University of South Carolina Libraries
\ I w ifnili H JMbki ' * ? I H I flHI , . ,/<y ; I fl B i' H I hrnmmm ' hi#' .. * 1IH - 25% OFF EVERY DAY at the THE NEW YORK IB I Hard Cover _ .. *?*S Fiction ? 4 GERALD'SGAME.by Stephen King. (Viking, 1 7 123.50.) Twenty-eight hours of horror suffered by a woman handcuffed to a bedpost. I r\ THE PELICAN BRIEF, by John Grisham. 2 25 I (_ (Doubledav.J22.50.) A woman law student probes I the murder of two Supreme Court justices. I Q WAITING TO EXHALE, by Terry McMillan. 3 14 I .j (Viking. $22.) The friendships and romances of four I black women in Phoenix. A COLONY, by Anne Rivers Siddons. (HarperCollins, 4 7 I Cj. S20.) Life at a Maine summer r^treaL r FATHERLAND, by Robert Harris. (Random 6 8 I 0 House, J21.) A book set in the Third Reich ? in 1964. I ?> POSSESSING THE SECRET OF JOY, by Alice 5 11 Ii Walker fffarraurf Rrae* Jnvannvich S19 9S^Thi> I struggles of an African woman to come to terms with the consequences of female circumcision. I *7 THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY, by 13 3 [ Robert James Waller. (Warner, $105.) A photographer and a lonely farmer's wife in Iowa. I Q SWEET LIAR, by Jude Deveraux (Pocket. *22.) 1 I Q On a visit to New York to track down her I grandmother, a Kentucky woman copes with a mystery dating back to the Roaring Twenties. I Q NIGHTOF THE HAWK, by Dale Brown. (Fine/ 1 I Putnam. J22.95.) American airmen and marines I undertake to rescue a serviceman in Lithuania. H -j THE VOLCANO LOVER, by Susan Sontag. I I j 11 (Farrar, Straus AGiroux. *22.) A romantic novel about Lord Nelson, his lover Emma Hamilton, her husband and Neapolitan society in the 18th century Telephone: South Carolina's M Fff Largest B m FT* ! Bookstore IUM M Every Tuesday night in the Golden Spur 8:QO p.m. SIMP For more information call the HOTLINE at 777-7CP1 This program paid for, in pan Programs are subject to change due bud f NOW < lAtVU aJpile & 5 Points Ne> n a ii# a mi t III Cl dateline i v |%^I| $1.00 Domestics $1.75 Bar Board PIMM $3.25 Pitchers 33Je're rrnt just gaa Thursdays: Mar Mon.-Wed. 4 pm - 1 ar ^ Sat. - Sun. Garrett's 711 Saluda Av Formerly THE GRADUATE - 21 g Engineering help in the ap a vending ma Whitesel mad sketch of the < UNIVERSITY BOOKSTC ffiS BOOK REVIEW Best Sellers Wee* Nonfiction 1THE SILENT PASSAGE, by Gail Sheetoy. (Random House, J16.) The psychological and soc significance of menopause for today's women. 2 TRUMAN, by Davxl McCuliough. (Simon A Schuster, 130.) A biography of the 33d President. 3 DIANA: HER TRUE STORY, by Andrew Morton (Simon A Schuster, S22.) A biography of the Princess of Wales. 4 . THE LAST TSAR, by Edvard Radzmsky. (Douhieday. S25.) The life of Nicholas II and his family, and their assassination in 1918. r EARTH IN THE BALANCE, by A1 Gore. Hfoitfhffln Mifflin C2 <IS TV Vif?.Pr>Ririmrial candidate discusses the environment. 6 MARILYN: THE LASTTAKE, by Peter Harry Brown and Patte B. Barham (Dutton. J23.) Did intrigues m Hollywood boardrooms and in the Kennedys' circle lend to Marilyn Monroe's death' 7 WOMEN WHO RUN WITH THE WOLVES, by Clarissa Pinkoia Estes. (Ballantme, $20.) A Jungian analyst remterprets myths and folk tales to enable women to understand their psyches. 8 SAM WALTON: MADE IN AMERICA, by Sam Walton with John Huey. (DouMeday, $77 SO.) The autobiography of the man who created Wal-Mart. 9 LINCOLN AT GETTYSBURG, by Garry Wills. (Simon & Schuster, 523.) The address delivered a Nov. 19,1863. and bow it has alfected American lii -4 HEAD TO HEAD, by Lester Thurow. (Morrow. 11 J 125.) The upcoming economic battle among Japai Europe and the United States. 803/777-4160 fo iw -The= l^CSGF! j. t, by student activity fees, getary and programmatic decisions. )PEN vest Bar ^Vj/ 'ML HAPPY i H . $1.25 Stadii (4-8 pm, llpr WBS? $1.50-25 oz. Gro b sparis... garita Madness!!! n Thurs.-Fri. 4pm - 2am 12 noon - lam e. Five Points 256-7733 and over All ABC Regulation Man tries 1 By CHAD BRAY News Editor (?V An unidentified man tried t steal a student's purse this pas r . week near Gambrell Hall, accord 0 receives*his ing 10 USC P?lfce rePOTlscheck for his About 10:30 Tuesday niShlprehension of female student, who wished not t chine burelar. ^ identified, was leaving Gambre! e a composite with two of her friends. :riminal using Police say four men were walk mputers. ing across the Pickens Street bridg India tests missile NEW DELHI, India ? India fire a medium-range surface-to-surfae missile Saturday for defense pu poses, news reports said. It was the ninth test launch c ?