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Family quabbles pervade in play " * by Anne Harrington, Beth is a woman who makes Gloria If1 F Stcincm look like a wimp. Needg:|:il1 VrCllVr I less t0 say? sbe has a few probIwik' "llil'.'i .'Oil- lems having a mother like Elaine. 'i'lfi ftWi Beth sPen(^s most lbe play brooding with cutting sarcasm 1 1 and a negative comment about ?. everything. Undaunted, Elaine is By TRESSA HAYNES bubbly and flirtatious, and at Staff Writer times you might think brainless. Imagine June Cleaver having Throw in a "raving faggot," a Madonna for a daughter and fireman with the personality of a you've got a contrast similar to brick wall and his son, and the one in Mayo Simon's play, you've got a play that is at times Elaine's Daughter, which opened very funny and at times very at Workshop Theatre Wednesday disturbing, night. Should you see this play? Mrs. Brady might have had Sure. What will you get out of her share of problems with it? That depends on who you are. Marsha, Jan and Cindy, but all Male or female, conservative or three of her daughters combined radical, whether you agree with could never have come close to Beth or think she's bananas, being as hard to deal with as the there is something for everyone one daughter Elaine had. to gain from this play. Not only a Barbara Lowrance plays few laughs, but perhaps a bit of Elaine, who is the kind of wo- understanding might come from man most men dream about mar- seeing Elaine's Daughter. rying - charming, attractive and a Lowrance and Harrington good cook. Also, she's a definite share the cast list with David G. Mrs. America in the spirit of Holland, Jerry Jewler and Engl'50s reruns. (You know, the ones ish H. Weston, Jr., under the dithat made you want to tell the rection of Debra Leopard Long, women in them to PLEASE get a A superb job is done by everylife.) Still in the Dark Ages, one involved in the production. Elaine seems quite content that Bravo to Workshop Theatre her primary goal in life is to for kicking off their new season please a man. with spunk. Elaine's Daughter Night and day. Black and through September 27. Call white. Elaine and Beth. Played 799-6551 for tickets. Walk with the Women Students' Association as we on Mon., Sept. 16 6:30pm Richland County Judicial Center on Main Street "Take Back the Night" is an annual walk and rally addressing the issues of violence against women and children. The Women Students' As- You are cordially sociation wants you to invited to walk with usl attend a presentation Meet us in front of the ~ XT7 A Russell House on Greene One Woman: Anger, Street at 6pm. Fear and Pain *a < 11 onrf u/<5ll/ Utr rod Ci*o\r V V C Will IIICCl CXI IU ?*airv iu u y nvui?.u the rally as a group. (rape survivor and women's issues leader) MONDAY, SEPT. 16, GAMBRELL HALL, ROOM 153 ryday problems abound in lif bled students pre By KATHY HEBERGER Staff Writer Life in a wheelchair isn't a piece of cake, disabled students agre but they're not complaining. A good ice cream cone is more of a challenge any day. "I always tell people 'Don't worry. I've never run over anybody b accident,'" business management and insurance senior Bob Brown said. Rmwn ic nnc r\f ahont ^4 ctn/ipntc on f.flmnns who must eet a] person," he said. Rivers and other Woodrow residents said they find ways to work a ound the schedules the dorm requires them to keep. "I fell asleep in front of the library the other day. Somebody woke m up, thinking my chair's battery was dead. Man, I was mad. I was sleej ing good," Ricky Brown said. Second year law student Tim Evatt doesn't have the luxury of fre time that the undergraduates have. He tries to finish his 80 to 100 paj reading assignments before 10:30 p.m., when someone from an agenc puts him to bed. "My education comes first right now," he said. "Law firms aren't g( P O.K. SO I'VE HAD SORT OF/ UNDISTINGUISHED ACADEI CAREER. IT'S NOT TOO LATE L \ cs : vs?A t-Xx -rr?V 1 11 COULDN'T;B? SECRETARY. IDONTtVENTRUST MVSE! l^JU^NOT THE TYPE AN D WITH MONEY, SO TREASU R! XCANTTyPE^^- 15 DEFINITELY OUT. ., \cM. <2 hinko'S-THECOPY CENTER- GOOD CLEAN C0PIE e we soluti ound in a wheelchair. "It wasn't until I met with a terrible accident that realized I had to do something other than paint houses," he said. "It wt time to put my mind to work." Brown lives in Woodrow, USC's Transitional Living Center. The cei ter, located in the Horseshoe area, is a year-round home for its seve residents. The federally-funded residence hall has 18 days of vacatic scheduled for the students. "We like to say there's lots of TLC here," psychology junior Rick Brown (no blood