The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 27, 1982, Page 4, Image 4
Bus to provide
From Staff and Wire Reports
The Travel Center will sponsor a
Thanksgiving express bus to New York City
for USC students who need an economical
ride home for the holidays.
* The bus will leave Columbia Nov. 23
between 5:30 and 6 p.m. and is scheduled to
arrive in New York City Nov. 24 at 9:15 a.m.
It will return to Columbia Nov. 28 at 10:15
p.m. A round-trip ticket costs $75.
Forty-two people must sign up for the trip
for a bus to be furnished. The bus will stop in
m r1 \r~ ?u:?i?
>?U1V>6?, 11.vs., iUV.ilillUIIU, V rt. , VVrt&IUIlglUII
D.C., Baltimore, Md., Philadelphia, Pa.,
and New York City.
Students interested in the express bus
should sign up at the Travel Center, Russell
House room 209.
nnn
THE ANNUAL CYSTIC FIBROSIS BowlFor-Breath
will be held Nov. 6 and 7 at Park
Triangle Lanes, in West Columbia between 1
and 9 p.m.
Door prizes will be given along with prizes
for the most sponsors. For informaiton and
A /"II !-* 1
o^naui tvi ins, cuuutci i^nrisiopner tsaum
at 777-1324 or Elaine Kimball at 254-3718.
Cystic Fibrosis is the leading genetic
killer of young Americans, and there is no
known cure for the disease.
Visit Carolina Can
through(
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[ " c#\^G?ld
^
MUG CLUI
Draf
8 p.m.
| Mugs $1.00 for
Men
i La Strada
[j "The Home of
Qirillnn Piwri"
? WVVkVVVI ?- JL W
{ >gafc{
I NiTE OWL SPEC!
| $1.50 OFF Pizza and
1
g On Ordei s Called In From (
i j * ONE COUPON PER DELIVERY * E
I
' i La Strada Special
| Six Toppings
| Pepperoni Mushrooms Ground Beef
s Green Peppers* Onions Sausage
j 10.50 17. Of
Lasagna
g A delicious Large Lasagna Dinner in
;1 eluding a half dozen of our homemade
garlic rolls. 6.00
Catering for Large Parties
Available
1 Call For Information
S 788-4578
; We Deliver
W
i
PRESENT THIS COUPO
| $ 1.50 DISCOUNT 01
students econo
THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION for the
Advancement of Colored People will meet at
7:30 tonight in Currell College room 107. All
NAACP members and interested persons
are asked to attend.
nnn
iniii kuinalu mcdui\auu House, in
cooperation with the Governor's Council on
Physical Fitness and the S.C. Department of
Health and Environmental Contrbl, Office
of Health Education, is sponsoring the first
annual Ronald McDonald Volksmarch for
Love.
The Volksmarch (literally, people's walk)
will be held Oct. 30 and 31 at Sesquicentennial
State Park, located just north of
Columbia on U.S. Highway 1.
Registration for the walk is $5. For more
information, call Donette Welch at 786-7080.
nnn
AMERICA'S COLLEGE STUDENTS can
now use their traditional "blue books" for
something more than answering essay
questions.
They can win prizes and internships by
filling a booklet's pages with convincing
predictions of what the world will be like in
2000 A.D.
is9 Haunted House
Dct. 51st.
r more information.
, ??a,
B SPECIAL
125C
10 p.m.
