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a Datebook Entries and corrections for the Datebook may be submitted to The Gamecock on the third floor of the Russell House. There is a box designated for the Datebook in the newsroom. The Counseling and Human Development Center at 900 Assembly St. is offering a variety of programs in the following weeks. One is "Multicultural Workshop Series for Students in the Helping Professions." The sessions are Fridays (Sept. 29, Oct. 3 and Oct. 13) from noon to 2 p.m. The sessions will discuss multicultural awareness, knowledge and skills. Participants may attend any session or all three. Malcolm Anderson will be leading the session. Another program is the "Memory and Concentration Through Hypnosis." The session will be Sept. 28 and Oct. 3 from 2 to 3:30 p.m. The leaders of the session is Judy Small. "Healing the Wound: Recovering from Loss" will be on Thursday from 9:30 a.m. - noon. Dr. Ruthann FoxHines will lead the session. Dr. Fox-Hines will also host "Burnout Prevention, Coping with Stress" on Sept. 29 from 9:30 a.m.12:30 p.m. All meetings will be in room 212. A representative from the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, will hold an informational meeting Sept. 29 at 9 a.m. for students interested in studying abroad at the University of St. Andrews. The meeting is held in Byrnes Building of room 704. For more information, call International Programs at 777-7461. APO Escort Service is offering a free ride to any USC student, male or female, who doesn't want to walk alone an campus. The service is available Sunday through Thursday, from a p.m. co mianignt. to request the service, call 777-DUCK Wednesdays PALM Campus Ministry, Dinner and Program, 5:30 pm., 728 Pickens St. Student National Pharmaceutical Association, first and third Wednesdays of each month, 5:30 p.m., Coker Life Sciences Building Ma* I KliMlti Hi '-aa-.tv. 4.^1* i. I ITlt * + ?. M <*. VikU~ ' - . . t . ..iMii.m -i.iii. - ., U Ai ? / Vi ,,,.r?/.^.rr <? ontil to^'l ??H3* * . .J.V? -?* i ? ?V?4. . ?'*. . , u-.K - l<U w J ?*JL? ., ........ J Ai. _ -w-i? *.4 . * AMAMVMIA/W 4 A?r?rJv*f( i? ' *** IHrrv^iQ no ruirvrs/4-. ?rr# uty,. 4 .1.1^ - 4 - ? 4 44 4 '? 4UH ajU ?ax ckaak.v( w u*.i . 4.''.U. ?* j.?J?17S H/JU V*4 A..,.14 - 4^. - ,r* -* - - '* 4A.?o,.?W.' ^ ?? y kWVtn../ vi We think your life would b( of knowledge: Macintosh* i the already affordable stud I .? ' A - Offers expire October 13,1995- ?1995Apple Compu, designed to be accessible to individuals uritb cbsabih Lounge. For more information, call 544-0899 and ask for Sonia Young Democrats, 7 p.m., RH 91K Student Government Senate, 5 p.m., RH Theater Women Students' Association, 6 p.m., RH 203 Carolina Productions Marketing Committee, 6 p.m., RH 201 Carolina Productions Black Cultural Commission, 7 p.m., RH 348 College Republicans, 7:30 p.m, Gambrell 250. For information, call their voice mail at 343-7194 The Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Association, 8 p.m., Business Administration Room 364 Gamma Beta Phi, Oct. 18 at 8:30 p.m. and Nov. 15 at 5:30, in the Nursing Auditorium. Test Taking Strategies, 12-1 p.m., Towers Conference Room and Russell House 303 Thursdays Habitat for Humanity, 5:30 p.m., RH 205 Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30-9 p.m, RH 315 Baptist Student Union: Heart to Heart, 7 p.m., BSU Center Campus Crusade for Christ "Prime Time," 7:30 p.m., Calcott 15 Carolina Productions Homecoming Commission, 7 pm, RH 201. Contact Lori Toland for more information Gamma Beta Phi, Sept 21,5:30 p.m., Nursing Auditorium Sundays PALM Campus Ministry, Worship and Dinner, 5:30 pm., 728 Pickens St. Student Government Executive Cabinet, 6 p.m., Witten Room Sorority Christian Fellowship, 7:30-9 p.m. in the basement of the South Tower. For information, call 779-7173 Ballroom Dance Club, 4 - 5 pm, Blatt PE Center 107 Carolina Productions Performing Arts Commission, 6:30 p.m., RH 201 Carolina Productions Special Programs Commission, 7 p.m., RH 348 Student Nurses Association, last Monday of every month, 1:16 2:15 p.m., College of Nursing room 125 4 ' .tJOtfii t> ?V lUJAUk?3UJkJ J i onto: arem (Okay, now go 2 vastly improved if you possesse computers are now available foi ent prices Just think, if you had Contc in tl 777-7917 as] ter, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh aru ty. Tb learn more (U.S. only), call 800-600-7808 or TTY800-. The Qamecock AIDS continued from page 1 presentation is real therapy for me particularly when students come uj afterwards and admit they had som< wrong ideas about AIDS and people with AIDS." Hie presentation focuses on Gold man's experiences as a fraternitj member and college student. Gold man focuses particularly on the risks he took by mixing alcohol and un protected sex. In the presentation Sullivan teaches students about alcohol's effect on