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Campus Crime Entries in the USC police crime blotter from Oct. 13 to Oct 17. Oct. 13 12:15 p.m. Auto break-in on East Broadway Street. A bystan 1 . i ? _ uci uuutcu suiiicuiic uuung gas from a parked vehicle. Oct. 14 " 12:07 p.m. Grand larceny, unknown location. Victim's purse was stolen by unknown person(s). It was later returned unharmed. Oct. 15 12:30 a.m. Threatening with a firearm, northwest stadium lot. USCAN c I CALL For A Free! ANYTIME (800) 34< L1 mow PEOPLE WITH M( are urgently needed to aid ii Mono test kits. If you have I within the past two week $11 for only 3 hours For Further Informatic SEROLOGIC) 2719 Middleburg Columbii 254-6! tion module is by far the most complex and difficult to implement It requires cooperation from the computer services personnel and the campus libraries, Washington said. According to Washington, the USCAN has been very effective. It Applications Are Now t THE GAMECOCK I Spring Se Deadline: Nove Applications are i Student Media Office, For More Inl Call 777 |[w1NGS^>N I ("Mozzarel/a * j; \ NOW O NLy i; CALL: y^J295 256-CO ji DELIVERED HOT, FAS IJ COUPON COUPON COUPON C \\ One Free Order of I !j with any Med., Lg. or ) I IT'S FF wwwwwwwvwyww Hfree^ i MONEY FOI Every Student is Eiigit Financial Aid Regardless of C We have a data bank of over 200,0' ships, grants, and loans, represents funding. Many scholarships are given to studen career plans, family heritage and plac There's money available for students grocery clerks, cheerleaders, non-snv Results GUARANTEED. Victims reported that an unknown male pointed a shotgun at them through his car window. Oct. 16 3:30 p.m. Damage to state property, The Horseshoe. Staff reported damage to sprinkler heads. Oct. 17 9 a.m. Larcenv. B.A. building. Key to change machine stolen from employee desk, change machine subsequently robbed. 5 p.m. Larceny, Whaley Street. Victim reported that her car was burglarized when unknown person^) ripped the convertible top. 5:10 p.m. Auto break-in, 1800 Pendleton Street. Victim reported steering wheel damaged as a result of an apparent theft 6:45 p.m. Auto break-in, 1300 Blossom Street. Items removed from vehicle by unknown person(s). Compiled by Kelli Lister Crime Reporter iued from page 1 helps students and librarians find information quicker. Students like using the system, she said. Because USCAN ties all USC library branches together, students can obtain more information. As a result, inter-library loan requests have increased, she said. 1 Being Accepted For: EDITOR-IN-CHIEF mester mber 3, 1989 available in the Russell House 313. 'ormation. -3888 wwvwv^vwwww\ ' WHEELS ck? T & FREE!! \\ ; :0UP0N COUPON COUPON !' Vlozzarella Sticks ;! ( Lg. Order of Wings.. J =SEE!! J mHMIBHMKMiHiHlBBHiB ISHIP INFORMATION FOR j IDENTS WHO NEED I COLLEGE ! >le for Some Type of trades or Parental Income. 00 listings of scholarships, fellowlg over $10 billion in private sector its based on their academic interests, e of residence. who have been newspaper carriers, okers. . .etc. brochure 6-6401 frS I 0? )N0NUCLEQSIS i the manufacture of the Mono, or have had Mono ;s, you may qualify for ]0 of your time, in Call or Come Bv: MS, INC Dr. Suite 105 3, SC >37 School of debates a By DEBORAH RYAN Staff Writer A local reverend in support of the anti-abortionn movement locked horns with an American Civil Liberties Union member who is a proponent of pro-abortion movement in a debate centered Wednesday at the USC Medical College. . The Rev. Mark Ross of First Presbyterian Church on Marion C t *1? ~ -?? uuiA/k, UV/IAUCU UlC aiKJInun issue, going against ACLU Executive Director Steve Bates. Bates said giving constitutional rights to the fetus would pit the rights of the woman against the interests of the fetus. He emphasized this dilemma, saying, "We can abolish abortion when we abolish pregnancy." In order to reduce the need for abortion, Bates said, society needs to provide pre-natal care, reinforce the consequences of sex, protect against pregnancy, provide adequate daycare and make it possible for women to have both children and a career. Ross went on to cite three causes from the American Medical Association