The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 13, 1994, Page 8, Image 8
|0p^
Dest way to aescriDe tne aitttuae or
this new club. Everything you love lig
about the Art Bar, Goatfeathers, as
Group Therapy and Rockafellas' is wi
wrapped, packaged and stored in The rnc
Cellar. Consisting of two totally dif- '
ferent sections, the Cellar has some- Th
thing for everyone. ho
Upstairs on the main level, the feel- Atl
ing is laid-back. You can listen to your Or
latest favorites on a crystal-clear sound ar<
system as you sink back in one of the sta
IlltijThou shall
s.
wdBHV f v SHOE SALON
quinte
738-9100 4517 I
(Across from the Columbia
Monday-Friday 10a.m. - 6p.m. Si
P.*..*!
m woto
H Laundered
El 4 for the pr
H Present the Coupon When Order
B One Coupon p<
Hours 7:30 - 6:30pm Mon. - Fri.
435 Assembly St. 799-2030 (On<
Aprill5,ie
Athletic Fieli
Whaley S
(First Session April
Full-Time Under
Academic & Physical
Males & Fei
For more informatioi
fin nnm
UU \j\J\jJ
Nursing junior John Im and and chemistry ju
The Peopl
The Cellar 'und
By CHRISTOPHER M. SMITH ma
Staff Writer bai
COLUMBIA ? Located at 1128
Devine St. next to Domino's is a new 1
club unlike anything Columbia has de!
ever seen. Conveniently located be- br<
tween the "beautiful" Towers area and ar<
the shadow of the Coliseum, The Cel- C e
lar has come to show party-goers what sh<
a real city club has to offer. nai
Incorporating Five Points and the 1
city's most entertaining bars is the gr<
. -i . ... i r
Jiior Tom Pak toast at The Cellar, 1
r% T n4?
C U11UC1
lerground' hi
ny comfortable booths, or sit at th
: and read one of the many poem
ipended beneath the glossy finis!
V healthy menu for lunch include
licious homemade salads and pit
;ad pizzas. At night, hot dogs als
: served. And for sports fans, Th
liar has a wide-screen TV tht
11 *.L _ 1 4. 1
jws ail uic iioiicM games aiiu iuu
ments.
Downstairs, the attitude is more aj
sssive. The large caged-in danc
or is colored by a multitude c
hts, and the thunder of the lates
well as classic, alternative musi
11 set even the shiest dancer int
>tion.
On Wednesday and Friday night
e Cellar houses the Southeast
ttest bands from areas such 2
ipn? rhanel Hill and Charlestm
i these nights, 18- to 20-year-olc
; admitted, but don't worry: U{
irs is always designated solely fc
not covet th
jphisticated styleultimate
fit..
nnrtntml aliartnr?r>a
niai iv^/...
west Drive
i Athletic Club)
aturday 10a.m. -5p.m.
iutte I
i Shirts I
ice of 3 |
ing Excludes Leathers ||
;r Visit b
Ram - ?nm Ratm-Hav
; Block from the Coliseum)
i&lY
i House
treet
15 at 5:00 pm)
graduates
Requirements
nales
l, call 777-7977
KS!
, ^ ^ ^ * '*:
Photo courtesy of Diana Ge
oca ted next to Domino's on Devine Strc
fiiA Cfoi^i
uit Jiaiii
it with student;
e those of legal age.
ts Whether upstairs or down, you1
be very well taken care of by The (
:s lar's expert bartenders serving ]
a from fully stocked bars. The Cellar
? a monthly calendar of specials thai
it eludes 25-cent drafts, $2 pitch<
J 1.25 Zimas. SI.50 vodka drinks ;
r. '
hangover specials for only $1.
g. Every day, 16-ounce Ice Hous
:e served for a buck.
>f One of the most striking attribi
t, of The Cellar is its visual app<
[C Throughout the club, original artw
? is showcased with sculpture, coll
and paint. All of the work is the pi
f' uct of the very talented local ar
^ Frankie Wolf.
