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2 WEEKLY^lEETlNOS Phi Sigma Pi will hold its rush on Wed., Sept. 21 at 5:30 in Humanities 202. Formal rush will be Sat., Sept. 24 at 11 a.m. in the RH Ballroom. For more information, contact Christy Holly at 544-1951. McKissick Museum will hold a program on "Deliriously Fragrant Herbs." Master gardener Ann Klingenhagen unll laarl nq>4i/>inqnto fViiwirrh tVia Viicl. nui tvuu uvi^/uiiiu uu vu^n viiv iuu tory and uses of many fragrant herbs. She also will discuss growing herbs in windowsills or small patio gardens. Participants will have an opportunity to make an herbal sachet. Herb-flavored refreshments will be served. The program is free of charge and runs from 10:30 ajn. to noon on Wed. Sept. 21. For more information call 7777251. Beta Alpha Psi will hold mock interviews on Sept. 20-22. A social will be held Wed. Sept. 21 at 5:30 p.m., followed by a panel discussion at 6 p jn. with Coopers & Lybrand, KPMG Peat Marwick and Price Waterhouse. Dress professionally. For more information, call 777-4710. The International Students Association is throwing a party on Friday September 23, from 7:30 to 12:30 p.m. at the Golden Spur. All students are invited to share a cultural evening with dance music. Snacks and beverages will be served. The USC Volunteer Fair will be Friday, Sept. 23 from 10 a.m.-l p.m. on the Russell House patio (rain location: Golden Spur). The fair will provide an opportunity for volunteer agencies to preview their services to future volunteers. The Columbia Coalition of Take Back the Night invites the community to participate in their 11th annual walk and rally on Thursday, Sept. 22. Participants are asked to meet at the steps of the State Capitol at 5:30 p.m. and to walk to Finlay Park for a rally that will begin at 6 p.m. For more information, contact Beverly MossClarke at 254-2253. HELPLINE, a 24-hour crisis-prevention and suicide-prevention hotline, needs volunteers. For more information, call 790-4357. BUCKLE URTT JiD dtfsui knb vkiuMi Z^VVed., Sept. 21sr\ , 3:00-4:30 pm \ ^ 152Gambrell J Get an early start Attend Job Search Seniors! Start Earl Your future deper Brought to you by the College of ? the Career Center. Persons needinj call Sally Rowell at 777-7280. 1000's of I CD's, Tapes, ALL KINDS POP, ROCK, URBAN, R&B, We Buy Used CD's, Tapes, LP's, i Everyday I Open 11-7 papa Mai-Sal 1:30-6:30 SundaV Columba The philosophy department will host a reception for visiting scholar Jill Frank at 3:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 23 in the Humanities Office Building room 615. The reception will be followed by her talk on "Aristotle and the Justice of Property" at 4 p.m. in Gambrell 258. Wednesdays Job search strategies for humanities and social science majors, 34:30 p.m., Gambrell 152. PALM Campus Ministry, 5:30 p.m., dinner and program with Dr. Jan Love: "Images of God." Student Government Senate, 5 p.m., RH Theater. Campus Rape Awareness information meeting and reception, 7 p.m., RH 332. Call Darra James at 544-0664. Bible Study, 7 p.m., Presbyterian Student Center, 1702 Greene St. CPU Golden Spur Committee, 7:30 p.m., CPU Conference Room. CPU Special Programs Committee, 8 p.m., RH 201. CPU Contemporary Sounds Committee, 8:30 p.m., RH 306. College Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Gambrell 250. Contact Larry Drakeford at 544-3501 or Vemon Davenport at 796-7402 for more information. Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Association, 8 p.m., BA 303. Fellowship of Christian Athletes, 9 p.m., the Koost lobby, truest speaker Art Baker, president of the Gamecock Club. Call J.J. Gentry at 2568067 for more information. Thursdays B "Heart to Heart," 7:00 p.m., Baptist Student Union, 700 Pickens St. B CPU Ideas & Issues Committee, 7:30 p.m., CPU Conference Room. B Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 8 p.m., RH 303. For more information, contact Richard Grinnan at 256-1211. B Campus Crusade for Christ "Prime Time," 8-9:30 p.m., RH 307. B Adult Reading Program Tutor Training, 6-9 p.m., State Literaiy Resource Center. T'S THE LAW LfuvwP :|x ::? '% i are you a re goi rig?? Ne Can Help! on your future. i Stategies for HSS y... ids on it! lumanities and Social Sciences and \ special assistance for a disability 11 ^ |BMj HHjjKi Ised & New , & Records ; OF MUSIC CLASSICAL, BLUES & JAZZ S A / JAZZ RECORD SHOPPE en St. Telephone: a. SC 29205 (8G3> 256-0095 The Gamecock Wodm Group promotes en SHARON TERNER Staff Writer SAGE is Students Acting for a Greener Earth would requir (SAGE) wants students to be aware of reusable mug environmental issues facing college stu- Styrofoam ( dents. year. Event SAGE