University of South Carolina Libraries
News by Four 1 USC will nominate four students t0 participate in a,"Washington Summer Intern Program"1 providing practical experience In administrative, professional or technical government work. To be eligible students must have completed at least 60 hdurs by June. Undergraduates need at least a 3.5 and graduate students must be in the upper half of their class. Application blanks are available from the Vice President ' of Student Affairs in the Pendleton Live Band Every Friday & Saturday Night .at The TomFoolery. Specializing in Favorite Beach Tunes. Adm. $1.00 per perso Happy Huwr 8.9 p.m. BEER .25 What O.K., here's sometl Now, the purpose financing a little g Being from the Soi of water skiing. Foi say that that mear place like that? No We mean Beech Md the highest slopes And Beech has tei with lifts to service get some good chi arouuid and get wa Beech also has a winter long. If you * O.K., send me aN I * NAME____ U ADDRESS * CITY__ __ Um (This offer good anytm4 to interin Building and must be returned by t Feb. 26. ROOMS AVAILABLE Rooms are still available for the - spring- semester In all residence j halls except South Tower and 6 Sims. All full time students, in cluding Columbia residents may sign up for rooms in the Housing Office of the Pendleton Building. 1 COMPUTER COURSES Three computer programming courses - Introduction to Data Processing. COBOL Programming and Fortran Programming - will be offered spring semester. Ap plication blanks are available from John J. Powers at the College of General Studies in the Coliseum.' CREATIVE WRITING Freshmen interested in creative writing will have the opportunity to enroll in special sections of English 102 next semester. The Department of English is offering two sections devoted to writing short fiction and poetry. The classes will be taught in a conference-seminar arrangement. I Anyone interested in enrolling in one of these sections should ask his instructor to submit his name to Tim Gautreaux. who will teach the classes. SKI TRIPS The Cohimbia Ski Club sponsors Ire you g.ou Win / V(p Bahamas?Oo to Panam hing new: snow skiing. Dynamite. of this hype is to get you to talk your etaway to the mountains. Read on. ith, when you think of skiing, you natu 'get it. This is snow skiing. The best. A is Vermont or Colorado or some oth< pe. lountain, N.C. Yeah, North Carolina. E east of the Rockies, and that includes 1 different slopes, from beginner to each one. There are cozy places wher ow and something to drink, or mayt rm. lot of single people all over the mot are male, that means that there are a a EUUEEUUMMEEEI mm breshures and tiNng so I an p. STATE -.. JNTAIN DEPT. "1", P.0o.34 Sduring the seaon except the weekend of Dec *EUUEUEanE**...i rips to Beach Mountain or Sev4 )evils on the first and thh Vednesday and second and four 'hursday of each month. The bt iaves Maxcy Gregg Parking lot 4 a.m. and returns by 9:30 p.m. Transportation cost is $8. S ental and lift tickets are extr 4aximum total cost for one pers4 s $20. Both beginning and e wrienced skiers are welcome 3.amecock business i The Board of Student Co munication and Publicatic Wednesday elected Joe Rol business .manager of T Gamecock for the spring semesti Riley. a senior in journalisi tucceeds Jack Padgett who he he position for the past tA ;emesters. The appointment of Woo4 4inkle as advertising manager he paper was announced at t neeting by editor-elect Ji Nannamaker. Hinkle is also ournalism student. mq to do t r .:7/ 'OF . I.. MERS we AFK Amm ral tin o huerdh h,, but you entitles you er foreign fees and co (A lot less il jacket patch leech has "One Good I Vermont. all that jive. idvanced, transportatic e you can coupon out, 'e just sit shoot throui what's happi ntain, all Bahamas? F ignificant winter, go to tder this skiing busines ir 3X 277/BANNER ELI ember 27-28, 1980) ipital . W'4 For more information call Pat d Treadaway at. 252-3167. SAFETY FORUM I The second annual Insurance it Forum on Highway Safety, sponsored by the College of Business Administration as a ki public service, will be held Jan. 28 a. In the Campus Room of Capstone. mn The state's insurance industry x- provides financial support for the d. forum. names nanager, m- The board acted on a request by ns retiring editor Carl Stepp for more ey adequate compensation for staff he members. r. Under a revised budget sub n mitted by Wannamaker and ap ld proved with slight modification by the board. advertising sales commissions will be increased and stipend payments to the staff will be more than doubled. of First issue of the paper under the new rules and staff will be Mon m day. February 2. The Gamecock is a not published during exam periods. with yourse iak? I .