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i Members of the Partnership Ann each week. PALM is one of abou Groups s< By JENNIFER LYNN FULLER Staff Writer Editor's note: This article is the first in a two-part series on campus religious organizations. The 20 religious organizations on campus vary in doctrine, activi ties and membership, but they have the common goal of strengthening students spiritually and providing social outlets. Hillel Hillel President David Cohn said the club's purpose is not just to have religious services. Cohn, an interdisciplinary studies senior, described Hillel as a "forum for Jewish students to meet each other and become active on campus." Hillel is mainly a social and cultural organization that "helps people get in touch with their heritor* t* " Pnlin cqIH An p nf lhi> VUUll OUAV*. V/UV V/l HIV group's cultural activities was a Holocaust memorial program on April 7. One of the group's social activities was co-sponsoring a Halloween dance. Hillel also has dinWESTSIDE WON OB/GYN CERHF] -Abor abou up-tc Wk -Iree] ^Pjr> Ultra; k press L^ Culhj trans ' 9k BIRTH C( Birth control services j student ra Call 798-9299 or toll 2301 F Bush River Road I * r[^g>p4^4fci> Coming to a neios stand near you ?C~ Accent leasing J We rent furniture and sell previously leased furniture 2231 Main Street 765-0095 Callus! FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Problem Pregnancy Counseling 252-7553 The Ladies Clinic Serving SC Since 1973 Br PHHr JrV VHr ong Lutherans and Methodists < 120 religious organizations on ca jek spiriti ners and attends a multi-campu student retreat in late February. Cohn said one of the organiza tion's biggest nmhlpmc ic amarp ness. He said some people don* want to join because they think it's "too religious." There are aboui 200 Jewish students on campus, but Hillel has only about 20 active members. He wants to encourage students to participate. "Don't be scared to come out to a meeting," he said. Hillel meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in room 202 of Russell House. Partnership Among Lutheran and Methodists PALM's president Nicholas Goeiger said one of the organization's goals is to promote student involvement with religious activities. Goerger, an electrical engi IIVV1XII5 aviuv/l, daiu X'/VL-.IVX piuvides students a "chance to be with students who have the same religious commitments." Goerger said PALM members lEN'S SERVICE | [ED PHYSICIAN tion St Counseling Services - Ask t the new, more oomfortable, date method pregnancy testing sound plete physical - lab tests, Mood ure check St pap smear ire St treatment of sexually mitted diseases )NTROL jlus one pack of pills be (Reg. $75) free 1-800-922-3730 Across from Outlet Point >SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS?5S RIVER 779-2373 Exit 1-26, righton C ssssssssssssssssssssss^s Sumiru $8.46/stc Must apply now Practical, profe Company-sp< Merit-basi 50 summer poj Intern credit fc 30 scholorships ; Earn company-pai t Positions avai locations woi for applicatio I 731 Leo Law9on, Jr/The Gamecock >at dinner as a form of fellowship mpus. ial outlet s try to "remember those who are less fortunate than we are." As part of a state-wide program, PALM - members go to John's Island and t rebuild sub-standard housing. * Throughout the school year, the t club tries to do a service project , each month. Some of their prog! rams include help for Providence Home and Habitat for Humanity. At their Wednesday evening services, PALM combines Bible study and discussion on. current issues. They've had several programs on the Persian Gulf War, and for two weeks they hosted a speaker on relationships, dating and marriage. PALM combines two denominations with slightly different services, but the variety doesn't end there. There is cooperation with Student Christian Fellowship on some services and projects. Church services are held on Sundays at 5:30 p.m. On Wednesday nights they host a supper and program, beginning at 5:30 p.m. So, GameCock ac ROSS UNP SCHOLAKSHIPS/F SCHOOL OF # American Medical School Curricuha # Guaranteed Clinical Rotaliooa.Clinx 0 Approximately 1500 graduate* are di ue licensed and in private practice I 0 Complete your education m 37 Meal VETERINARY 0 American Veterinary School Currict 0 listed in AVMA Directory. Only fo Clinical Clerkship* are done in U.S. U.S. Veterinary Schools V : Clinical 0 Apprcxirraurly 5u0 graduate D.V.M 0 Complete your education in Three Y Now aooepting application* for both scha Place* are (till available for Sept. '91 veterinai International Educatlo 446 W. 34 Street, N.Y.C. sssssssssssssssssssssssssss A X JjDCfL jr Workl irtina rsitA U VIXX^ XMW to start after finals, ssional experience nsored training ed pay raises ritions open in SC >r business majors available, all majors d vacation to Florida lable at all 300 Id-wide ? call n information! -7166 1 Jazz mu: By JENNIFER JABLONSKI