plans several activities ? ase an cc throughout the year to try to get stu- .0 en??jraP dents involved in and concerned about ^)^CU 6 us Plan. environmental issues ana me earxn. ine wanj group's goal for this year is straightfor- ^ (jown on, ward, said SAGE cochairwoman Trisha ber Mike Ba1 Cooper. SAGE sai "We are tiying to remove all Styro- Styrofoam ci foam products from campus cafeterias," ter and $45 c she said. SAGE is i Court fight clouds! WASHINGTON (AP) ? Somewhere on Justice D( the high seas, two European freighters U.S. Court of are creeping toward the United States on Monday t not knowing whether their caigo of high- gravely j eop ly radioactive uranium fuel will be un- program "to loaded. tion and detc The dispute over what to do about The two f the two civilian ships is unfolding in two have been on federal courts and has pitted the envi- ing that the ronmental concerns of South Carolina's turn the injur governor against the Clinton adminis- officials said 1 tration's nuclear nonproliferation poli- the 12-mile 1 cy. sons they de The rarcrn nf 1M fiiel rnrls frnrn re. en their Inrni search reactors in Europe is supposed The earlie to go to the Energy Department's Sa- Perry in U.S vannah River nuclear weapons complex bia, S.C., last near Aiken, S.C., for safekeeping. to a lawsuit fi The department has agreed to take Carroll Cam] the shipment from the Europeans so the Department weapons-grade material is not sent to vironmental a reprocessing plant in Scotland where full environn plutonium ? the material needed for The state making a nuclear weapon ? would be ment eventu extracted. as 15,000 spe But that strategy was thrown into But Justi< doubt last week when a federal judge in gued that it \ South Carolina barred the uranium from suggest the s U.S. waters ? even after the freighters an undue ha had already set to sea ? until a detailed account for o study is completed on the environmen- fuel already i tal impact of storing the fuel rods at Sa- The uranium vannah River. part of a ship DON'T DRI Chapla Corner ?-? % Dinner & Program Tuesday Evening 6:00 pm The Carolii n i | p a j promotes co Bible Study thefoundati Wednesday Evening life at CaroL 7:00 pm I All associal of healthy it XUJV Presbyterian significant P * s?= \ Student Center -ah of thee I S * 1702 Greene St. Carolina Ch vi"v ~7QQ no 10 available foi '"s^ /Jy-ML Z guidance. -x X Wedm "V {(/ ... Me; Exp Sunday 5:30pm Worshi PALM Campus M Parnership Among Lutherans 6 728 Pickens Street 799 St. Thomas Moore Catholic Ce Masse Sun. 11 am, 6 pm Mon.-Thurs. 12:15 pm tl610 Greene St > (arrncc frr?m thr> 1 * |yylinriamm - /twv \uviv/uu aav?a& uiv w Heart to Heart ''What do I believe? (Dealinc Guest Speaker: Jane Poster (Associate Director of the B.S.U.) Thursday, September 22 7:00pm BAPTIST STUDENT UNION CANTERBURY <5:?>M Tfee EpiscopS::Piiirch on ( *TJh> art of 1115 Marion Street ^ R^Rich Biegat.Chaplain" | The Episcopal Ckorch Welc ssday, September 21, 1994 vironmental awarei working on a plan that recycling office to determi e freshmen to purchase a waste is produced on cam] [ to help reduce the amount the results to students, cups used during the school There are several ot hough students can pur- $AGE hopes to carry out tl >mug for $2, SAGE wants pjan t0 help local high sch Marriott Dining Services environmental groups to e mug m the freshman meal dent310 start getting inv, t to promote Ecomugs and omental issues. They ala the waste,' said dub mem- t^33"011 Pr?-)ect around K ttaglio areas. Some of the ideas id the plan would save 224 include planting flowers ips per person per semes- trees around campus. >n meal plans. SAGE meets Tuesday also working with the USC Russell House Room 302. ate of radioactive f apartment lawyers told the fuel rods the Energy Dep Appeals in Richmond, Va., agreed to take for storag* hat the injunction "would tors of small research res ardize" the government's gium, Austria, Scandina^ prevent nuclear prolifera- European countries, sr nuclear terrorism." These reactors for yea reighters in the Atlantic highly enriched uraniun lered to reduce speed, hoj> processed for weapxms use appellate court will over- administration has agre iction. Energy Department the uranium with a less d; the ships remained outside njnm fQ6i used in comme imit, but for security rea- p0wer plants in hopes oi clmed to be more specific them to stop using weapo 1. , T , ... terial for fuel. But 33 ?art of the . District Court in Colum- hi h] enriched fuel has t Thursday was in response , Tt t jc* * iju o i.i.n r r> to the United States. Jed by South Carolina Gov. . obeli, who said the Eneigy Jhe,r?133 lo?of was violating federal en- a kt?f bombs and v