for the practice of abortion: the widespread popular ignorance about abortion, carelessness of fetal life by doctors and defects of our laws regarding existence and independence of the fetus. Ross pointed out a parallel between views of life's beginning and termination. If brain death is considered the end of life, brain life must be considered the beginning. If a patient is brain dead, life NATIONAL SYMPOSIUM 0 SHERATON HOT HEAR: eminent scholars, Freud: A life for Our Time: F Freud and the Figure of I The Mind-Brain Interface: Psychiatry, Medical Unive Barkley McKee Professor Psychoanalysis and the H of Arts and Humanities, 1 Women, Love and Power Training and Research, C Karen Horney Reassesse Where Feminism Failed: I Psychoanalysis, Morality and F Psychoanalysis and Organizati The Symposium is co-spc TO REGISTER CALL C SEE: "Fragments of a Bur of archaeological antiquitie Mental Health Joseph Bev collection by Rita Ransoh( 5. The Exhibition, on loan Both the Symposiun Sigi ?4iie OOPS Medicine bortion "The question is not who is right, but who decides. That is the essence of our fundamental value of individual liberty." Steve Bates ACLU Executive Director support will often be continued in hopes of regaining brain activity uvvuujv iiuiu a^uvuy un even after brain death, Ross said. The same point should be made for pregnancy, he said. Don't terminate the life support of the fetus, as brain activity will begin at six to seven weeks. "I hope enough is left of our moral intuitions to see we went down the wrong path," Ross said. Bates rebutted by saying, 'The question is not who is right, but who decides. That is the essence of our fundamental value of individual liberty." One woman from the audience addressed Bates, saying some of the reasons he is using in defense of abortion are the same reasons the Nazi's used in defense of killing Jews. But Bates said the difference is that the government isn't differentiating on who can and cannot have an abortion. "We can't give the government the right to decide for the individual," he said. The debate was sponsored by the Medical Student Association at the medical school campus. N SIGMUND FREUD: IMPACT EL AND CONVENTION CENTER, ( NOVEMBER 3-5,11 researchers and clinicians on: }eter Gay, Ph.D., Sterling Professor of I loses: Harold Blum. M.D.. Director. James Ballenger, M.D., Professor a rsity of South Carolina, and Robert I and Chairman of Psychiatry, Cornel lumanities: Murray Schwartz, Ph.D., Iniversity of Massachusetts at Am he : Ethel Person, M.D., Director, Cent* olumbia University; Author, Dreams d: Eleanor Galenson, M.D., Clinical toy Ann Dolen, Former Editor, LA Religion: Edwin Wallace, IV, M.D., Professoi ons: Abraham Zaleznik, D.C.S., M.B.A., Pre rnsored by the USC School of Medi( AROL MAYFIELD, 253-4250. ied Past", Selections from Freud's p )s at USC's McKissick Museum. Sta 'ilacqua, Ph.D., will introduce a free off, A.C.S.W., Ph.D., at 1:30 p.m.; Si from the Freud Museum in London, i and the Exhibition are tunc 1 up < ^Company, 6 ;JHBb?? ha h ^' Bs^ i* HHBr^ I ;" v.H~ V" n, f JAMES NETTLES/The Gamecock Sign me up! Wake Forest resident Lara Chapman fills out a card Thursday for a balloon purchased for the balloon derby sponsored by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Phi Epsilon. Proceeds from the derby will go to the Charleston Relief Fund and the Rose McGill Fund. ON TWENTIETH CENTURY THOUGHT I FRFI ID R COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA I History, Yale University, and Pulitzer Prize biographer. " " J Freud Archives, Library of Congress. nd Chairman of Michels, M.D., I University Medical School. Professor and Dean rst. 2r for Psychoanalytic of Love and Fateful Encounters. Professor of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. News-Banquet Address r and Acting Chairman of Psychiatry, Medical College of Georgia. )fessor of Organization, Harvard University School of Business. ;ine and the SC Department of Mental Health. ersonal collection te Commissioner of public talk on the unday, November will be at McKissick through November 26. led in part by the SC Humanities Council. at OOPS! Win a Classic 1953 MG-TD ^ 10 Harden St. /5 Points