September 15, 1995 Page 5 • The Battalion CINEMARK THEATRES tfere sfie comes ♦ 44 but what should she wear? tudents have differing views on the swimsuit competition issue • • • time, 'Do md party ur imajj yeah.’ Wei ?et done*; to a ack Dam aly.” )0 millioi lakefroi! lied boat, -omised, ng for it, I to £ k or i licrosofl d to irtuneof n, Gates gazine’s s richest I Jan Higginbotham e Battalion |^or 74 years, contestants in the Miss ^ America Pageant have paraded down the pageant’s runway in swimsuits, but at could all come to an end Saturday night. The pageant has been criticized in recent ars for exploiting women by having them splay themselves in only swimsuits and gh heels in the swimsuit competition, ewers can call the pageant’s 900-number iring the contest to decide whether or not e swimsuit competition will be included in is year’s and future competitions. A&M students have expressed an interest the subject, both criticizing and endorsing igeant officials for their decision to let ewers decide the fate of the contest. Tracie Martin, an A&M student who |on Alpha Phi Alpha’s national Miss Black id Gold contest, said the swimsuit compe- Ition should be eliminated from the Miss erica pageant. “Having had to compete in three levels of imsuit contests, I feel it undermines the e essence of beauty and of womanhood,” artin said. A&M’s contest does not include a swim- lit competition, but Martin was required participate in one at the state, regional d national levels of the Miss Black and lold competition. “On the surface, it seems harmless,” she id. “To actually be up there on stage in hat position was very uncomfortable.” Clint Eckhardt, a senior chemical engi- leering major, said the swimsuit competi- is an appropriate part of the pageant. “If the contest is truly about physical beauty, then the swimsuit contest should be a part of it,” he said. “If the contest is about the woman as a whole, then the swimsuit contest should be de-emphasized.” Miss America Pageant participants are judged on their performance in talent, poise and grace, swimsuit and evening gown competitions. "It seems harmless on the surface. It under mines the true essence of beauty and of womanhood." — Trade Martin Miss Black and Gold 1995 Eckhardt said officials should not be con cerned about the presence of the swimsuit competition, but with how the results of such contests impact the pageant’s outcome. “Maybe the whole question should be how much the swimsuit contest should be weight ed in the final results,” he said. “It is impor tant to be included, but it shouldn’t be the focus. It definitely should not be weighted as much as the other segments.” The Miss TAMU scholarship pageant eliminated the swimsuit segment from its competition several years ago. Christie Barton, second runner-up in the 1995 Miss TAMU Pageant, said the pagean t’s context should determine whether or not swimsuits are included in the competition. “In a pageant like Miss America, beauty is a part of it, as much as people are trying to get away from it,” Barton said. “That’s why pageants were started in the first place.” Barton said other parts of the pageant could be seen as demeaning to contestants. “If you’re going to take away the swimsuit contest, you might as well take away the evening gown contest,” she said. “There really isn’t that much of a difference between them anyway, especially now when the dresses are just as revealing as the swimsuits.” Eckhardt said the swimsuit competition allows judges to see contestants in a unique situation. * “I like the swimsuit competition because it shows a woman’s poise in a situation that most women would be uncomfortable in,” he said. “Sure, it helps to sell the pageant to men, but for the judges, it’s a chance to judge the women on being fit and for show ing poise in that situation.” But others say the competition serves no purpose. Scott Harper, a junior biology major, said the swimsuit competition should be eliminated. “The contest isn’t necessary,” Harper said. “It’s just for guys to look at. What does it have to do with anything?” Harper said there are other ways be sides a swimsuit contest to tell if a woman is beautiful. “In today’s society, when you think of an overall beautiful person, people automatically think of physical beauty,” he said. “You can also tell if someone is beautiful if they have their clothes on. You don’t have to take their clothes off to see that women are beautiful.” Pageant has a long history before television ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -In the beginning, there was no talent competition. There was no television. There was no tear ful walk down the Convention Hall runway. On Sept. 6, 1921, eight young men agreed to compete in a suit contest on the Seventy-five years and 68 queens later, what start- a tourism gimmick re gains an American institution. Through a depression, a world »ar, the women’s movement, oc- lasional scandals and hundreds (lawful talent acts, the Miss America Pageant has endured as in annual rite of fall that cele- ates American women. When millions of viewers tune ii Saturday for the 75th anniver- ary Miss America Pageant, the jivent they see will bear almost no (illation to the inter-city beauty jjageant won by 16-year-old mar- champion Margaret Gorman fWashington, D.C. The first pageant was dreamed by members of the Avenue lotelman’s Association as one of everal events in a “fall frolic” (limed at keeping tourists on the (Boardwalk after Labor Day. An 80-year-old man dressed as ng Neptune came ashore from a facht anchored in the ocean and led the women to Garden Pier, where judges picked Gorman. Campy as it was, word about the beauty contest spread quickly and far. In 1922, 58 women showed up for the pageant. Gor man lost out to Mary Katherine Campbell, Miss Ohio, who later became the only two-time winner. Some years were missed in the 1920s and ’30s. It was not official ly called Miss America until 1940. By most accounts, the biggest contributor to the pageant’s longevity was its marriage to television. When Lee Meriwether was crowned Miss America 1955 be fore a national viewing audience, the dowry was lucrative televi sion revenue and — perhaps more importantly — an image beamed into living rooms from Philadelphia to Phoenix. Instead of relying on news reels and newspapers to get pageant news, fans could now see it live. The image of Miss America walking the runway, roses in hands, fueled the dreams of countless young girls. “It’s like being a princess, be ing in fairy tale,” said one of this year’s hopefuls, Miss Vermont Jennifer Lynn Faucette, who dreamed of becoming Miss America as she was growing up. In the 1940s, the addition of scholarship money under then- executive director Lenora Slaughter was the first of many wood sometimes creates things and they don’t last. But this is heartland, this is America, this is a program that originates with them (volunteers),” she said. Television did not make the pageant, she said. “Of course, TV helped. But it was alive and thriving long be fore TV,” Maffett Wilson said. initiatives aimed at distancing the pageant from its bathing beauty origins. The Miss America organiza tion, through its state and local programs, now makes available $29 million in scholarships to young women annually. Miss America 1996 will receive a $40,000 scholarship and the other finalists Sat urday will receive ; from ars $8 P 00(> ngi to ! First lady plans to vote but $30,000. The money | keeps her opinion a secret must go to education : ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Even Hillary Clinton is getting involved in the Miss America Pageant’s swimsuit poll. But don’t ask how she’ll vote. "Except voting for my husband, 1 don’t tell anyone how I’m vot expenses or be for feited. The other contes tants receive a $3,000 scholarship or savings bond. What has kept the pageant alive and flourishing, according to pageant officials, is a network of 300,000 volunteers at state and local pageants that supple ment the work done by the pageant’s 14- person staff. “What’s made it last is that it’s a grassroots organiza tion,” said Debra Maf fett Wilson, Miss America 1983. “Holly- ; ing,” Mrs. Clinton said ; in a telephone chat with | Miss America Heather I Whitestone. Viewers of Saturday : night’s pageant tele- : cast can call in their i votes to determine I whether to hold the i swimsuit competition. Whitestone, who is ( deaf, spoke to Mrs. I Clinton on Wednesday ; at her farewell news ; conference as Miss America. She used a i special telephone system for the deaf. Clinton HAIR BIZ Store and Salon Regular Haircut $9.95 Special $ 6.95 Buy any Joico Conditioner and receive Shampoo Free! 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