laws by not completing a ^3' out of "orld P 1113 lental impact review. Undersecretary Charles i ! said the federal govern- reporters recently. lally might keep as many Thomas Grumbly, ass snt fuel rods at the facility, secretary for environmei le Department lawyers ar- ment, said the fuel rods a vas "sheer speculation" to 2 feet long, weigh only a fe ipent fuel rods would pose can be relatively easily har zard because they would easily transportable, easi nly about 2 percent of the separated," said Grumblj stored at Savannah River. But South Carolina off aboard the two vessels are department has other op >ment of 409 used nuclear ing reprocessing the mate mm ins Dh ^ LAST d ,ina m Association \Jm ia Chaplins Association v 19 operation and fellowship as RHfl ul on of the diversity of religious H ^ If A|f| V UUU H(j| > lion members support the role ? 7 . iligious development as a f C iart of higher education. v \S t ^ haphns and counselors of the ^ ^ Simon aplins Association are : counsehng and spiritual ~~ ~~~ fwed esday 5:30pm al & Program loring Prison v Ministry . t . J Tickets mav be ourcha iplin Frankie San Desk no later than Sep &p.. dinner to be served prii .Dinner meal/cash cards. Forri Program Union at 777}t Methodists |~~j? L7363 F^eJ?r? Progrtm Unio nter Confession K m 2-3 pm or by apt. Evening Prayer mmm 6:45 pm w Man Club Meetings pm . Michael F. McCafferty k reet chool of Nursing) 3 with cults)" M llpt Mak< CULTS If you hav Th*r An nm whmt Tt-y smm mononucl ) Pickens Street 799-3854 may CC MUNITY Em , up to a week topus ill ill ^Hbrseshoe) '71-7800 omes You. ( Minimum $5 a we less Woodstock sua and to get investigated her projects for waste us year. They '^zz. violations Dived in envi upoiiaucdu- inc,w lujkjwarj? as mousanas impus and lo- grooved to the music, some Woodstock f for the project '94 revelers visited a solar-powered "Eco j, plants and Village," read about saving the earth and soothed their consciences by toss's at 8 p.m. in the brochures in recycling bins. But one month later, nearly 1,500 _ tons of beer cans, soda bottles, crumpled ll/\ I lawn chairs, muddy tents and other conW.V/J. cert trash are buried in landfills. And what was billed as an environmentally >artment has friendly event is being investigated for 5 from opera- possibly breaking pollution laws, ictors in Bel- Ulster County authorities claim orria and other ganizers of the 25th anniversary concert in Saugerties recycled a scant 2 pertrs have used cent of the refuse ? far less than the 50 l that can be percent they promised. County law rei. The Clinton quires recyclable materials to be kept ed to replace out of landfills, angerous ura- "In a festival such as this, that was srcial nuclear billed as an environmental concert, ref persuading cycling should have had a high priority f ns-grade ma- on the agenda. I don't believe it did," said Charles Shaw, executive director reement the of the Ulster County Resource Recovo be returned eiy Agency, which manages solid waste and recycling for the area. erial here to Wetlands also were trashed and toi, , . , lets overflowed into the 3eaver Kill ? r, stream. The state Department of Envi r Piir^ia tnM ronmental Conservation tested the water twice, but hasn't said what it found. . "There could be some basis for wa, energy ^er pollution violations, but we haven't i anaSe" determined that," said department re only about spokesman R.W. Groneman. w pounds and Shaw says the Saugerties-based conidled. "They're cert promoter, Woodstock Ventures, ly chemically could face up to $4,000 in fines for each ' day of the massive trash cleanup, which icials said the is only now wrapping up. About 250,000 tions, includ- people came to the concert, which endirial. edAug. 15. Woodstock spokeswoman Ilene Marder conceded that only a few tons of material was recycled, but insisted it wasn't all the organizers' fault. I ^ I Register with i I Selective Service, I it's quick, it's easy, I and it's the Law! iner Theat^^^ nesday, September 28,1994 6:30 pm RH Ballroom sed at the Russell House Information tember 23. Ticket price includes gourmet > ar to performance. Students may use riore information, call the Carolina ; ( 7130 mi paid for, in put, with student activity fees. I B6 I |? I iml assistance far disabilities please contact the Carolina |i^| USI n at 777-7130 at least 48 hours prior to the event. j a date with us. e or have recently had herpes, eosis, or measles, your blood mtain valuable antibodies. <CAnn o mnnth _ In met 2 It Allro u. iiiuniii - 111 j u^i j nuuid for more information, call 803-254-6537. QP Serologicals Zreating A Healthier World. 0 per donation, donate up to twice sek; 1-1/2 hours to donate.