Assistant Copy Desk Chief "One of the world's top-rated jazz trombonists" will perform with USC's Left Bank Big Band Jazz Ensemble and Bank Group Combo Tuesday at the Koger Center, according to Roger Pemberton, the big band's director and jazz artist-in-residence at USC. Bill Waltrous, a studio musician from Los Angeles, will be featured with the two groups in Stellar V, a two-day jazz festival sponsored by the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Fox Music, Pecknel Music, the Selmer Company and the School of Music. The festival has been held about twice a year since it was first created in the fall of 1988, Pemberton said. Waltrous will kick off the event with a clinic 7 p.m. tonight in the Koger Center's rehearsal room. "He'll talk about jazz improvisation, trombone technique, his professional experiences as a jazz recording artist and anything else the crowd asks about," Pemberton Laser show t By CHAD BRAY Staff Writer On Wednesday night science fiction and the music of Pink Floyd will clash at 8 p.m. in the Township Auditorium. Paramount Entertainment Of Texas presents Paramount's Original Laser Spectacular featuring the music of Pink Floyd. You could take a long: letting the tap run while Messc ' Is are a waste? rhon why are you reading one? ^ERSITY INANCIAL AID medicine m *1 Clerkships Available in Teaching Hospital sing interne hips A residencies or throughout the U.S.A. '"medicine than reign vet school doing clinical rotation in U.S.A. Veterinary Hoapitals. We are affiliated with Clerkships. .'? are in private practice throughout the U.S.A. ears. els for Spring, Fall, A Winter semesters. y class A June/October '91 medical class. a Admissions, Inc. 19901 (212) 279-5500 **??? j Ride with a sober driver. ft JUST DO IT1 THER BECOM1N Hi on the right mean earning a BSN, w Clifton, NJ 07015 ARMYNUR sicians to ] said. Tickets for the clinic are $4, but students, faculty and staff will be admitted free. J Tomorrow night, the Bank Group Combo, a jazz quintet, will 1 open the concert at 8 p.m., with Waltrous and Pemberton, a saxophonist, playing "a few tunes," Pemberton said. Students Scott Burkholder, drums; Joe Henson, saxophone; Tony Makarome, bass; and Dwight Spencer, guitar, make up the combo, with John Serry, the group's director and coordinator of jazz and media music, performing on piano. "The combo plays some straight-ahead and progressive tunes, but they also stress original works by combo members and a mix of older and newer pieces," said Stacey Houghton, a music graduate student who plays lead tenor saxophone in the Left Bank group. During the second half of the concert, the Left Bank jazz band will play "mainstream big band :o feature Pink Dubbed "the largest touring laser show in the world" by Paramount, the show features projections by argon and krypton lasers of computer graphics on a 2,500 foot screen in front of the audience and numerous "duo-dimensional images" created over the audience with fog machines. Seven million bytes of computer shower everyday with the wal > you shave and brush your te jge by Students Allied for a Greene J ?,<* 4 A RING April 24, I 9-4:1 $20 De University Bookstore Ri Meet with your Jostens representative for full details. See our co FADE TWO (IP G A NURSE INT And they're both represented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you're part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar ls you command respect as an Ar rrite: Army Nurse Opportunities SE CORPS. BE All Y ^ , perform cnans with two selections frcMn the Count Basie book before Bill joins us," Pemberton said Waltrous will be "a real treat" performing with the big band cm their last three selections, said John Entzi, a doctoral music candidate who plays lead trumpet in the group. In particular, Entzi thinks Waltrous* performance on the ballad, "A Time For Love," will be "a standout." Waltrous recorded the song on his Refuge West aibum. "He's the best trombone balladplayer I've ever heard. He's the modern Tommy Dorsey," Entzi said. This will be Waltrous' second visit to Derform in a Stellar festi val, the first being in Stellar III in the fall of 1989. "Bill and l have been friends since the '60s when I played with him in New York," Pemberton said. "John (Serry) also had met him, out in L.A., so!we both worked to bring him here," Tickets for the concert,are $8, $4 for students, and can be purchased at the door. * -t - * Floyd music memory choreograph these effects and "a synchronized beam show? to songs from Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, The Wall and Momentary Lapse of Reason. * Tickets are $11 in advance and $13 the day of the show. For more information, call 252-2032. ter you might waste by eth. TURN IT OFF! r Earth ?E K1N G " DAY , 25,26 30 posit |sse|1 House mplete ring selection on display in your college bookstore ^ ESTO ~ HE ARMY. my officer. If you 're i, P.O. Box 7713, OUCANBL