University of South Carolina Libraries
.H.t Four university students and one non-student charged with resspassing in the Russell House began standing trial Wednesday. The fifth defendent, Mrs. Bar bara Herbert, is defending herself. The defense claimed that, ac g to South Carolina law, passing is for entering private operty after due warning. Since is was state property and the endents were not warned not to the building the lawyers ed there were no grounds for ant. The a Market Monday through Friday 12:10 to 5:0 p.m. A STUDENTS who have materials in the Crafts Shop, please pick them up before the end of exams. If you don't, they become the property of The Crafts Shop. The last day to pick up your materials is June 3. Call 777-4&% for more Infornation. GRADUATES: Would you like to break into sales. national company? SALES CON SULTANTS specialize in filling sales jobs only. Some of the companies we represent have starting salaries of $10.000 for graduates with any degree. For confidential interview call 779 *23. Sales Consultants, 2726 Middleberg Dr., Columbia. S. C. RON: Maybe we ought to forgive Wade and Kathy for their mistake, cause we can always make up for lost time. Gail. WADE: It's the last Flea Market of the year but thank goodness not the lait of us. (I hope). Mae West II. TiO TeH GAMECOCK STAFF: Thanks for being you and making our jobso "interesting." Kathy and Gail. PERSONAL. INCOME TAX RETURNS "ERVICES" 3702 Rosewood Drive. Telephone 782-4222. Established 1947. L-EGA-. PLEASANT TURN-ON. South American herb. Brew like tea. Great with lovemaking. Hurry before legislature turns us off Quarter pound $8.50. Kilos $60.00. Money order or check. Odyssey Imports. Box 145. ConwaY. Mass. 0134. COl-.EGF STUDENTS!!!! Earn $75 per week while in school. flexible hours. Earn S165 per week this summer in your own home town. Age 19 or above. Have use of a car and neat appearance. Call 256-1907. IIL, Ili,PI W,*'ANTED: Good position open for display and window man. Must be capable of trimming ladies fashion window. Part-time or full-time college student may apply. Free hospitalization and other benefits. Apply in pe-rson. Allan's 1619-21 Main St. FOR SALE: Parachute main reserve harness $75 Call 777-4519 or come by 110 Waccamaw after i p.m. C'TWN TYPING of all types of papers. Quality paper furnished. Contact day or night. Mrs Horne. 787-8836. TYPING - Various papers, theses, disser tations. Electric typewriter. 15 years ex itrience. Call Mrs. Stokes. Day or night. 782 (K147 Prompt service. \Pit1tTNIENT roommate for summer wan tvd 525 per month. 1721 Pendleton Street. FtR t %I,: 8mm Sound Movie Camera, sound projector. three lenses and tripod - very good condition - di for $V5. Mario Berguistain - 777-14 ik 99H1. e:tt. 3thl. **' FORS.\LE: Nikon F Photor'ic Tn 50mm 1.4-for 1225. Call 782-7687. lII('Y'.ES: Quality to speed Men's and I.adies' models from Europe. Call 254-400! or 254 -4512 clean After all is shed and done, your soul may be saved., . .but your contacts need help. They need Len sine. Lensine is the one con- '9 tact lens solution for com plete contact care... preparing, cleansing, and soaking. There was a time when you needed two or more different lens solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. No more. Lensine, from The Murine Corn pany, makes caring for contact lenses as convenient as wearing Just a drop or two of Lensine coats and lubricates your lens. This allows the lens to float more freely in the eye, reducing tearful irritation, Why? Because Lensine rials co Magistrate H. E. "Buck" Watts denied all the motions. One motion said that the warrants for the defendents arrest did not include the day or time they were trespassing. The prosecution was permitted to change the warrants to include this fact. Since Gerald P. Sammon was a non-student and the other three defendents Paul A. Gumm, Lynn A. Herbert, and Paul E. Foxworth represented by the lawyers were students the lawyers asked that Sammon's case be heard separately. In another of the twelve motions to dismiss the case the defense attornies summoned Gov. Robert E. McNair, State Law En forcement Division Chief J. P. Strom and Assistant Attorney General J. C. Coleman. McNair did not appear. Through these men's testimonies, the defense tried to prove that the judge had been a party to a meeting in the gover nor's office with university and law enforcement officiuls after the incident and therefore Watts should disqualify himself. During an afternoon session that Lovers ro campus There are hundreds of bar tenders and lovers roaming the USC campus following this semester's Short Courses. Lovemaking with 250 par ticipants and bartending with 200 headed the enrollment this spring. Rap session to be taped by WIS-TV John Marion, an English graduate student, and Jim Bradford, Student Government vice-president, are coordinating a "rap session" to be shown on WIS TV next week. A panel of four students, Eric Wyka. Mike Rierson, Richard Hines and Michael Ball and three professors will discuss USC problems. The discussion will center around the recent campus demonstrations. SNiIMEt WORK: Earn $1.200 to $1.500 this %inmer working in your own home town. 15 to 