University of South Carolina Libraries
[PEOPLE PL /?, * jbI K V B|< 111 Pianist Shu-cheng Shi wll maks his Amsrlcan debut wltl the USC Symphony Orchestr at 7:30 tonight at the Roger Cer ter. Under the direction of cor ductor Donald Portnoy, th evening program will featur the works of 18th-century con CONCERTS Hie Donaghadee Male Voice Che of Ireland will perform at 7:30 p j Thursday at First Baptist Chun at 1306 Hampton St. Hie Grateful Dead will perfor at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Thur J LVvi /4mr rt 4- 4" V% r\ am!/\4 u.ay aiiu rnuaj au uic vuai iut Coliseum. Friday's show is so out, but tickets are available f the Wednesday and Thursdj shows. Call (704) 522-6500 f more information. The USC Dance Company w present its Spring Dance Conce at 7:30 pjn. Thursday and Fricte Tickets are $5 for students. The USC choral ensemble, Ca olina Alive, will perform at 7:1 p.m. Saturday at the Koger Ce ter. Tickets are $4 for student Blues group he Gibb Droll Bai will play at 11:30 Saturday nig at Rockafellas'. Acoustic blues artist Caroline Aik will play at 7 pjn. Saturday at t Unitarian Universalist Coff House. The Unitarian Univers; ist Fellowship is located on tl corner of Heyward and Woodrc streets. MOVIES The Nickelodeon Theatre will pi sent a benefit showing tonight 'Gideon's Trumpet.'' USC law Pi fessor William McAninch will le a discussion after the showir The program is part of the Lb Week celebration sponsored the Student Bar Association ai the USC School of Law. The Nickelodeon Theatre is pi senting a festival of women fill makers, women actors ai women's experiences. 1 Dont Ws to Talk About It" will run tod and Wednesday. Shows will be 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. MUSEUMS "Josiah Wedgwood: Experime tal Potter" will run through Ap 16 at McKissick Museum. The i hibit includes more than 70 pie* of Wedgwood pottery and chr< icles how he influenced ceram as decorative art. ^ ' """" Christy Kline, a 9-year-old stu gets her face painted by Lola ties Saturday In Five Points. ACES WHATNOT] use Madia Relation* | * II poser Amadous Mozart and 19th- _ h century composer Frederic Chopin. SM Is resident conductor I and solo pianist with the Central Philharmonic Orchestra of I Kappa Delta membe Beijing. Tickets for tonight's donations to proven performance are $5 for students. iir "A Journey to Hindoostan: Ro- Ij f n. mantic Views of India, 1780-1860" i 1*1 1 ih will open Saturday at the Columbia % # Museum of Art. The exhibit will * ^ run through May 21. m k a p p s- "Triennial 95," an exhibit of conte temporary South Carolina art, will Id be on display at the S.C. State Mu- | YOU ITUiy I or seum through May 31. beCOHie Weai ?r theater ' J colof gteefl hi Longstreet Theatre will present I week, but oik a free performance of "Men, Women . ie ..dnrf dum dl and Margaret Fuller" at 4 p.m. to- I snclir !l"t day. The show will feature actor illCf OdSC 8W3I iy- and writer Laurie James as the Child dbl nonconformist Margaret Fuller | Ossoli. >r0 , i by clifton c Shadowlands, a play based on n" the life of C.S. Lewis, will open Staff w, '9' Friday night at Town Theatre. The production will run through ?? April 8. Call 799-2510 for reserht , i n i vations ana lniormanon. 1 The Puppet Regime will perform Pn David Drake's "The Night Larry 6 Kramer Kissed Me" at 8 p.m. Fri I day through Sunday at Benson Theatre. iw WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH 1 WUSC disc jockey Claire DeLune I will be the host of "Women in the ^ Blues" from 6 to 9 tonight. Hie ra- | dio show will celebrate female ? blues artists. no ad A panel discussion, "Modern I lvv^ Women in a Traditional World," . bv will be from 7 to 9 Wednesday I Q(j night in RH 322-326. MISCELLANEOUS | -e. Students are invited to attend the DAWrtnflflinw" tir/M?lroV?Arv Qaf_ I LJ&y UI 1 CItUOOlUli TTUIAflllU^ 1J urday at the USC band hall. Clinmt ic sessions will be at 10:30 a.m., | ay 1:30 pjn. and 3:30 p jn. Registraat tion is at 9 a.m. Cost is $2 for Percussive Arts Society members and $5 for nonmembers. Call 777-4278 | for more information. m I >ril John A. Miller will be reading from ex- and signing his book "Jackson ;es Street and other Soldier Stories" a g~>i | jn- from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. Wednes- I, 1^11*^1,1 ics day at the University Bookstore in the Russell House. ^ TAMARA LAW Staff Writ The USC Masters ( ies program has beer ^ ^ a-yi try by U.S. News & V Ik. I I secu^ve year, y m The magazine's ai t m I country's best gradu Hf f / ahead of such Ivy Lei VK':H|Hp| ^ | TheUSCMIBSp: m *?i the first interdiscipli | major U.S. university. K al about business admi | become fluent in a foi fm \ Bj^i ture of a country in v and serve a four- to TT - yi.: _ company in another ( p' r I The program otfei . for foreign students, B I ian, Portuguese and I I in Chinese, Arabic, J I < -.v. l1 CHUCK QRIFFrrH The Gamecock | ident at Harmony School In Columbia, I I H 1 i Barnello at St. Patrick's Day festivl- 1 1 ^ I I "-J ?? r~i-" will begin at 4 want to sweep under the rug We on *he Rus. figured that by doing a weeklong se|| House Patio service project, we would not only mu n , u 4.