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chuck dean's Random Patterns On the streets with me, Chuck Dean . . . Karolyn Stiglbauer, English sophomore ? Chuck Dean: So Karolyn, how did you feel about Saturday's game? Karolyn Stiglbauer: Ecstatically happy! CD: Sure Karolyn, you sound enthused. How are you doing this semester? KS: Ecstatically good! CD: How many times have you called home for money? KS: I live here. CD: So, how many times have you gone home for money? KS: I live at home. CD: Karolyn, you're not making this easy for me. How many fights have you had with your ma about money? KS: Many, many. CD: Thanks Karolyn. Yvonne Penn, medical studies sophomore ? Chuck Dean: So Yvonne, what are you studying to do? Operate on people's hearts and lungs? Yvonne Penn: No, not exactly. I'll be working more with machines. CD: So, you'll take broken machines and fix them if they're knocking inside? YP: No, I'll be doing lab work and working with thf ni?w mpHiral machinprv HD What did you think of that game? Pretty emotional wasn't it? YP: Considering that I was on the outside looking in, I thought it was a disgrace! They had no stamina! Tiffany Wengrow, psychology freshman ? Chuck Dean: Tiffany, are you related to that MTV singing sensation Tiffany? Tiffany Wengrow. No, but a lot of people ask me that. CD: And they should, Tiffany! Are you sure you're not disguising yourself here at USC, you know, just to get a decent education? TW: No! CD: Do you do any kind of lip-synching? TW: Me and some people did at Derby Day. CD: You're a greek? TW: Yeah, I'm a Delta Zeta pledge. CD: Has anyone called you "dizzy" yet? TW: Yeah, my boyfriend. CD: Did you slap him, Tiffany? TW: Yeah. CD: Good. Lynn Skews, psychology freshman ? Chuck Dean: Lynn, do you know Tiffany? LS: Tiffany? CD: Nevermind. Did you have a nice fall break? LS: Yes 1 did. I mainly sat around the house with my parents. CD: Did you get on their nerves? LS: No, they're pretty cool. CD: What does your mom do? It's not illegal is it? LS: No, she's an elementary school teacher in Myrtle Beach ? that's where we live. CD: Tell me Lynn, is that you and your friends that con aI.. J ^.1 i._* 11 * 1 sianuy urag me sinp ? yening vulgar things, drinking beer and playing Bon Jovi entirely too loud? LS: No, that's mainly tourists. It's pretty dead there now because of the season and the Pavillion is closed. CD: I bet you can play a mean game of pinball, being from Myrtle Beach and everything. LS: No, I can play pool. CD: Are you looking forward to Thanksgiving break? LS: Yeah. CD: Tell me Lynn, do people in Myrtle eat turkey or swordfish on Thanksgiving? LS: We eat turkey. Grant Gibson, business freshman: Chuck Dean: Where are you from, Grant? Grant Gibson: Macon County, Georgia. CD: Really? WOW! Are your parents bootleggers? GG: No. CD: Tell me Grant, what is it about the Macon County Line and booze? Wasn't that a movie? GG:I don't know. It is a little behind the times there. CD: Would you encourage people to vacation there? GG: It's a nice town, but you know, I don't plan to live there. CD: Where do you live on campus? GG: Bates. CD: Really? WOW! are there a lot of rats and roaches over there? You know they can crawl in your ears and nest don't you? GG: No, I haven't seen any rats or roaches. CD: Are you sure vou're narents aren't bootleg gers? GG: Yeah, they're not bootleggers. THE GAMECOCK THE GAMECOCK is the student newspaper of the University of South Carolina and is published three times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly on Wednesdays during both summer sessions, with the exception of university holidays and examination periods. Opinions expressed in THE GAMECOCK are those of the editors and not those of the University of South Carolina. The Board of Student Publications and Communications is the publisher of THE GAMECOCK. The Student Media Department is the parent organization of THE GAMECOCK. Change of address forms, subscription requests and other correspondence should be sent to THE GAMECOCK, Box 85131, University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. 29208. Subscription rates are $18.00 for (1) year, $10.00 per fali or spring semester and $4.00 for both summer sessions. Third class postage paid at Columbia, S.C. THE GAMECOCK is a licensed student organization of the University of South Carolina and receives funding from student activity fees. comic-urama oecause 01 Oliver aione s up-coming movie version. So see it quick before your mother sees the flick! Tickets are $5 and $10 on weeknights, $6.25 and $12.50 on weekends. Show dates are November 11 and 12, 16-19, 25 and 26, 28, 30 and December 1-3. It's Friday night and you go to a play that ends by 10:30. What do you do? Well, if you're at Trustus, there will be live music from area jazz bands starting at 11:15 p.m. If you go see the play, admission is $2.50; if you come just for the band, admission is $5. Two Thirty Eight, a pop/rock band from Atlanta, is giving a free show Sunday, 8 p.m. in the Russell House ballroom. Campus Advance, a nonprofit student organization, is sponsoring the show. Hansel and Gretel, produced by the Columbia Lyric Opera, will open tonight, 8 p.m. at the Township auditorium. The University Orchestra, directed by Donald Portnoy, will be playing the score. Hansel and Gretel is a student production, and should prove to be a great show. Tickets are $12.50 for adults and non-students, and $6.50 for students. Show times are 8 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Sunday. Greenpeace is sponsoring a music festival at Rockafellas' Saturday to protest Savannah River Plont'c new nrr?rhir>tir?n reartnr T av Oniet Awhile. Vectors, Cherry Orchard and Gigantic Orange Question will be performing. The show begins at 6 .m. and 50 cent draft will be served. All proceeds ill go to Greenpeace. Wk: ' Dan Rogers and Cindy Dean Ott rehearse their star mm is ine nrsi project of Kobby Benson s hlmmaki JsSf ^ ^ T I -JLheir self-titled debut album featuring: "I WANNA BE LOVED" || "SLIP OF THE TONGUE" "LOVE DON'T LIE" ^ Producer: Andy Johns & Gregg Giuffna I Executive Producer: Gene Simmons KrjQJR J Heralding the arrival of Simmons Records ** Krilfl 3E ^ Ufr^', Bifkfi SIMMC^NS ftCCOtt* (Om Features' Weekend Local acts play for Greenpeace By SUZE and TOJO Features folks Ah, back to school, back to work. Some of us a little later than others, but that's a different story. Sorry, guys. So what is up for the weekend? Trustus Theatre's Talk Radio opens tonight. The show is about a Morton Downey Jr.