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2 PATEBOOK Guide to Weekly Meetin< Harvey Roeenfeld will speak about Roger ce "Raoul Wallenberg, Holocaust Rescuer and $61 ?Where is He Now?" at 11:30 a.m. Sunday in Russell House 201. For fur- A bis ther information, call Bernard Fried- Anders* man, Hillel religious counselor, at 799- Tuesday 9132. ing and located* USC Opera will present The Pri- informa ma Donna" by Domenico Cimarosa this weekend Performance times are 8 pm. The Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday in Dray- 96 exch ton Hall. Tickets are $10 for adults and and Lee $5 for USC faculty, staff, students and today. I senior citizens. Interna at 777-7 The Master Class Series continues Monday with oboist Dwight Manning. The The performance will be at 1:30 p.m. national in Fraser Hall. Admission is free. arship is tact Inb The Women's Studies Association dents at will present Audrey Monk from the National Organization for Women The Wednesday. The meeting is at 6 p.m. Rape-fr in Russell House 348. cation n day in tl Drop-in self-hypnosis sessions are the Rusj scheduled firm 230 pm-4 pm Wednes- tion, cal days at the Counseling and Human 777-824 Development Center, located at 900 Assembly St. For more information, Stud contact Ruthann Fox-Hines at 777- ing thei: 5223 about U during < The Albert NcNeil Jubilee Singers, summei the internationally acclaimed choral pick up group, will perform its blend of jazz, . Career C folk and gospel music Sunday at the line for i DID YOU KNOW? K If you are convicted of K a DUI in EL SALVADOR that your first offense Wa is your last ? execution by K firing squad. E A first conviction DUI in the state of South Carolina coats an average of $13,500. Your drivers license Is suspended for 6 months. Drinking & Driving: J ^ l&?tg?5l Is it really worth the price? < J | ? ? ? ijsxa I J I KAip U | 25%? i item i i or^oi 1 Friday ' no ttir _LV/ LI | i Febru i i *Excluding Calvin Kleii Th? fianwco 2! inter. Tickets are $11 for adults Sundays br students. g Ballroom Dance Club, p.m., Blatt P.E. Center Room ick focus group led by Malcolm more information, call Gabriel on will be from 3 p.m.-5 p.m. 3^40 ISI in room 212 at the Counsel- B Worehip service and din! Itanan Development Center, PALM Center, 728 Pic at 900 Assembly St. For more tion, call 777-5223. Mondays application deadline for 199^ ^ J" Council, 5 pun.,: ange programs to Kent, Hull BCPU Cultural Arts Con ds Universities in England is 7 cpu Conference Roo: ? or more information, contact _ Amr /-? . tional ftogrcms for Students c Arts C 461. ?' ' r~"' CPU Publicity Commiti application deadline for Inter- Pm*' ^ ^ *' Students Study Abroad Schol- _ . i Feb. 17. For applications,.con- Tuesdays TrTT^? srnational Programs for Stu- ? Carolina for KIDS, 6 p 777-7461. 302 Dinner and program, CARE (Creating Attitudes for Presbyterian Student Cent< ee Environments) Peer Edu- Greene St. leeting will be at 2 p.m. Tues- I Carolina Cares, 7 p.m., tie Witten room, third floor of I Student Psychology Ass sell house. For more informa- ^ P-m., Barnwell Conferenci 1 Sexual Assault Services at Homecoming Commissi 8. p.m., RH 307. USC Model United Natic aits who are interested in shar- 8:30 p.m., Gambrell 201. r experiences and knowledge SAGE (Students Actii SC with incoming freshmen Greener Earth), an environm* Carolina Camp, an optional tion group, 8 p.m., RH 302. r orientation experience, can Campus Coalition for 1 a counselor application in the every other Tuesday, 8:30 p Center, sixth floor of BA. Dead- 202. For more information, c application is 5 p.m. Feb. 20. 8402. >NE DAY SAL tch the marathon from Main SI SAVE MONEY ON HUNDREDS OF ITEM! THIS SATURDAY ONL1 IKMY/NAVY STOR 821 MAIN STREET 252-K L1AAAAAAAAA^AAXA*A*AATT lis ad, git in, and aff any one in Juniors' ing Men's f, February u Sunday, lary 121 only! n. I ck Friday, February 10, 1998 zri Museum becom 4 p.m.