEN SWEDISH CLOGS 'LATFORMS flGH HEEL SANDALS A/ Arcade Mall Down i to 6pm .LO/ Arcade Mall 10 am to 6 pm Forest Drive/ 782-8162/ Bush River Road/ sankAmericard/ ise. U LUM' Dra Roa Fis4 OPEN I1:04 2005 6 In F Gamecock Guilty Of Editorializing To the Editor: I usually refrain from writing letters to the Gamecock. However, your first page article of June 28 regarding the Student-Faculty Parking Committee was so ram pant with editorializing that I could not resist. I have no particular feelings on the subject, except that the cur rent parking arrangements are ob viously inadequate. Your news ar ticle implied throughout that the administration and faculty were more interested in deriving rev enue than in needed changes to im prove the situation. Now, this may be true, or it may merely repre sent the feeling of Ms. Woodruff (the reporter) and the editors. Res ponsible journalism requires that you separate fact from opinion the latter belongs on the editorial page, or the article should be iden tified as "an opinion." For example, you attributed a variety of somewhat bizarre pro posals to Dean Brunton and a number of destructive attitudes to faculty members on the commit tee. Yet all this character assassin ation was accomplished through interviews with two student com mittee members. Would it not have. been advisable to permit those who made the proposals and those who purportedly held the destruc tive attitudes to be quoted direct ly? If in fact you attempted unsuc cessfully to accomplish this, the article should have so stated. In a news article, it is irresponsible to quote parties (out of context, no doubt) through the mouths of those with opposing attitudes. I do not intend this letter to be interpreted as a cynical "put down" of the Gamecock. My pur pose is rather to suggest that you attampt to maintain a more ma ture, sensitive editor's pen. Steve Levenberg S SPECIAL ft Beer st Beef 5 & Chips )AM 'TIL 12:00 PM . Mion.-Sat. reen Street ive Points Dean's Wi Class To H By Bob Craft The ongoing Watergate mess is simply that, but among the nasty accusations and counter-accusa tions that fly by almost daily, there has arisen one srriall article which should not be overlooked. That is, the appearance of Mau reen Dean upon the scene of Wash ington politics. While her husband testifies before Senator Ervin's committee, this lady sits and watches. Her cool eyes and Nor dic beauty silently, almost non chalantly watching the whole af fair, and yet she gives the impres sion of being a tigress, ready to spring to her husband's defense. Mrs. Dean is certainly a refresh ing change from the Washington women we have come to know re cently: the uncouth Lady Bird, the vapid and uninteresting Nixon har em, and that loud-mouthed, fading Southern belle, Mrs. Martha Mit chell. Mrs. Dean radiates what none of those other women possess and she radiates it in great quantity. And that, for lack of a better term, is class. The last person in Washington who had something approaching Mrs. Dean was Jacqueline Kenne dy, but she has long since given all that up for wealth. It would be hard to say if Mrs. Onassis still re tains any of that former brilliance which madehersuch a likely Guin evere, but if she does, she has kept it hidden. She has been too ready to stoop to the level of trading punches with that odious pappar azzi, Ron Gallela. She has left too many of us with the impression that she is ready to put up her dukes and street fight and so has re linquished the title of The Lady of Lost Camelot. Mrs. Dean, on the other hand, carried herself in a manner that is both tasteful and elegant. Small things, like ever correct posture, even after many hours in the com mittee room, show Mrs. Dean to be a superior woman. Her mode of dress is at once both chic and ele gant and as stated before, she look s coolly upon the whole proceed Easy To Open Gamecock Charge Account *100 (Limit) I BRTTONS THE C COMPLETh SALES & SER Vi 91 1 Sum ter St. - Across fro e Gives earings ings as a countess upon a bar room brawl. Indeed, even the jaded eye-of television has been much taken with her, the first day spending al most as much time perusing her as it did her husband who is good looking in a close-cropped Certi fied Public Accountant's manner and Senator Ervin who; in my o pinidh, is-the finest looking elder ly Southern gentleman to appear since Burl Ives received his Oscar for his portrayal of Big Daddy Pol lit. It is with good reason that the cameras have been taken with this lady, she has style and grace. She is the epitome of what one would expect of a lady, a great lady. Calm, cool, with a hint of warmth in the eyes and ever at the side of her man. When Walter Cronkite inter viewed the Deans before Dean's ap pearance in front of the commit tee, Mrs. Dean sat with her hus band, quiet, quite elegant and very supportive of her husband. Unlike the garrulous Mrs. Mit chell, Mrs. Dean has not parried thrusts with the press. However, if she did, I think it may come out something like the Washington sec retary who was grilled by boorish reporters upon the death of the Aly Khan. This woman, when asked of her relationship with the Aly Khan said quite simply, "He had a great many friends, and I am pleased to think that I was among them." Such are the makings of a great lady. And so, gentlemen, I propose a toast to Maureen Dean, the new first lady of Washington. Volunteers Needed The Columbia Chamber of Commerce needs volun teers to help settle 70 ex iled Ugandan families in the Columbia area. This help is needed immediate ly. Call Sam Washington, 779-5350. - SALE 25% OFF INNER CITY* gL ADRAgS 2016 GREEN STREET (AT FIVE POINTS) YCLIST 3E-LlBERAL TRADE-INS mnthe 'Shoe -Open 11-5