1 Finally, Columbia has a place 1
Is compares to those in Philadelpl
> D.C. and Atlanta. The Cellar is d
>r nitely living up to its city-club im;
<y lover unless
PEER CON
APPLICJ
NOW A
IN THE I
PCB is a judicial reviev
living in the residence
Having a 2.5 cumulati
! residence hall at least
living in a residence h
residents. Membershij
nr?r?r?r+i ir?i+\/ +r? ho a Ic
VUI II \.J vv u ?v
For More lnformati<
REALLY!
Donate plasma
today and receive
up to $140.00 per
month. Stop by the
PBI Plasma Center
and become a
nlasma donor.
New Donors Earn
Make an appc
254
BE A PLASMA DONOR
LIFE IS EVERYBODY'S
Premier I
1620 G
1620 Gervais
1 'Wheel of Fc
for winning
By College Press Service 1
ORLANDO, Fla. ? Who'da thunk it:
a bowl of creamy spuds, worth 50
I grand?
Well, it's true. By guessing the
I phrase "mashed potatoes," four Georgia
Tech students won $50,000 for
their school on "Wheel Of Fortune's"
College Week.
In addition to the $50,000 annuity
to be used for scholarships, the Geors
nil Tprh tpom ralfcH in olmnct
i $88,000 for themselves.
"I would've been happy going
home with a couple of boxes of Ricea-Roni,"
said a grinning Corey Rockwell,
20, a sophomore majoring in
electrical engineering.
Other members of the winning
Georgia team were Larry Stewart, 19,
another electrical engineering major,
plus the "Big Money" winner, 19-yearold
chemical engineering major Pete
Ketterman, who walked away with
_ $53,500.
ntiie With three engineering majors, it's
;et. safe to say these kids weren't picked
because they couldn't make the cut
on "Jeopardy."
S"We were surprised that we did so
well," said Jennifer Hawbaker, 22, a
management science major. "We only
had a week to prepare. The other
schools had been picked months
c ago."
3 The other schools competing in
College Week were UCLA, the Uni
versity or Pittsburgh and the Univer...
sity of Arkansas-Little Rock.
The four teams met March 5 at the
Disney/MGM Studios in Orlando to
f?u tape a week of the shows that will air
has May 16-20.
t in- The final standings: in first place
?rs was Georgia Tech with combined winmcj
nings of $ 137,950; UCLA, $45,800;
c q University of Arkansas-Little Rock,
$31,248; and University of Pittsburgh,
e ls $5,500.
4 It was a LOT harder up there than
ltes it is playing at home," said Heather
:al. Newsam, 20.
r^-vr-L- "At first I nnc ppollv npnrrmt " ?hp
Uliv A "UO 1VU11J 11VI f VUk7) w??%<
age said. "I didn't win anything until the
-o^j. final round. I was so scared. I thought
. I was going to let my school and my
family down."
She didn't. The University of
;hat Arkansas sophomore came through in
hia, the final round and went home with
lefi- more than $21,000 and a weeklong
ige. trip to Hawaii for her and her family.
, thouweareth a
DUCT BOARD
LTIAHfi ABE
MAILABLE
BUILDIMGIII
v board made up of students
j halls. Requirements include:
ve GPR, having lived in a
one semester, are currently
all and have a desire to serve
p in PCB provides an
jader in your community.
8000? 8003
jnal Call 7-0378 or 7-8188.
22JSj2
$25 On First Donation
lintment by calling
-2280 . .
col
...BECAUSE
i BUSINESS J w
BioResources, Inc.
rervais St., Columbia, SC
; St., Columbia, SC
rtune' prove
Georgia Tec
"I would've been happy going
home with a couple of
boxes of Rice-a-Roni."
Corey Rockwell
Georgia Tech sophomore
And other than winning heaping
gobs of cash, what was the coolest
moment of her weekend in Orlando?
"Meeting Vanna White in the hotel
elevator," Heather said. "She is
sooooo sweet."
Sweet.
Ask any contestant or anyone even
remotely connected with "Wheel of
Fortune" about Vanna White, and
they'll all say she's sweet. A saint.
America's Sweetheart.
Yeah, right.
So. we loaded uo on insulin and
walked into the makeup room to interview
the woman who allegedly
makes Mother Teresa look like Shannen
Doherty.