211 hours per week. This is first time this op porlunity offered to students. Call 787-7233. goodc ses thE is a compatible. "isotonic" solu-. lion, very much like your eye's nat ural fluids. Cleaning your contacts withc Lensine retards the build-up ofb foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Len sine between wearing periods as sures you of proper lens hygiene.5 You get a free soaking-storage case with individual lens compart - ments on the bottom of every bot It has been demonstrated the improper storage between wear not yoL :x>ac ntmue started late because several prospective jurors were over 4 and had to be excused, four more jurors were disqualified because defendents a fair and impartial trial. The case will be continued at 10 this morning in Watt's courtroom in the Richland County Law En forcement Center. Executive program planned USC College of Business Ad ministration will conduct its firs Executive Development Program of 1970 June 4-19, Elbert Helton, director of the USC Management Center, has announeed. This year marks the first time the two-week program will be offered twice in the same year. Application and enrollment information is available from the Management Center, USC College of Business Administration, Columbia, S.C. 29208. spam y 100's The Short Course Committee has received full committee status in the University Union and will be chaired by Bill Hummers in the fall. It had been a provisional committee under the lectures committee until its enthusiastic response this semester. The only problem marring spring courses was late publication of the brochure. Enrollment was apparently not affected. Student response will insure the continuance of Witchcraft, Polluted Waters, Budgeting, In surance, Lovemaking and Bar tending. Fall courses should in clude Auto Mechanics, The New Left, Graffiti, Karate, Students and the Law, The Peter Principle and Science, Fantasy and Mythology. Short Courses are flexible and each semester's response deter mines the course matter, meeting time and whether or not the course will be kept. At enrollment time students may establish any course merely by gathering enough.. in terested people. Anyone wishing more in formation should contact Stephanie Fiedler at 3505. soul ings permits the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye ir ritation and in some cases can endanger your vision. Bacteria can not grow in Lensine be cause it's sterile, self -s'anitiz ~. and antiseptic. Lensine . .. the soulution for 'mplete contact lens care. Made the Murine Company, Inc. S q.. DonI Wesley n takes S.C By HARRY HOPE Staff Writer The Rev. Don Bundy is leaving the Wesley Foundation on campus after eleven years of service to Carolina. The minister has seen three changes of personnel in the other campus religious centers. Now he has been assigned to a pastorate in Belton. "I promised myself and my wife that I would do this as soon as an opportunity came," he stated in an interview yesterday. "Mediocrity scares me . . . " "Like most of my southern brothers, I have such a learning sentimentality that I have to guard against it." Before the University built Russell House and expanded University Union, the religious centers handled most of the ac Stations broadcast Cockfigh t A statewide network of at least 16 stations will join the Gamecock Radio Network for broadcast of "Cockfight '70", Carolina's annual spring intra-squad football game tonight. Kickoff time for the climax of the Gamecocks' spring practice will be 7:30 p.m., and air time for the broadcast will be 7:25 p.m. Bob Fulton, "Voice of the Gamecocks ", will handle the play-by-play. Stations that had ordered the Cockfight broadcast as of early this week included: WIS Columbia, WCRS Greenwood, WBAW Barn well, WRHI Rock Hill, WWBD Bamberg, WELP Easley, WEKD Kingstree, WALD Walterboro, WDSC Dillon, WWMC Moncks Corner, WLAT Conway, WHCQ Spartanburg, WMRB Greenville, WGCD Chester, WLOW Aiken, and WKDK Newberry. onle But lo Nova's Magic-Mi lacquer fini Nova's choice of three standard engines: 4, 6, or V8 Nova's room for five pasengers and their luggage Noova's bias beltet ply tires Nova's ge Becausi with a N< on other ( Maybe lundy unister pastorate tivities that the Union now handles. Now, according to Bundy, the centers can concentrate on social action and other facets of campus life. He believes that the University community is more urban oriented than the Columbia community. "The job of the church is to do what needs to be done. How do you get meaning fi-om all that chaos on campus? We've got to bring order out of chaos. "How do you relate to the fact that USC has more of an urban climate than the city itself? What is the relationship? You've got to say yes to the largeness, the im personality. Use it, bring meaning into life," Bundy said. "So many people refuse to deal with the situation. They pretend that life is some other way than it is. People don't want to struggle. But you've got to say 'yes' to the struggle - only when you do that do you live. People who try to avoid the struggle don't. Summer Gamecock one dollar. Subscriptions to The Gamecock during the summer are $1. The paper will be published weekly during