relation to Bob Brown) said. "We get kind of tigh Sometimes there's disputes, sometimes we get along great. It's like family. When somebody moves out, you feel like something's missing." With their wheels for getting to class, braces on their arms for holdin fortes or pens and nurses to help them in and out of the shower and be< disabled students make routines out of extraordinary circumstances. What could go wrong? "The weather," personnel management senior Robert Slee said. When it rains, students in wheelchairs grab trash bags for cover and g slower around the corners. "I've slid into walls before. Those floors g< slick," Ricky Brown said. "Falling out of a wheelchair isn't fun either. . . .until you get back in he said. He added that he really doesn't laugh too hard at the "I've fa len, and I can't get up" commercial. Crowded elevators present another headache for the disabled student "But the stairs just get in the way," Slee said. Ricky Brown, 21, was paralyzed in a football accident while at J. I Mann High School in Greenville. "I always knew education was impo tant, but I really wanted to come to college to play football," he said. He said he hopes to watch his cousin Leshun McGreer play as a wall on with the Gamecocks next year. Freshman Lloyd Rivers, 21, broke his neck in a basketball court figl four years and four months ago. Now he's in a wheelchair. Rivers hasn't decided what to major in yet. He just got through deck ing to come to college instead of his previous decision to join the mil tary. "I don't think I would be here if I wasn't in this chair," he said. T>f/* ?1a/ia 4-?-v n?-rvimrl Anmnud 10 tllA D nconl 1 CV I\ivci3 lavuiiU/ piaU/ iu luii aiuuuu uii waiupua w uiv i\u?wi iiuuj' atv? alu/avc 1r*tc r?f nprmlp thPTP Onp rlav T mipht mPP.t thp. ripl r_ ing to say 'He's got a 2.0, but 1 said. c_ Evatt, 25, fell out of a tree i was back at Clemson, working ^ to beat his sister's 3.8 GPR. "I newspaper so slow," he said. j_ Leaving the security of home i- They said the change is positive "At home, my mom wanted e. the family and all," Rivers sai tit own." When they feel stressed, the r- frustrations at the gym. "When haven't talked to in a long time ic nal justice junior David Hiller s; 3- Hiller, 22, has been paralyze< their way to avoid my path w ie wonder if they're scared of me c re Rivers agreed that people sta 'y nod or open a door to help him in wheelchairs as they do everyl 3- it and get on with our lives," he liTi TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT KK BUT CLASS PRESIDENT? TO MUCH RESPONSIBILITY. J LENIFINAILY DECIDED?IHfl ER TO RUN FOR,1 MADE 100C CAMPAIGN FOSTERS AT KlNKC /v^^T--) i ///mm ( j m ^V__j fcrladV VJ^ iFwrniml. S,CAMPAIGN FIVERS,ETC,' 1111 I F?7 I \m? b // FRESH, CHAF ff 12oz. Fl! : |i | WEDf [ fj Oyste E $f Steamed z Raw Bar Oysters E FULL AQ SIMP 2! CAROLINA PROGRAM UNION ] Cultural Arts Committee j Presents: 1 H PII?fflWE^BBSSSS ^ "ff3?mS75n3 r< ^ m I ? - PHONAL TOURING COMPANY 2[ Thursday ^ September 19th jj 7:30 pm - at the H - Koger Center H tor the Arts ]i USC Students $5 Public $16.50 & $12.50 >? Tickets can be purchased by calling 777-SCAT or at the Coliseum Box 2\ Office. Department of Student Life " Division of Student Affairs ~ University of South Carolina j This program Is paid for. In part, by student activity fees. Bi,T'I'T'I'T,I'T'TT?T?Trr7m?'TTTVT';'T'I'T'mT-i'TVT'i'T'I'TVT'im?T'?1 4 ions exist IH i l > mi.. le's in a wheelchair.' They don't play," he n February five years ago. By August he on his political science degree and trying got bored at home. You can only read the brings change to disabled students' lives. to do everything for me. I'm the baby of d. "Now I'm doing these things on my se avid sports fans can't work out their /ELL DRINKS $2.00 | HjJ 53.00/Doz. Clams $4.00/Doz. 8 days/wk? !C BAR - $2.00 BAR BRANDS 4-7 $ 1111 KNOX ABBOTT DR. CAYCE 794-4805 M un. - Thurs. 11:00am -10:00pm K Fri. 11:00 - 11:00 Sat. 4-until K LUNCH SPECIAL DAILY /? gjj] A)l ABC Regulations Enforced i I get mad, I usually call up a friend I . My phone bill can be sky high," crimilid. i since birth. "People will go way out of hen they see me coming. It makes me >r of getting their toes run over," he said, re a lot when he wishes they would just through. "People should just treat people body else. We're just here trying to make said. Ill V. P? THEY WIND UP DOING 0 MOST Of THE REAL WORK. rC> iT AND TUBLWHATA SITE! 1 1 FOUND OUT VALEDICTOR/AN 5S ISNTAN ELECTED OFFICE. GREENEST.f?OS>7W-3?07 ^-GRILLED/BLACKENED Wm 3H STEAKS DAILY ^lESDAY'S SPECIAL 1 K >rs $3.00 per dozen 09 Clams $4.00 per dozen m APPY HOUR 4-7 I $0