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Photo Contet RULES OF ENTRY ARE AS FOLLOWS: I. The contest is open to.all U.S.C. students faculty amid staff excluding GAMECOCK staffers and employees. I. Photographs should be permanent, unmounted, black and white prints no smaller than 4xS" and no larger than 8t1o". III. Each photograph must be accompanied by an entry form clipped from a current issue of The GAMECOCK. IV. First prize wil be $15.00, second $10.00 and third $5.00. Winners will be announced if the final issue of the summer GAMECOCK on August 9, 1973. All winnig entries as well as some of the outstanding non-winning entries will be published in the August 19 issue as well as the fall orientation issue of The GAMECOCK. V. All weekly entries are due on Wednesday at 3 p.m. These dates are June 13, 20, 27, July 4, 11, 18, 25 and August 1. VI. All photographs become the property of the GAME COCK. VII. Pbutographs will be judged by the GAMECOCK editorial staff. VIII. Photographs must not be identified in any way on the front. However, all should have complete identifi cation on the back. X. There is no entry fee. GAMECOCK PHOTO CONTEST Entrants: - Name ........................ Local Address ....................... U.S.C. Status ............. .10 a... Phone .................. Veto Continued "If the Chartering Commission Now they get some money from approves a new request, the final the Athletic Department and some authority will be President Jones. from student government. They This new commission will bypass want to be on firm financial Student Affairs with their recom- ground." mendations going straight to the president," Fidler said. Fde adta tmgtb presdent" Filer aid."dangerous" to set a precedent of CHEERLEADERS chartering a group which was not At the same meeting of the a true student organization, but Student Affairs Committee, the A USC Cheerleading squad appliedprpsltPeidnJoswhc for recognition. This request was tabled because of two committee "Tereqstwsabdpn concerns, F idler said.-igteotoeo htpooa, "We wondered if the cheer- h ad I hti prvd twl leaders were a typical group. It issovthprbe. not an organization open to any one who wants to join; only a picked, limited rnumber can be in it. Student organizations are sup- E . oO e posed to be open to all, and this one isn't. "Then there was the question of how they should be funded. - SALE- Gmcc 25% OFF from6studentgovernment The (ATaFIVEtOINTS)on.firm fnanil Wicker Book Facing the Lions, by Tom Wicker Viking Press, $7.95 A strange mixture of fiction and current history, Wicker, in the course of spinning a tale of power politics, lays down his phil osophy on the role played by the Washington press corps. The narrator of the story is surprisingly the Washington bureau chief for a large Northeasternnews paper. The surprise is that Wicker himself was bureau chief there for the New York Times. during the Johnson and early Nixon ad ministration. In many respects, the rather long novel (432 pages) is autobio graphical since both the narrator and Wicker are North Carolina boys and one gete confused as to who is saying what during some of the lengthy descriptions about Southern politics and mentality. The story centers around a mythical senator, Hunt Anderson, and his wife Kathy. Anderson is a junior senator who can't seem to wait his turn to get a shot at the White House. He begins by hold ing hearings on the misuse of mi grant workers. As a result of the hearings the major candidate is discredited. An derson, through his television ex posure during the hearings, be comes the prime contender for the ennsylvania Avenue residence. Bucking the Senate seniority, ie makes many enemies on his vay up and the party rebels at the iominating convention. Wicker shows with astute per eption how "the taste in the rnouth" of the highest office can .urn the head of the noblest of white knights. Anderson's head was turned from getting construc ive legislation on the books to al er the plight of the migrant work er But Anderson is portrayed as .he "gut fighter" who, once cor. winced he is destined to do some 'hing, puts his head down and ;craps with the best of them. He goes into the convention with the knife in his teeth. Wicker whips the reader with suspense. LOOI All you e Strahge Mix Anderson's wife flays influential delegates with a sexual presence that is near the metaphysical. The whole thing is almost com ical, except we never get an Indica tion of Wicker'sline between fact and fiction. Anderson is reminiscent of LBJ,, and his wife, of Ja6kie Kennedy. What a combination-cornpone and caviar. At any rate, Anderson is the fatalist who loves the battle. He wants to be in the are'n with the Christians he said, with has face dripping blood, sweat, and tears For anyone who loves the battle, the suspense is great. No one cries when the man buckles-facing the lions. PATRICK TYLER PRi Watch C Classifie K STUDE What SHE] COLUM across fros 4 Nightly Specia an eat from a .$1 TOM WICKE R amecock d Ads NTS... 'new at RATON [BIA INN t the 39 and up