New Mug Club I
ibers mL\
? y
We Deliver
In Our Hot Oven Trucks J
788-4578 J
Lasagna DinI
College Dorms After 9:00 pm
FFECTIVE THRU DECEMBER 31,1982 j I
Sicilian Pizza J
cn?? i o on? I
1/ (Jlll-C i tC. 011 If
Half Whole I
Mozzarella Cheese :
) Plain 6.50 JJ.50g
Pepperonl Sausage
Mushrooms Onions
Choice of Above
Toppings ' l.OOea. 1.50ea. 1
Drinks
Canned Soda .65
mi rrices include rax * s
Orders Accepted \
4:30pm until 11:00pm
Sunday Thursday
4:30pm until 1:00 am
Friday-Saturday
?
i
i
>N FOR AN ADDITIONAL
FF THE PRICES SHOWN
t
mical Thanksgh
news briefs
Sponsored by a manufacturer
headquartered in Minneapolis, the
Honeywell Futuristic Awards competition
asks college me., and women to nredict the
most significant technological developments
by the year 2000 and to describe how they
will affect world society, economy and
environment.
A panel of scientific and technological
experts will select 10 winners for the $2,000
cash prizes.
nnn
use RESIDENTIAL LIFE Services uses
dorms to house conferences during the
summer to alleviate rising housing costs.
Cynthia Steele, area manager conference
coordinator at Capstone, was in charge of
housing more than 2,000 people at the 38
different conferences held at Capstone this
summer.
"We are not trying to compete with
motels," Steele said, "but trying to provide
housing for participants in educational
conferences."
Conferences held at Capstone must be
educational ly related and sponsored through
someone at USC, according to Steele.
I Complete Line Of
I Stage Make-Up /^2
and Spirit Gum! ^
The House of Fal
1720 Main St. 765-246
Near Tapps
:
TON]
CHRIS to
A nTTTT fiT
HSf MiBPn t: c
Chris is contrit
National Lampoon
tVlP film A ??
?MV nil
A
WEDNESDAY OCT*
RUSSELL HOU
STUDENTS FREE V
?81? SB
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CAROIINA PROGRAM UNION
zing trip north
Capstone conferences cleared from
$40,000 to $50,000 this summer. This money
is used to help keep housing costs down.
nnn
OLIN CORP. will interview chemical
engineering and mechanical engineering
positions today. Also, Equitable Life Insurance
Co. will interview interested insurance,
management science and computer
science majors.
r or more lniormauon on interviews and
preparing resumes, contact the Career
Planning Placement Center at 777-3166 or at
Lieber College on the Horseshoe.
ruin
HANDWRITING ANALYSIS, basic math
and other short courses will be offered in
November at various Columbia locations by
the USC Division of Continuing Education.
Eight courses are offered in the program.Handwriting
Analysis, Sewing Secrets1
Professional I, and Sewing Secrets;
Professional II begin Nov. 1. Piano
KpvhnarH Oriont atir?n Imrol TT Knnino
Aav; VI IVfVI A JL WV^IUO ilUV .
3. Basic Math II: A Continuation begins
Nov..4. Fundamental Photography begins
Nov. 8. Basic Math: A Refresher Course
begins Nov. 9. Intermediate COBOL
Programming begins Nov. 16.
For more information and a free short
course catolog, call Steven Wray-Langer at
777-2589.
The GAMECOCK It the student newspa
pci m viic umvemiy ui souin urooni and
m?$99B5EB59 n published three times a week on
I Mondays, Wednesdays ai\d Fridays during
I the (all and spring semesters and weekly
a on Wednesdays during both summer
I sessions, with the exception of university
9 holidays and examination periods.
v jl\ t\ i Opinions expressed in the GAMECOCK
I are those of the editors and not those.of
V H the University of South Carolina.
| The University of South Carolina is an
9 equal opportunity institution.
V; The Soard of Student Publications and'
I Communications K the publisher of the
S GAMECOCK. The Student Media DepartL.
_ ? ment is the parent organization of the
ones i gamecock.
f ^ H Change of address forms, subscription
requests and other correspondence should
| be sent to the GAMECOCK, Drawer A,
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and receives funding from student
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IGHT
ULLER'S
mw nuun
, / '11a * '
gmnMHMlVflr
s
mting editor to
, and also co-wrote
imal House
OBER 27 - 8:00 pm
SE BALLROOM
Tim PUBLIC $2.50
JDK AS
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ISSUES