-5 A?octatodPr? He rate 107. For COLUMBIA (AP)?Ed Colie had worked facilities!] e at 250- at the State Museum for only a few butjiot gre months in 1990 when he came across a ner, 5:30 ciying child one day?a young blind boy seven. Wh kens St. frustrated because he couldn't see the a 12," C museum's exhibits. about 10 pe From that troubling scene was bom visitors eac RH The- the idea to make the museum as hand- ability and icapped-friendly as money and technol- recorded d< amittee, ?gy would allow. Money m, Colie, an exhibit specialist, on Thurs- Colie expec lommit- day demonstrated a prototype at the mu- ?fvo' seum s great wnite snarK display. A 4- i tee 7:30 f??t high pedestal contains a transmit- from the g ter that broadcasts a description of the plied for m display to receivers contained in head- ernment. 1 phones that patrons will wear. Harvard L m RH A shark model sits atop the pedestal, hon in gove letting those who can't see the full dis- plied for wi 6 play still feel what it is like so they have First to V7no a better understanding of the exhibit, will be the Jr' Colie said. exhibits: th RH 204 With enough funding, Colie hopes to the "Best f . * have 219 of the stations installed around locomotive; oaation, the museum in Columbia's Congaree to built in I s Boom. Vista neighborhood. called "the on, 7:15 ns Club, ^^KRLOTTE'S PRE ES| I LOCKUP ,fc; t I COME READY treet ! I MOSHI a mm YOU CAN NOT M Ilk. ESCAPE... ?? l| I j IS COMINC... Ej I IF YOU RE rVJ/! UMr SCARED THEN VlV I ^^^YYOU RE u 1 laO mtmfL - / tTl'll ||mip :|SC * ? The ||k Sponsored by TTin fawnlftia I ira// A"v vcu uiuia jl| Chaplain's Association I | ; ^ I B 9 pm, Thur ' , IT Russell H tog more accessible s the museum's handicapped the Confederates' Hunley submarine, iow as better than average, the first sub ever to sink an enemy vesiat. sel in the United States. ' a possible 10, we're about a When Colie first began thinking en we're finished we should about the troubles the handicapped must olie said. He estimated that deal with, it had no direct bearing on rcent of the museum's 200,000 his life. But two years ago he began losh year have some kind of dis- ing his vision and has become extremely i could benefit from the pre- farsighted. He wears thick corrective - escnpuons. lenses, sometimes walks with a cane J has been a stumbling block, and needs another pair of glasses to see :ts the project, even with the detail up close, lunteers, will cost at least Tasks once simple for a man who le's collected a $50,000 grant has been a pilot and prototype designovernor's office and has ap- er for AT&T, such as soldering wires, toney from the federal gov- now are nearly impossible. ["here's also a chance that a "If s the sheer frustration of not be[niversity grant for innova- ing able to do things you used to be able rnment programs he has ap- to do," he said, ill yield $100,000. The radio system for the blind and get the handicapped displays vision-impaired isn't Colie's only idea, museum's five most popular There also are amplified recordings for le shark; a mastodon model; the hard of hearing, mirrors positioned Yiend of Charleston" steam to help those in wheelchairs see exhibits the Anderson Car, a rare au- and lower controls on interactive extock Hill that in its time was hibits for children and the wheelchairAmerican Rolls-Royce"; and bound. FEB OTH 9:00^ MIER HARD-CORE fAMi ? t. m- ^ A. * m mm. m . m ^ ^ I IS O TwUK WAY THE PARENTS... TO BE DRIVEN TO A :RENZY HIGH /iz01 I Living life to H ""V its Fullest! jr )avl ?/ 1 m I* Professor of Sociology (w||| at Eastern College T Author of 23 Books j|| Internationally (real Renowned Speaker Tony & i Campolo jr s., Feb. 16, 1995 & ous^ Ballroom ^