the University's summer sessions for the first time this summer. John Gash, a rising sophomore from Charleston, has been named editor for the sum mer. Marshall Dukes will serve as business and advertising manager. Subscription money will be taken at The Gamecock offices. Anyone interested in reporting, photography, business and ad vertising or office work for The Gamecock during the summer should contact Gash, Dukes or Gene Haney, chief photographer. You coy of those ok what Nova' Nova's glove anti-theft coi ignition keywiho warning buzzer Nova's cigarette or acrylic lighter 'U Nova's wider tread front and rear Nova's four transmission choices t a lot to talk about. a you get so much more value va. Things you just can't find a ars anywhere near the price, a that's why Nova is such a big va:A medcanton.i SLED di (Continued from Page 1 "We try to teach all the publc to recognize these most abused drugs," Bryman said. SLED's display includes love beads, meditation stones and "hippy handouts." Bryman said the display was just for the cuious and was not saying that long hair. are drug abusers. SLED has at present no plans to expand its education programs and can only hope the lectures are effective, according to Bryman. In Richland County, four officers and Sheriff Frank Powell give similar presentations. The only area college where talks are given is Columbia Bible College, ac cording to Lt. J. H. Levearne. The County lectures are also primarily on the hazards of drugs. While USC and SLED officials say the heroin use in the area is very small, Levearne said, "Heroin can be bought in Columbia any time, if you have the contact." About the effectiveness of the talks. Levearne said, "We go out and make a talk and if we keep one person from taking dangerous drugs, we feel it's been worth the trip." Detectives from the City force also present shows to schools and splays civic organizations, priparily an their own tinte. A spokesman for the tiverslty and law enforcement groups said it was doubtful that a USC *%1 course or education program would come about under preont conditions, but SLED's traintig program is open to anyone who would like to enroll, according to Bryman. Prof. Hahn to be given B.A. chair Prof. Herbert R. Hahn of the College o; Business Administration has been appointed holder of the Real Estate, Property Finance and L rban Development endowed chair. Hahn will advise students and professionals and will work in establishing training programs with realtors and bankers. The chair provides a salary supplement to an outstanding faculty member to help develop real estate and property finance programs. S. C. Savings and Loan League and the S. C. Association of Realtors supports the chair. Play has hysteria By HARRY HOPE Staff Writer Mass confusion reigned last night as the University Theatre presented its closing production of the year, "Marat-Sade." The confusion was intentional and the -play was a notable endeavor in surrealistic theatre (if such planned madness can be classified at all.) The audience was subjected to utter hysteria, well planned and well-executed. It seems the Idea is to lead the unsuspecting audience just to the brink of insanity and leave it staring into a murky pit populated with underlife and other sub-human missing links. If this poetic description doesn't make you want to see the play, just take my word for it and go. John Carpenter (the student, not the Geology professor) played a major role as the herald. (I'm sure about this, because my program says so.) He was the major link between the groups of missing links. He stole the show - again. Kevin Kelly was a passable Marquis de Sade, and Jack Chandler was a better Jean- Paul Marat. Michele Harrison played a succinctly nervous Charlotte Corday. The cast was unified under the direction of Stephen Coy. Every action on stage was worked out in det6t1, and at no time that I could see was there anyone "sIgking off"~Tn playing his part of a mentally incompetent. As the play ended, several members of the audience rose for a half standing ovation. The play was revolution, and the male nurse-bouncers seemed to have learned their parts well under the tutelage of the National Guard last week. It is a good thing this play was not produced last week - with some of those lines it would have been raided by SLED. The end of the play is most significant. The cast shined mirrors into the audience, probably telling them that what they were seeing on stage was really a manifestation of themselves. It was a completely exhausted cast which straggled off stage, and an excellent ending to a great season highlighted by "Oncine," "Pirates of Penzance," "Orpheus Descending" and "No Exit." ild buy small cars. you don't get. Nova's tment day-night Nova's k rearview mirror more usable luggage capacity Nova's rear windows that roll up and down Nova's cargo-guard luggage compartment - Nova's forward mounted door Jock buttons 2. EmNova's flush-and-dry rocker panels Nova's computer selected sprmngs Nova's inner fenders front and rear oiler. It.offers what more people want. LIong with a resale value that'li make ome of those other cars seem even Putting you Nurt, keeps us first.