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Solomon asks senate to be responsible SGA President Carl Solomon addressed the senate Wednesday, asking the senators to be fiscally responsible. Solomon spoke of the $25,000 that is in the SGA budget and asked the senators to be careful with the money. "This year is a little different than most years. We are in a budget crunch," he said. "I ask the finance committee and the senate to be very responsible with this money." In other senate business, SGA Vice President Brian Comer announced there are still available seats in the colleges of Applied Professional Sciences, Public Health, and the Law school. The College of Business has two openings as well. Any one interested in the ? open senate seats can pick up an application from the SGA I office. -1 Theater department announces fall season | American classics, Shakespearian favorites and ?! controversial contemporary dramas are among the productions th being staged this year by Sc USC's Department of Theatre, wi Speech and Dance. cl; The 1993-94 season, which is designed to teach USC stu- he dents all aspects of the theater 0j business as well as to entertain audiences, includes favorites such as Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" av and William Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure." cj Tickets for each of the ^ season's shows, except the Fall d? Dance Concert, will be $10 for the public; $8 for USC faculty and staff, senior citizens and ^ military personnel; and $6 for U( students. . Tickets are on sale from noon to 5:30 p.m. weekdays at the Longstreet Theatre box office. To order by phone, call 777-2551 or 777-2552. 31 DIVERS Humor! Mi campus iss of alcohol, < co nee Ri BUS J I ?* % The Reside s 8pr f 6pm J We? 7pm - Si (Ra i t Maggie in the Midi Former British Prime Minist Metropolitan Airport to speak al 7awhai? f?fl 1 UI111CI 311 :rime, viol f NORA DOYLE > aff Writer \ USC ? You might not know c at more than 11,000 students in ? )uth Carolina, starting at age 10, * sre enrolled in a hunter education ass at school in 1992. It's a class that teaches children \ >w to kill animals and how to >erate firearms and is often hid- < :n under the heading of Outdoor j lucation or Physical Education. ^ It's also possible that you are not ( vare that 14 children a day are lied by firearms in accidents, suides and murders. You might not ( low that more than 100,000 stu- ? 7 < ints across the country bring guns ( school everyday. But former USC student ( atherine Trimnal, author of , Jhildren, uuns & violence in ] merica," is aware, and she sees a j nk between the 22 years hunter lucation has been in the school < 'Stem and the adolescent violence < id crime in the United States. i "These classes plant seeds of ! UY WEI usic! Drama ues related t drugs and ot rns. Come Si SQV 3 I 1ST E S J presented by ?nce Hall As; unday Sept. 19th ri - Bates Social Room Monday Sept. 20th Capstone Campus Roor ruesday Sept. 21st 3pm - Towers Lobby dnesday Sept. 22nd ims Porch, Women's C iin Location - Sims Lobby) ands m ^ flKI ^HT a' iww er Margaret Thatcher arrived t a Lexington Medical Center Four ?1 l laeni s uui ence with violence, and they are academically ; wid," Trimnal said. "There's a j :onflicting message. It's saying kill j mimals with guns, but don't bring ;uns to school." Trimnal said there were at least leven examples in her book of nurderers taking their anger out on inimals when they were children. Albert DeSalvo, the Boston ; Strangler who killed 13 women, rapped dogs and cats in crates vhen he was young and would hen shoot arrows through the box Carroll Cole, executed for five )f the 35 murders for which he was accused, strangled a puppy as a ;hild. Anthropologist Margaret Mead 3nce said, "The worst thing that :an happen to a child is to let him till an animal for pleasure and get away with it." It's easy for children to misuse ;>r misfire weapons once they've sxperienced a rush of power and realize they are in control, Trimnal said in her book. But from then on, EK '93 ! Explore o the use her social 66,.. > E E> sociation n }uad improv be mor eration to tell It's vei Tasc no cos becaus interes | , Tascor rate m; compa NE) David Mandrell/ The Gamecock Wednesday at Columbia idation banquet. ok links - # Stud hunting ~~ anyone who makes a wrong move might have their destiny ended prematurely. c Trimnal has made it her job to ask all 91 S.C. school districts to JAY reconsider allowing hunter educa- City. tion into the classrooms, a The book said, "The handgun has to be LEE a better stalker, a better outdoors- Caro man. Handgun hunting requires a ERE person to have a better grasp on the Phot art of hunting. Naturally, you will want the most powerful handgun re^ you can comfortably control." Adve Richland County School District One has already recommended that TOE Hunter Education not be included Asst. in its curriculum, stating that the ERI addition of the course would make Faci its challenge of teaching required courses even more difficult. Th< "Parents need to be aware of andis semes what information is being fed into Op the brain of a child," Trimnal said. not ^ "Children are aware of everything TheC we do. They are like sponges." L___ INTERI ^ Vmi < m \ \ it MUSIC \ by InternaUoiiBl ! Programs for Students DMsion of atndeot Aflkn * ^ ^ KING GORDON MANTLER * Editor University Editor : CLONTZ ROB RODUSKY Una! Editor Sports Editor C GLENN CHRIS MULDROW o Editor Graphics Editor IEE GIBSON LAURA DAY 'rtising Manager Production Manager >D SHEVCHIK JIM GREEN Advertising Manager Asst. Production Manager ^ K COLLINS BRIAN McGUIRE dty Advisor Graduate Assistant ; Gamecock is the student newspaper of the University of South Carolina published Monday, Wednesday and Friday during the fall and spring iters, with the exception of university holidays and exam periods, inions expressed in The Gamecock are those of the editors or author and ose of the University of South Carolina. ; Board of Student Publications and Communications is the publisher of iamecock. The Department of Student Media is its parent organization. $ * jjfflOtML \ \ A SCOR, continued from page 1 ? s will have to decide which, expand into educational manageof the company's recom- ment and decided to offer its serious are acted upon. vices to USC free of charge, possible concern for USC Acocella said Tascor has been ees is a possible recommen- present on college campuses before to consolidate, realign or never at as high a level as it ize their departments, has been at USC. e is a) sense of trust by Russ McKinney, director of pubr ees, a sharing of their day- lic at usc ^ responsibilities, their sug- t^ere was a 0f uncertainty 1S ^ow th|n?Is ca" ,e among a lot of university employed. Palms said. I couldn t ee$ when ^ ma(ter ^^ e unpressed with their coop- ?. . ? x. ?. .. < # . At die same time, ifs hard r0 ,"? ou<: M'Ktnney said. 'J what the future may hold. 01,6 fn8^have been glad to y delicate " hear is that the Tascor folks have or is performing its study at sa^ ^at ^ave never in this t to USC. The study began W of work encountered a group e Palms had expressed an ?f workers who have been more t to associates in Atlanta, willing to take the time to show ordinarily focuses on corpo- them what they do, and tell them inagement. Acocella said the what they do and share with them ny saw an opportunity to tneir thoughts about tneir joos. NS: 777-7726 ADVERTISING: 777-4249 '(5aifl?cock ent Media Russell House-USC Columbia, SC 29208 J.T. WAGENHEIM, Editor in Chief Office Hours Monday, Wednesday 11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. [SON HENDERSON SHAYLA STUTTS ' Desk Chief Viewpoints Editor