-esque radio talk show host whose program is going national. Quite a bit of attention is being paid to the j i r* /"vi* fx ?_ WUSC: student-run rs Alternative ft By JULIE STUEMPFIG Staff writer USC's student-run radio station WUSC-FM isn't different from every other station in the area by accident ? it's purely intentional. WUSC, located at 90.5 FM on the radio dial, is an alternative station. In other words, the music played on WUSC can't be heard on other area radio stations, said WUSC Music Director Seana Baruth. WUSC has had an alternative format since the late 1970s, when the station's power was increased to 3,000 watts. Baruth said that, as she understands it, the format was changed partly because the power boost almost made WUSC competitive with other area stations. Because the campus station is not commercial, had it played the same type of music other stations played, those stations might have lost many of their listeners. College stations also have a tradition of playing alternative music, Baruth said. "There are different levels of alternative music," she said. "Some alternative borders on commercial, but WUSC is an educational station. Our staple is new bands with debut records, independent labels and obscure major-label bands." Sometimes listeners will hear songs by wellknown groups, but they are not supposed to be the songs that have appeared on Music Television, popular songs or those played on other local stations. "We're avoiding sounding the same all of the time," Baruth said. "We hope that by exposing new bands continually, people who listen will walk away with something new and different. I'm not saying they'll love everything they hear, but with attentive listening, I think almost anyone can find and enjoy really creative things they never knew existed." WUSC offers three-hour special-interest shows most weekdays. These include experimental music such as Massive Metal Monday nights; blues and the Almost Acoustic folk program Tuesday nights; Blast from the Past, featuring oldies, and a hardcore show called roles in Radio Waves, or The Day I Said Uterus o ng class. HA - jH JE k, J| i| , j Tracks: 5 Points, Old Zesto' Record Bar: Dutch Square j Netv Location!: Richlanc idio irmat station i Raucous Waves Wednesday nights; and a dance show and Purple Lagoon reggae showcase Thursday nights. There are about 35 WUSC staff members on the air and about 70 DJs in training. Music is played from 9 a.m. to midnight daily. Any student, staff or faculty member may become a DJ by agreeing to conform to the station's policies and passing the required tests after a training period. The station conducts training sessions at the beginning of both the fall and spring semesters and also has a summer session. Baruth said she hopes more people, especialL Benson'* semester From staff reports What should radio DJs be j to say on the air ? especiall That's the comic subject first short film Robby Benson filmmaking class will produ weekend during the group "hands-on" shooting. The script, which Benson < from those submitted by his < 38 students, is derived from occurrences at local radio The film will be a family ai was written by Cindy Dean C seven-month-pregnant, morn at the station ? and her hi John Ott will direct the film Waves, or The Day I Said Uu the Air which stars his wife tingly, a pregnant DJ who sti HHMr* trouble. Both the Otts are pursuing 1 n the Air. The of arts degrees in media arts a Dan Rogers co-stars as the HBPnfSllP' Ps!"u c' ' "fc;:ha ! s Location 779-6046 Mall, Columbia Mall 1 Fashion Mall seives Carolina ly students, will tune in to WUSC in the future. "I know that neonle are more comfortable listening to music they know and can sing along with and that a new style can be unsettling," she said. "But I hope people will not automatically tune out when they hear new music." She also said she hopes that those who stereotype the people who work at the station because of clothing and hairstyles will move beyond prejudice and be more open-minded about the music played. "WUSC isn't an outlet for fashion, it's an outlet for music," she said. ? class to film 's 1st project station manager.- Rogers is a partallowed time student who works at the S.C. y preg- State Development Board in Columbia. of the The film is based loosely on Cindy i's USC Dean Ott's experiences at WSCQ. An ice this announcer, amazed at how the uterus 's first expands to 500 times its normal size during pregnancy, discusses the .elected "medical phenomenon," as she :lass of describes it, on the air. actual Some of her listeners, however, station aren't quite as thrilled with the subject. When her manager approaches ffair. It Ott with the complaints ? and their )tt ? a conversation is accidentally broading DJ cast ? the real trouble begins, isband, Benson's other students will use what they have learned from him in , Radio the past few months in handling erus on every aspect of the production, from as, fit- cameras to lighting and set design, irts the Filming will begin 8 a.m. Saturday at the Russell House, nasters The class will produce three more t USC. of its own scripts before the end of hapless the fall semester. -?v B Cassette k. Compact (hi Sale Through WRF November 16 Bk> ^/>