--. - *- *: alc?Or-worseyt-gom emales with whom you can become you can dig it. If you don't know how t< lon't have any equipment, we'll rent il e your own equipment, what are you a pitch:Beech Mountain features a gift c to two days of skiing. The package ir mplete equipment rental. All for unde you have your own skis and stuff.) Yv and a button which bears the catchy, a 3eechkommer Deserves Another." Wei Even when you figure up your own foi in, it's still cheaper than the Bahama: write your name on it, etc., and mail ih with some brochures and stuff tU aning. .C.? Lauderdale? Tell those scenes t Beech Mountain and ski. End of ad. *EEEEUEUEU my heart of heats. [, N. C. 2S604/TELEPHONE 7 *egs . n es.,A44mgIN.e Pledge signing required Upon registering at the University, each student is required to sign a paper to the effect that he will not violate any rules of the University, or of state and federal government. According to Joel Gottleib, assistant to the state attorney general, this pledge does not necessarily take any rights away from the student. "It is merely that a student agrees to abide by the rules of the. University."' he stated. "Signing or not signing does not breech rules of the University." "It's information for the students: that the University has rules which they want the students to obey." he continued. "Students are liable to penalties under the rules whether or not they sign the pledge." "Actually, the University can't force you to sign anything which is illegal." "The code was started two years ago by the board of trustees, and the attorney general of the state approved the wording," stated Brunton. "It is a clear un derstanding to the student of what is expected of him." If over la owhere?) mcquainted, and > ski, we'll teach to you, cheap. waiting for? ertificate which cludes your lift r thirty dollars. ou'll also get a md game phrase r it proudly and 3d, lodging and E. Now, cut the I it to us. We'll at will explain a kiss off. This GUGChEE UU T l U48824 At the.nw ,Vi 15 "John and Mary" Take Mia Farrow and Dustin Hoffman, sprinkle in equa parts of flashback and forseen plot and whet de You have? Why, it "John and Mary" of course. Very simple. But if you came In t o le tose ite title momentarily flash on the screen, It woWM take you 9 minutes to find that out. Morning breaks, and the movie apens, en the WW where: Mia and Dustin rest in orthopedic cmfort, and proceeds through the mental conflict and confrentation of arrangjng the arrival of both at exactly the same point by the end of ths show. Dustin plays a somewhat swinging furniture designer plagued by thoughts of lovers past Ond confrnted with lover present and future. His valiant effort te preserve his solitary ways against the encroachments of a woman he met and mated only the night beefre becomes a mental subterfuge when the idea finally dawns upon him that he has unwittingly stumbled upon what he wanted in the first place. Mia, or Mary, it turns out, has been having an affair with a politician whose dictum of make love not war apparently applies to those other than his wife. The pair makes two half-hearted attempts to leave each other only to wind up back where they started, in bed. As the curtain closes across the screen, they finally tell each other their names, presumably creating an unshakeable bond between them until at least the end of the movie, a full 20 seconds away. John Mortimer's screen play serves to fill up the time with the plot but Is notably lacking in character development. The people are there but there is no sense of identificatop. It is as if they were pulled out of a hat and placed before the audience for its approval. Peter Yates did not succeed in pulling more character from the actors with his directing. The movie lacks all the attributes of greatness. That however doesn't make it a bad movie. It keeps the kids off the streets if they are old enough to get in and it provides passable entertainment. In all probability though it won't be remembered anywhere except on the 20th Century Fox ledger books. Center stores student data By ROXANNE BRADFORD sent home, or when an emergency Staff Writer arises and a student must be Contrary to popular belief. the located in a hurry. computer center at USC doesn't The service numbers that are really have a secret plot to take sent to the draft boards are sent over the freshman class, and the from the computer center. So woe forms they sent to be filled out unto the student who doesn't give aren't really designed to be en- the center his correct service durance tests trying to blow un- number (he coud M!! . (. suispectigg stpdents' mJn4s. *V f.-Ahein The freshman class won't even formation on all of the stdents, be registered by computer next the computer center sends out semester. They will know the joy of forms. registering for themselves. These forms can really be The computers are used like easy as taking a test with a cheat large file cabinets in which the set seilyi h tdn information about every student at redthdicios USC is kept. the information is Tedrcin a ota h w used when the students' grades are paeaaranpucoeti HELP WANTED whrthrarblksite Part time work for man or cretifraini o led woman student. Must have onteonhadam home currently in Columbia Tecdsta r eddt area and drivers license. Non- anwrtefotfoeshtae dull work, knowledge of ntebc fth te.S hr Photography helpful but not VOIhvi. necessary. Large old Columbia We se ftecmue company. Only apply if mihyopltouegse llte need work. Loafers stay-a-way. ha ftecmue cec Near U. S. C. 81.60 per hour. Apply Manager P.O. Box 6707. cne,si hti sntvr Thlmi.s c e ie vte nuears tare,u eventuaoly,eitrwft bead ietablent Weo tCanmutr cntr.Sove theShenter hnscangetrservic inrmaounrnspecifate stuents ages.s Theseformsndnleaalyher. easykasrak,ngsutest,wdteaschea sweatershebeautctulns cleancedn,ayt tarte w We'eejrt e ther aweank f h fo canswtefoto.n he r m eeligh sopeeyrgse l h