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Fall has arrived and with it ... 0 Denim and Corduroy suits by Brittania and Faded Glory. eGentleman John and Bad Bob cotton shirts 0Over 1200 pair of dress slacks @60" fashion scarfs and socks 1221 Main St. (Ne. ................. . Home BAR Russell Hou Wednesday 5:00 Bar-B-Que Chicken Baked potato Corn on the Cob Cole Slaw Rolls &?01.o Cake Squares Tea or Lemonade Students, Faculty & Staff Welcomse UNIVERSITY DINING SERVICES "THE PEOPLE PL.EASERS t to Carolina Theatre) coming B-QU so Patio , October 8 -7:00 All for $ meal coupons and board plan cards valid Official says computer print-out denied by panel By MARK LEARY and MICKEY TRIMARCHI Gamecock Staff Writers A request for a computer print out, which would aid in the correlation of information on intramural injuries, has been denied by the Student Records Committee, according to Student Health Center Director Dr. Isao Hirata, Jr. This semester, the 40-question medical form that was used in the past has been abandoned. The questionnaire had been set up to be run through a computer but instead it was read manually. With more than 5,000 participants in the intramural program. this process is extremely time consuming, Hirata said. "IT GOT to be more of a hassle than a benefit," said Intramural Director Robert C. Dalrymple. "We didn't have enough personel to make the system work without the use of computers." The medical form and the initial program utlizing the computer were borrowed from a plan at the University of Massachusettes by Hirata. He studied the program there, which has been in operation successfully for several years, and decided to adopt it here. According to Hirata, the Health Center was to receive medical histories of each student participating in intramural activities and the intramural department would get a print-out of the members of each of the participating organizations. "THIS WAS the Health Center's number one priority," Hirata said. "Somehow our priority was nothing to the head of the Computer Center." Computer Center Director Jack noper said "The computer department can only 1oork at the request from a technical aspect. It (the proposal) is feasible but we must go along with the priorities for automation set up by the Records Committee. We are only a sub-committee." At a meeting of the Record Committee last week, a priorities list was drawn up for automation requests. Among the top of the list was the grading system and registration. "TO THE best of my knowledge, this requestby Dr. Hirata is not at the top of the priority list of the committee," Cooper said. Committee members could not be reached for comment. INJURIES From Page One REFEREES WHO are selected for the intramural football program must attend a three-day clinic instructing them on the officiating procedures of flag football. This clinic also includes how ti handle certain game situations. After this session, there is a 55 question written test that must be passed befor, that person is allowed to referee. "The pay for intramural officiating is higher than most in tramural programs across the nation," Dalrymple said. "The new pay program, which was started this year with the pay increases for every additional year a student stays with the program has helped the officiating." A first-year official receives $3 per game, second year $4, and third year and up receives $5. Dalrymple said that "if the pay goes any higher, the people will only be in it for the money." Supervisor of Intramural Officials Chuck Nichols said "we're not catching it all out there. If a boy gets his nose broken it's a little bit of both, sometimes it is accidental and sometimes it is the fault of the other players." Some connected with the program say tighter officiating and the use of pads may be the answer. However, both Hirata and Dalrymple feel the use of pads would not be helpful in aleviating the injury problems. "PADS WOULD mean the program would be ten cuts more vicious. Pads are not the answer," Hirata said. "The rules of in tramural foot ball, if enforced, are strict enough where pads are not needed." "WThen these teams practice, they don't practice the rules of the game," Dalrymple said. "If they want us to call the games tighter, we could, but there probably would be a penalty on every play." Nichols summed up the referees' feelings when he said, "What can be expected when some teams play like they are competing for $100,000 in every game." GU M - -~bi '~g'(ii over her face. "I swallowed all the juice first," she explained while peeling off her facial Bazooka. "I tried to get it as dry as I could." The fourth and final heat took a little longer than the others to *complete, as the six particpants just could not get it together. No one had a bubble to offer as time expired, so 30 more seconds were added. Doody Franklin, who prefers to work with Kiss gum rather than bazooka, rose to the occasion nevertheless, blowing it to balloon-like proportions to qualify for the championship round. The finalists had five minutes to show their stuff. The bubbles were rising more frequently now--big, strong, hardy ones--but no one could keep them up. They were bursting prematurely, and as ithe seconds died away. Jack Lewkowicz kept his composure long -1enough to spew one out which clinched first place and a two-pizza ,prize. "TiS IS really bad on the 'old moustache," Lewkowicz acknowledged, trying to scrape off the sweet, pink debris. "I'm not gonna talk for two hours," he added 24 he massaged hse se- aw