The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 25, 1995, Page 2, Image 2
PATEBOOK Guide to Weekly
Mandatory Treasurer's Workshops
continue today for groups that
receive student activity fee funds.
All student organizations must be
represented at one of the four sessions
to be eligible to receive funding
for next year. The last workshop
will be held today. The session will
run from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. and will
be held in RH322/326. For more information,
contact the Student Gov
ernment office at 777-2664.
Drop-in self- hypnosis sessions
will be held Wednesdays from 2:30
-4:00 p.m. in Room 212 of the Counseling
and Human Development Center,
located on 900 Assembly St The
sessions are led by qualified professionals
and are free of charge. For
more information, call 777-5223.
Wednesdays
Beta Alpha Psi, 5:30 p.m.
PALM Campus Ministry, 5:30
p.m., dinner and program, PALM
Center.
Student Government Senate,
5 p.m., RH Theater.
Women Students' Association,
6 p.m., RH 201.
Campus Rape Awareness, 7
p.m., RH 332.
Student Ad Federation, 7 p.m.,
RH 302
Bible Study, 7 p.m., Presbyterian
Student Center, 1702 Greene
St.
Young Democrats Meeting, 7
p.m., RH 348.
Thursdays
Habitat for Humanity, 5:30
p.m., RH 302.
"Heart to Heart," 7 p.m., Baptist
Student Union, 700 Pickens St.
CPU Ideas & Issues Committee,
730 pan., CPU Conference Room.
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship,
8 p.m.-9:30 p.m, RH 315.
For more information, call Richard
Grinnan at 256-1211.
Campus Crusade for Christ,
"Prime Time," 7:30 p.m., RH 327.
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Carolina Cares, 7 pm., RH 204.
Student Psychology Association,
7 p.m., Barnwell Conference
Room.
Homecoming Commission, 7:15
p.m., RH 307.
USC Model United Nations
Club, 8:30 p.m., Gambrell 201.
SAGE (Students Acting for a
Greener Earth), an environmental
action group, 8 p.m., RH 302.
Campus Coalition for Literacy,
every other Tuesday, 8:30 p.m.,
RH 202. For more information, call
777-8402.
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Meetings
Call Dave at 551-5577 for more information.
Christian Coffee House, 9-11
p.m., PALM Center
Sundays
Ballroom Dance Club, 4-5 p.m.,
Blatt P.E. Center Room 107. For
more information, call Gabriele at
256-3140.
Worship service and dinner,
5:30 p.m., PALM Center, 728 Pickens
St.
Mondays
Living Off Campus and Learning
(LOCAL), 2:30 p.m., EH 348. For
more information, call Off-Campus
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Sorority Council, 5 p.m., RH
Theater.
PALM Campus Ministry, "Body
& SouT meal and program, 5:30 p.m.,
PALM Center.
CPU Cultural Arts Committee,
7 p.m., CPU Conference Room.
CPU Cinematic Arts Committee,
7 p.m., RH 203.
CPU Publicity Committee, 7:30
p.m., RH 201.
Tuesdays
Carolina for KIDS, 6 p.m., RH
302.
Dinner and program, 6 p.m.,
Presbyterian Student Center, 1702
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Hangin' Shoes
About twenty pairs of shoes w?
Russell House patio Tuesday. Ri
know of the shoos origin.
Legal compli<
bungee arch >
MYRTLE BEACH (AP) ? The dismantling
of a bungee arch at Atlantic
Beach where two teen-agers died last
year has been delayed because of legal
complications.
Zachary Steinke, 17, of Indianapolis
was killed at the site of the arch His
family got a court warrant to keep the
arch from being sold or dismantled before
its $10 million lawsuit against Beach
Bungee was resolved.
]Steinke and Michael Nash, 19, were
killed Aug. 10,1993, after a cable snapped
on the crawlevator used to take jumpers
to the top of the 172-foot arch and the
cage plunged to the ground.
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KIM TRUETT The Gamecock
m hanging In a tree on the
issell House officials did not
nations stop
removal
Beach Bungee sold the arch to Family
Magic Adventures Inc., an amusement
company in Florida, prompting
the Steinke family to serve an attachment
warrant on the arch, which was
to be torn down Monday.
