The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 28, 1983, Page 3, Image 3
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Up in the air
USC students examine a U.S. Air Force T-38 o
Cooper Library.
Fraternity to spi
From Staff Reports
USC's chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma will
begin delivering anonymous messages
Tuesdav to and frnm inHiviHnalc in thf>
greater Columbia area and the university
community in its first "Get It Off Your
Chest For Multiple Sclerosis'\promotion.
The event is held in conjunction with
Alpha Gamma Rho of Clemson University.
The chapter that raises the most money will
be presented a "Paw and Claw" award
before kickoff at the Carolina-Clemson
football game Nov. 19. All contributions
will benefit the local M.S. chapter.
"We need the support of the students to,
first off, help us raise money for M.S., and
secondly to win the award for USC. If only
one-fifth of the students would donate one
dollar, it would be $5,000 toward needed
M.S. research," Phi Kappa Sigma fundraiser
chairman David Wynn said.
Throughout the drive brightly illustrated
EYES
HEY MAM,
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WAVE FWl?M0WHAWk
vznszzM
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CUT OUT THIS AC
PIZZA DELIVEREE
ra T
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PIZZA
* * * : t435 Chas> Highwa
1 Small Single Topping Pin
m 2 Salads form our 32
I j Item Salad Bar and
j i 2 Large Ice Cold Cokes
h $8.43 Reg. Price
O 0"7 r->^U^4.^
| ~0?' neudie
| j 5.06 + tax Final Cost
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| Expires 11 -5-83
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na;a rass
Photo by J cm J?ckson
n display in fro.it of the reflection pool at the Thomas
i
insor fund-raiser
boxes will be on campus where individuals
may place messages and donations.
Envelopes with instructions will be
available at each box site.
Boxes will be at Thomas Cooper Library,
University Bookstore, Carolina Coliseum
and Andy's Deli. Other box sites include
7-11 convenience stores and Shoney's
restaurants.
The fraternitv will check the boxes rinilv
All messages will be personally delivered
and read to the message recipient by a Phi
Kappa Sigma member. Absolute anonymity
is guaranteed.
The event is Phi Kappa Sigma's first
community service project of the year, and
the members are anxious to begin, Wynn
said.
He said fraternity members will
"probablybe going around the parking lot
at the football game this Saturday to get
donations or messages for donations."
FAR OUT.U kE PEOPLE
, CRITICS re,but
/tHEY JUST r, LlkE,
I /REALIZ-E MY HAIK \S
J-/,v\/vw<\MO- A QTATF
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A&OUT SOCIETY.
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VJ-WAVE E.ULU I- K\ TOTALLY
, HUNGRY. HOW AS.OOT SOf^E. PI
) AND PRESENT TO GET
). OFFER EXPIRES OCTOi
"Abates """""""""ij
From CSt
FACTORY
y, 559 Sf. Andrews
1 g
:a Spaghetti Dinner j
Salad from our 32 Item II
c Salad Bar - Garlic Bread 1
; 0 and a Large Coke I ;
u $5.03 Reg. Price M
q -1.65 Rebate i.!
n 3.41 + tax Final Cost ||
/ No Other Specials Apply I
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From Staff Reports
Reactions to the United States' invasion of
Grenada are mixed among USC faculty
members familiar with the region and with
U.S. foreign policy.
All agreed, however, it will be important
to the Reagan administration that the operation
be concluded in a few days and our
troops pulled out.
Foreign policy specialist Paul Kattenburg,
a former state department official, said contingency
plans for such an invasion had been
in place for some time and that the timing
was influenced by events in Lebanon.
"THE DECISION to go and do it now I
think was impelled by the Lebanon bombing,"
he said. "What Reagan had in mind
was partly to take America's attention off
the Lebanese developments, partly to veil
any forthcoming retaliatory moves we may
be planning in the Middle East, and partly a
matter of maintaining a macho image."
"Certainly," Kattenburg said, "the move
can have a salutary effect by relieving
domestic frustration over the situation in
Lebanon."
Kattenburg said the decision to invade
Grenada was made at the National Security
Council meeting last Sunday (Oct. 23), after
the attack on the Marine headquarters in
Beirut.
The invasion, he said, can be judged on
three levels, both pro and con.
"LEGALLY, WK arc in an extremely
tenuous position. We have acted contrary to
the OAS charter and the arguments put forth
by the Organization of Eastern Caribbean
States are specious."
"Morally," he said, "the action is on the
one hand repugnant from the standpoint of
armed intervention in another nation's internal
affairs. Yet the situation in Grenada was
evidently so serious ? the terrorism to which
the people were being subjected was so terrible
? that the situation virtually demanded
intervention."
Politically, the cost may be too high, Kattenburg
said.
PlZZJ
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FREE COKES WITH A
BER 30, 1983
YOUR BSN19
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Your BSN nu'iiib vou iv ?i pro
nuMiis you vc .in otfkvr Yui st;irt
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ARMY NIK
BE ALLYC
cts to invasion
"The cost we'll incur in terms of adverse
l atin American and European reaction is
likely to offset any advantages we'll reap
from installing a more stable government."
BARBARA TENENBAUM, director of
USC's Latin American Studies Program,
said she sees the action as setting an extreme
ly bad precedent and destroying U.S.
credibility in the western hemisphere.
"This step was taken," she said, "to cover
up the serious mistake Reagan made in refusing
to see the late Grenadian Prime Minister
Maurice Bishop when he came to
Washington seeking aid from the U.S.
government.
"Bishop was willing to maintain neutrality
in Grenada," Tenenbaum said, "but the
Reagan administration can't accept neutrali
ty. You're either for us or against us in their
eyes, and since they're not comfortable with
the carrot approach they sent Bishop home
empty-handed and thus totally vulnerable to
the more radical elements in Grenada."
Chaitram Singh, a Latin American and
Caribbean political expert, disputed this view
of the operation.
"INDICATIONS ARK that the Canadians
view this as a liberating invasion,"
Singh said. "It had become evident that they
could not remove the repressive methods of
recent days by themselves, and they welcome
this opportunity to be free of the military
regime's terrorist policies and to begin a
return to parliamentary democracy."
Furthermore, he said, the United States
ana tnc other Caribbean nations viewed the
expansion of the major airport in Grenada as
a threatening act.
"Grenada's main exports are spices and
bananas," Singh said, "and they had very
little to offer in return for Soviet and Cuban
aid. About all they could offer was landing
rights in a strategic location ? a situation
understandably sensitive to Grenada's
neighbors and to the United States."
See "Faculty," page 7
. r
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