Well, Vanna White's no Mother
Teresa, but she is charming, pleasant
and very, very pregnant.
The baby, a boy, is due June 2. She
hasn't picked out a name for him, yet.
She sat in the makeup chair, wearing
a sequined something-or-other
over the baby and her hair in huge
curlers, which meant we couldn't take
pictures.
Since we couldn't take an embarrassing
photo, we asked Vanna what
was her most embarrassing moment
on the show.
"I almost lost my outfit," she said,
laughing. "I was wearing a jumpsuit,
and the belt just popped off. I guess
I ate too many mashed potatoes during
the break."
The break she spoke of was the
half-hour or so between show tapings.
"Wheel of Fortune" tapes a week of
shows in a day, with 16 taping days a
month.
Each show is taped in chunks, stopping
periodically to change the puzzle
or replace the wheel for each
round.
To change the puzzle, a huge curtain
is draped around the letter board,
so neither the audience nor contestants
can see the new puzzle.
cunuum.
If you're only looking f
We're looking for the rare p
nize the opportunity for a h
most rewarding profession:
with Northwestern Mutual I
you've been hoping for. Yoi
paid for your productivity a
ness experience. Potential
graduation. If you're an act
sr., or grad student, call: K<
pSToPENH
( ? OPEN l\
( Food for the so
/ A sanctuary
) Join us for worship
) Blythewood Commum
f Martha Cross Sexton, Pastoi
btpm
Make a dat
If you have or have re
mononucleosis nrm
may contain valua
Earo up to $400 a moi
a week for more ir
803-254OS
Serobgii
Creating A Healt
Minimum $50 per donatic
a week; 1-1/2 hoi
ts profitable
h students
A crew replaces the letters and then
checks and re-checks to see if the puzzle
is spelled correctly. If the crew
makes a mistake, the taping is
stopped, the puzzle is changed, and
the contestants have all their money
taken away because the round has to
be reshot and replayed.
Being a contestant on "Wheel of
Fortune" is tough, but it doesn't compare
to the ordeal of being in the audience:
90 minutes of sitting on a
hard folding chair surrounded by
kvetching senior citizens ("I'm hard
of hearing! I have to sit next to Vanna!"),
forced to continually clap like a
seal nn amnhetamines and noohino
and ahhhhing over prizes you can't afford.
But then, no one has it easier than
Pat Sajak.
The former college dropout, Vietnam
veteran and TV weatherman who
made good has no pretensions as to
his place on the Celebrity Food Chain.
For more than a decade, he's held the
cakiest job in the universe, and he still
hasn't gotten a big head over it.
Even though he projects a clean-cut,
straight image now, did Pat ever do
anything kooky while he was in college?
"What do you mean by kooky?" he
asked.
Well, did he ever get really trashed,
steal a car, drive to Central America
and shack up with a 13-year-old
Guatemalan hooker?
"First of all," Pat said, "she was 14,
and it was Mexico. No, no, no Really,
I was a pretty boring kid. I didn't
belong to a fraternity or anything. No
'Animal House' for me."
And thoueh he looks like Dan
Quayle, Pat Sajak is cool. Really. lf
Vanna White is the Milk of Human
Kindness personified, then Pat Sajak
is a can of Jolt Cola in a '59 T-Bird
with the top down.
"You know, there are people stuck
working with Hulk Hogan," Pat said.
"1 get to work with Vanna White. Not
a bad gig, don't you think?"
*mm '"WJ' ^
or a JOB don't read on,
lerson who can recog- f
ead start in one of the
s. A college internship
-ife could be the break
j'II be your own boss, get
nd gain practical busifor
full-time career after 1
lievement-oriented jr? . |j
elli Rhode 254-0133. ;J($
EARTED )
/IINDED (
ul and the brain )
forall people
Sunday at 10:45 am (
ty Presbyterian Church (
' Highway 21 at I-77, Exit 24; J
3
. fi
am
e with us.
gently had herpes,
easles, your blood
ible antibodies.
ith - in just 3 hours
lformation, call
6537.
3
:als
hier V/orld.
)n, donate up to twice
iirs to donate.