* HI the Prithvi missile since Februai H 1988 and the third since the proje< was handed over to the Defens Ministry from the Science an Technology Ministry. Prithvi, which means "earth" i Hindi, was launched in clet weather, 775 miles southeast c New Delhi on the Bay of Beng; ? H coast, the Press Trust of India nev WeeJcs H asencysaid "B Man can't be a nanny 3 11 LONDON ? A Swedish youtl ; 2 9 H cannot work as a live-in baby sitte in Britain because he is male, thi I 4 H Home Office said Sunday in order ing the young man to leavi 4 n H England. H An au pair, or resident baby sit aier, musi oe an unmarried reman aged 17 to 27 and without depen dents, according to immigratioi rules, a Home Office spokesmai said, speaking on condition o anonymity. Johan Egelstedt, 19, does no qualify, and must leave Monday. IWrLIILVAI Rivera free erf charges JANESVILLE, Wis. ? A prose cutor said he won't press charge against Geraldo Rivera for punch i Tr. In \ in ^ US HOUR 4 Wings If yOL im Dogs or ore inte n-ciose) please con g (draft) it Monday be is Enforced to steal stude toward the women who were walking down the steps on the south o side of Gambrell. t As the two groups approached l_ each other, police say one man separated from the males and a rapidly approached the women, o Police say the" man suddenly II pushed the victim and grabbed her purse. Police say she grabbed her nnrse tiohtlv and hpoan nrreamina e The suspect let go of the purse and ran toward College Street and Iing a heckler at a Ku Klux Klar rally. "I've seen the tape of the incident, and I believe the conduct he ;(j engaged in was privileged self:e defense," Rock County Districi r- Attorney Perry Folts said Saturday. Police arrested the television talk >f show host Aug. 16 after a scuffle y during the rally he was taping for a ct show. John R. McLaughlin ol ;e Champaign, 111., was charged with d disorderly conduct in the fight. m Army builds tent dty ir FLORIDA CITY, FLA. ? Army troops cleared 14 acres of parkland ^ and a section of a demolished air 's base in Florida City, Fla., hoping to have a tent city up Sunday nighi for thousands of victims of Hurricane Andrew and for troops h sent to help. r The crews were among 7,000 e Army and Marine Corps troops . ordered to South Florida by e President Bush amid complaints the Federal Emergency Management Agency was dragging e its feet in providing relief to hurricane victims, n In Washington, Bush told a ri hastily arranged news conference f he understood the criticism but didn't feel such recriminations t were useful. ^ Largest garage sale in S.C I MYRTLE BEACH ? Thousands of bargain hunters turned out for s South Carolina's largest garage sale that took up three levels of the orr M It gel it! e 1992 Garnet & Bli >C's student yearbc is here! i purchased one la: rested in purchasir le by the Garnet & , 316 Russell House through Friday of; tween noon and 5 / nt's purse < the Capstone area. Police say the i three other men avoided the women and quickly walked toward the Capstone area. A search of the area by police after the incident, however, did not turn up any signs of the suspect. The suspect is described as a 5foot-8-inch, 140 pound, black male between the ages of 18 and 20. On the night of the incident, police say he was wearing blue jeans and a^ black T-shirt with a logo. i Myrtle Beach Pavilion garage and a nearby parking lot. There were racks and tables of : clothes of every kind, jewelry, - musical instruments, pictures, furt niture, crutches, jet skis and toys, and all were bargains for the 45,000 shoppers who were out hunt: ing for a special buy Saturday. | [ "I bought this Depression glass : plate for 25 cents when it usually i would cost $10 in a store," Sandra Thomas of Loris said. "This is my prize of the day." S.C. crime rate drops 1 WASHINGTON ? There was more bad news than good for South i Carolina in the FBI's 1991 Uniform Crime Reports. The good news is the violen^ crime rate dropped slightly from 1990. The bad news is crime \ increased nearly twice the national rate last year, and South Carolina remains fifth in the nation in the rate its citizens are victims of rape, murder and assault. And state officials find little good news in a declining rate at which all crimes are being solved. The crime rate index of selected violent and property crimes increased 1.3 percent nationwide.! but 2.2 percent in South Carolina in 1991 compared to 1990, the report showed. MsbmB i ie~ J I I ( ack, i. /OK, ( sf year lg one now, Black office, i J this week o.m. "i