The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, December 01, 1993, Page 7, Image 7
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Comic pla;
From Staff Reports
USC ? A bitterly comic parabli
about a man who allows evil t<
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open at 8 p.m. Thursday at USC'
Drayton Hall theater.
The play, Max Frisch'
"Biedermann and the Firebugs,'
will also be performed Dec. 3-.
and Dec. 8-11. Performances wil
begin at 8 p.m. weekdays am
Saturdays and at 3 p.m. Sunday.
The play tells the story o
Gottlieb and Babette Biedermann
who allow an unscrupulous, unem
ployed stranger to stay in thei
home. The stranger soon take
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explores d(
advantage of the Biedermanns'
; hospitality and invites his friends
3 and their large cache of flammable
j materials to the Biedermanns.
s The play, which was inspired by
the rise of Nazism in Germany durs
ing the 1930s, warns against the
" dangers of evil, said director
5 Richard Jennings, a USC theater
1 professor. "The play's moral is still
j timely today, especially with the
re-emergence of racism and hate
f crimes everywhere from Sarajevo
i, to Fulton County, Georgia," he
- said.
r The play features undergraduate
s theater students from the USC
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Department of Theatre, Speech and H
Dance. Don Gruel plays Gottlieb
Biedermann; Monica Wyche plays
Babette; Marty Simpson plays the
stranger, Sepp Schmitz; Rob
Branch plays Sepp's friend; and
Thurman Brandon plays the fire I
Tickets are S10 for the public;
$8 for USC faculty and staff,
senior citizens and military personnel;
and $6 for students. They are
available at the Longstreet Theatre
box office from noon to 5:30 p.m. qg,
weekdays. To order by phone, call wh<
777-2551 or 777-2552. une
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C ? Meet Katie Ross, the
iling industry's newest
iyroducing
the guys of the
am Team." They
a calendar coming [AKSjti
?r 1994. "
ien any magazine, . j
heck out the modChances
are the
Is are no more than
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lounug less man peiiccuy
ese superthin models do not
I up to many freshmen's fears
ining the "freshman 15" that
ed them all summer.
w that USC is nearing the end
II semester, often, the fresh15
is no longer a fear but a
yeshman
music major Brian
r said, "I was at a friend's.
;, and I stepped on the scale
76. Now, I came to college
;hing 165, and I thought
>e the scale was wrong. So, I
i another one, and to my sur:,
it was wrong. I weighed
he healthy food on campus is
limited, and you really have to
for it," a junior music major
"By the end of my freshman
I had gained the 15 and then
ct of evil
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i Gruel plays Biedermann
ose house is invaded by ar
imployed stranger.
The Essential Guid<
for Writers, Editors,
and Publishers
XX c
lenter offers
ts fighting n
some."
Fuller feels .the reason he
gained 13 pounds is because of
the all-you-can-eat cafeterias. "If
it's in front of me, I'll eat it," he
said.
"I was afraid of gain
L I m mg the tresnman n,
marine science freshman
Sara Hedrick said.
I? "Everybody was talking
about it. It almost
p seemed inevitable. I was
' worried about gaining it
because I was already
overweight."
Hedrick expressed a concern
spread throughout the so-called
Generation X. What do you do to
develop a healthy lifestyle when
you have been raised on everything
else.
USC's Open Door Health and
Wellness office thinks it has the
answer.
"Lighten Up!" is a self-paced
plan that emphasizes a total
lifestyle rather than diets or calories.
Participants work with an
Open Door peer health educator to
learn how to incorporate nutritious
eating, exercise and healthy behaviors
into a college lifestyle.
"We have a range of people in
the program, but I'm more tempted
to say we have more sophomores,"
Open Door graduate
assistant Anry Senn said. "It's
$24,
Graduate F
fo
college seniors
interested in becoming sec
American history, Ar
and socia
Fellowships pay tuition, fee
For information an
James Madiso
1-800-5:
Internet;
, Recogprog @ ACTi
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311 Ma
Si Sty
933
lira'.si
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> help
lew fat
after the fact of the freshman 15
that they come to us. We're trying
to spread the word to freshmen
through things like
University 101 classes that you
don't have to gain weight to
improve your lifestyle."
"You read a lot of stuff about
it," electrical engineering sophomore
P.J. Snavely said. "The program
really helped me out a lot and
basically taught me how to keep
the fat out of my diet. 1 have high
reviews of Open Door."
Snavely went on the program as
a freshman to keep from gaining
die 15.
Hedrick, however, has an alternative
to "Lighten Up!" "Since I've
been living at Bates and walking to
classes, I've started to lose weight,"
he said. "I lost 20 pounds instead p
of gaining the 15."
Many students also take advantage
of the P.E. Center and the other
information offered at Open
Door, such as height and weight
measurement, percent body fat
checks, written information and
support on weight management, fitness
and exercise, nutrition
improvement and more.
Anyone interested can drop by
the center, which is located in die
haspmpnt of thp Thomson .Student
Health Center, or call 777-8248 for
more information.
000
ellowships
r
and graduates
ondary school teachers of
nerican government,
1 studies.
s, books, room, and board.
d applications call:
n Fellowships
?5-6928
address:
ACT4-PO.act.org
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Suggestions for
:hool & College Students
HIRD EDITION 1
eeic guide updated for the
netlee?techrilquee for
festive etudying at home, In
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