- -ir t\ u j There will be be promoting Kappa Delta around , r j j n i u- three seesaws and campus and around Columbia, we , would be promoting awareness of S1.?j W ? child abuse." will teke turns unEighty percent of the proceeds t]1 the ^athon raised will benefit the Midlands Area ls a P"m' Council on Child Abuse and Neglect, J, v and the remainder will be donated and a11 llbe re to the National Committee for the 1T??,a ce? ain airi Prevention of Child Abuse. Ple5fs' 5"** Sunday night, the sorority tied tfftL rrcy ribbons around the necks of teddy ?UPP? m bears and will donate them to the sJ^?8se? ai? p Children's Center in West Columbia also to , , , Sigma Chi and Si, later this week. ... , 1 or pUUrlWa Pont? io fraternities, she i Ihe Children s Center is an et- aT . . . fort to condense all the places chil, , . u 4.1 need an entire w dren will have to go when they are , , ... .. abused," Denley said. ' 1ft more things t Hie center takes in children from one esi es ui ... j . .1 we re just not sen abusive homes and prevents them . ? n from having to go to separate facili- helping the Midi diversity makes MIBS number tor in tne two-year tracx, tne nrst year Deg )f International Business Stud- summer with intensive language traininj i named the best in the coun- 1?the summer/fall sessions, courses in farld Report for the sixth con- dations of international business are t eluding marketing, finance and manager itiuqI mii^o **onira fVio In the fall/spring sessions, students cc llluai TTiuvii luiino ciiv * w ate schools, placed Carolina take language courses to learn business ague colleges as Harvard. ogy and global enterprise courses such at rogram, started in 1974, was tional finance, accounting and business e nary program of its kind at a Students are required to take special MIBS students not only leam tive studies, which may concentrate or nistration; they also have to tional banking, global financial markets a reign language, learn the cul- marketing. vhich the language is spoken In the second year, students begin ar< sixth-month internship at a with emphasis on political, social and econ< country. ies, along with cultural and geographical "H two-year tracks in English the country in which they will intern. Afte Yench, Spanish, German, Ital- studies, students begin language trainin lus?ian, and three-year tracks eign institution. apanese and Korean. After these courses are completed, ir e Gamecock. R< c mSr. iHiMfeis 8 * \ ^ ^pfj it Anna Truluck, a physical education sophomore, and sociology t child abuse as part of the weeklong Shamrock Days. A seesaw i n it ttt r\nr^ A DELTA * S H A |Uiy0 "W" appa Delta sorority is ties for medical cai I X sponsoring a weeklong "Now, every ti ry of the service project called into the center, th I the past 1 \ Shamrock Days. The bear for a feeling event began Sunday ley said. I sorority with a teddy bear ribbon tie and will Today, the soi irOCkS tO conclude Thursday and Friday with group of children fr ronocc a seesaw marathon on the Russell a Columbia shelt House Patio. dren, to Chuck E. ISO. Kappa Delta has sponsored Sham- za party. Wednesrock Days every year since the chap- day, Kappa Delta ter has been at USC. This is the first wii} donate the 'iTESTNUT year the event has been a weeklong teddy bears to the ~ project instead of a one-day event. Children's Center nter Jennifer Denley, philanthropy and dobeautificommittee chairwoman for Kappa cation work at SisDelta, said the sorority thinks child tercare a local abuse awareness is an issue that shelter for abused needs more publicity on the state women and chiland national levels. "Child abuse is something that Thursday the is neglected around our state," Den- 8eeMwmarathon 1 clit ooiH Ira o tnot T"vri/"kr\lr* v '"^%s lit '" * V j0400&^*^ #1 I ^ jl ' CHUCK GRIFFITH The Gamecock senior Annette Creech staff a table Monday to collect marathon will wrap up the project Thursday and Friday. k T^/^? A T / I 1 IN S OAKb MROCK DAYS -e and other needs. . me a child walks ey will get a teddy of security," Denrority will take a cm Palmetto Race, er for abused chilCheese's for a pizChild abuse is something that is neglected around our state. It s a problem tbat people want to sweep under tbe rug. *!day- ... Jennifer Denley ml seesaw in shifts, . sponsible for rais- Chairwoman lount of money in Philanthropy Committee said. Kappa Delta irority has received 2 alumni and local rofessionals. Kapbeen supported by gma Alpha Epsilon jaid. it enough that we eek, and there's a hat we need to get id-raising so that ding our money off mley said. "We're ands as well." one for sixth straight year ins in the year, students begin interning at foreign companies I courses, such as IBM, AT&T and General Motors. After inthe foun- ternships, students take courses emphasizing overaken, in- ajj strategic management and planning of interintinue to na^ona^ markets. terminol- Students in three-year tracks receive another } interna- year exPosure to the complex cultures and lanithics. guages of nations where these languages are spoized elec- ken. i interna- Students in the MIBS program face intensive nd export training. They are in class four hours a day, but most of their work is outside the classroom. ?a studies "One 0f the best parts of MIBS is the language imicstud- ... , studies of trainm?> because tnat s wnai sets us apart irom r the area ?ther programs, and the opportunity to intern in g at a for- the country of the language you're learning," said John Gravely, a MIBS student studying Spanish, i the final "It gives you a good opportunity to get a job." ead it, you.