The Steinke family and the amusement
company have reached an agreement
to remove the warrant.
Family Magic representative Danny
MacDonald said he was told the dismantling
was delayed because the crane
that was to be used was scheduled to be
somewhere else Monday. He said the
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management team:
Please join us to find c
rniormanon session:
Wednesday, February 1,1995
6:00PM-7:30PM
Reception will follow
For:
The University of Soutt
Master of Internationa
We are an equal oj
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COLUMBIA (AP) ? Rather than wait t
to get sued, South Carolina took the U.S. (
Justice Department to federal court on
Tuesday, claiming new federal voter registration
rules are an unconstitutional i
violation of state power.
California also has sued to void as un- <
constitutional the 1993 National Voter ,
Registration Act, which aims to make
registering to vote easier. It would establish
voter registration programs at '
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anvers license Drancnes ana uma government
offices.
Along with the constitutional argu- ,
ment, the law, known as the "motor voter"
bill, improperly requires states to establish
and run expensive programs
without providing money, South Carolina
Attorney General Charlie Condon
said in the federal court lawsuit.
On Monday, U.S. Attorney General
Janet Reno sued California,'Illinois and
Pennsylvania to enforce compliance. It
held off on suing Michigan and South
Carolina because election officials were
trying to comply by using existing money.
The department, however, said it
would keep monitoring those states and
lawsuits were possible.
South Carolina, however, "will not
kowtow to threats of intimidation by the
government in Washington," Condon, a
Republican, said.
"This issue has nothing to do with
free and open registration. The larger
issue is who should manage the affairs
of the states," he said.
The state's lawsuit argues that the
law violates the 10th Amendment, which
niwoo ototoa Krnaf) ricrhta tn run their af
fairs without federal interference.
A Justice Department spokesman
BUDGET continued from page 1
property tax relief across the state. Comer
said he believes the final decision regarding
the cuts will depend upon whether
or not the public is swept away by the
notion of lowered taxes and whether or
not they are made aware of the effects
on higher education.
While public education in grades K!
12 have received an exemption from the
cuts, post-secondary institutions have
not. The state of South Carolina provides
comparatively little state support for its
iangin
iness.
RKETIIMG DEVELOPMENT
ountries. Our five major busin
COLGATE-PALMC
COLGATE PEOPLE...MAKING A Wl
donal training program - project bast
Lreer tracks: domestic and internatior
igement responsibilities in sales, glot
cet research, finance, technology, and
n comprehensive understanding of t
usiness - "learn by doing"
ion for competitive assignments witf
5.
>ut about career opportunities in Market
Place:
Admin
Board I
For deta
Placemt
i Carolina On Ca
I Business Studies Februa
jportunity employer committed to quality through d
la auempis
>r voter bill
vas not available for comment on South
Carolina's pre-emptive legal strike.
On Monday, Gov. David Beasley aljo
cast the issue as one of state's rights.
"I don't think the people in South
Carolina want the federal government
running the state government," he said.
Before he left office earlier this month,
Gov. Carroll Campbell vetoed legislation
to comply with the federal mandate.
Earlier, he had directed the state Budget
and Control Board not to transfer
$570,000 needed to help pay for it.
The law passed Congress after a bitter
partisan fight, with Democratic support
but opposition from Republicans
concerned that it would put more poor,
largely Democratic, voters on the rolls.
It requires all states to provide voter
registration through the driver licensing
process, through the mail and
at state social service offices. Establishing
the programs would cost between
$773,000 and $1.5 million, South Carolina
election officials said.
Condon said South Carolina already
had taken substantive steps to make
voter registration easier.
South Carolinians can obtain mailorder
registration forms at state and local
agencies, libraries, town halls and
other places. The state also has mobile
vans where workers register voters and
it sends out registration forms as newspaper
inserts.
public institutions.
"In talking to Rep. Rogers, who represents
the campus area, he stressed
promoting knowledge of the issue through
the Gamecock, promoting dialogue among
students, calling your legislator or anyone
who has some sort of influence over
this" Comer said. "Make sure your parents
know as well that higher education
could take another hit, and that's your
diploma that they're hitting."
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impus Interviews:
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