decision-making, the workings of the HIV virus and ways students can reduce their risk of contracting the disease. Goldman's and Sullivan's program has been well-received on college campuses because they speak c :i:? i. n 1_ ixi a language minium tu uuiiege stu* Wrong comm; turns off millii AMoetotedPr? TULSA, Okla. (AP) ? Millions of personal pagers across the country were rendered useless Tuesday when a computer operator inadvertently sent out a command that turned off thousands of satellite receivers. Space Com, a Tulsa-based satellite transmission service, had to manually reprogram the receivers one by one. About 95 percent of service was restored by the end of the workday, and the remainder was expected to be back by Wednesday morning. Space Com has contracts with five of the 10 largest paging companies. Its biggest contract is with Pagenet, which has more than 6 million pagers across the country. Pagenet could not estimate how many of its customers were without service. "Have we had problems? We've had mqjor problems resulting from this outage," said Pagenet spokesman Gary Hartman in Bridgeport, Conn. Paging Network of New York, which has 5 million customers nationwide, reported a 20 percent increase in complaints from customers on Tuesday. The biggest concern was in the medical field, where doctors are on 24-hour emergency stand-by. Pagenet and and Seattle-based McCaw Communications said thev immedi J shcoff 3WOO' back to whatever you were ( *wmm in - ? mmm. id this piece you could get your ho r less than the more important th a computer, disturb you. Macintosh ict USC Bookstore le Russell House k for the Compute i "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Compu 755-0601. StiU reading? Maybe you should think about law school ^ Wednesday^ , dents. The experiences discussec ) the presentation are things that i i evant to students here at USC. 3 "It's hard to believe that th< are many college students who thi that safer sex means a birth cont r pill," Sullivan said. "As long as tb - students hold the mistaken bel i that they can't get AIDS, they wc take the time to educate themseh , and learn the truth about HIV." The Sorority and Fraternity Coi 3 cril are SDonsorinfr the nmeram in i effort to educate students about All "Their message is so imports and they really have great things say," said Cameron Gilreath, sor ity council member. "This is an ; sue that potentially affects all of i our friends and family." md to satellite ons of pagers ately contacted hospitals, law e forcement agencies and other maj customers to tell them their page were temporarily out of service. Space Corn's satellite system i so relays information to stock que networks like PC Quote in Chica^ which gives 800 customers up-to-tt minute stock quotations. "All we know is that it affect* customers, whatever happened," sa a PC Quote secretary who did n give her name. She said company < ficials could not comment becau; they were too busy dealing with tl problem. There are two satellite pager fi quencies serving the United Stat ? FM-cubed and FM-squared. ] addition, some pagers are served 1 telephone links. Space Com operates an uplir satellite system. Companies ser paging data to the satellite receivei which relay it to the companies' tran mittprs nnH nn fn f.ViP naopro A1 Stem, vice present and gene al manager of Space Com, said ii receivers were turned off between a.m. and 3 a.m. Tuesday when a operator giving the wrong commas ordered the satellite to off-load a the addresses on the FM-square frequency. The company's 40 tecl nicians all worked to restore pri gramming. lputer mln aaic. mework done faster. Then you'( lings in life. Anyway, sorry to a l. The power to be your best! IS r Desk iter, Inc. CardSbop Plus is a registered trademark of Mindscape September 27, 1995 a Pants cause < t in Columbia ink Associated Press TOl ese COLUMBIA ? Women in pantsuits let may not maxe me Desi-aressea list m m't Circuit Judge Joseph Wilson's court, res but there are weightier things to deal with, lawyers said Tuesday, a day afin ter Wilson stopped a hearing and told an one female attorney her clothing was )S. inappropriate, mt "As long as people are neat and i to clean... I don't think it should make or- a lot of difference," said Lee Robinson, is- president of the Charleston County [is Bar Association. It's kind of a silly issue." Robinson said she does not wear pants to court because she believes i her clients expect it. "On the other / hand... I think I look just as nice in a pantsuit as a skirt," she said. On Monday, Wilson called lawyer Heather Smith to the bench to comment on her pantsuit. Wilson would n- not allow Ms. Smith to enter a guilty ior plea on behalf of a woman facing rs firearms charges, The State reported. Wilson did not return phone calls al- Tuesday. He told the newspaper, "If ite a man were to come to court without jo, a tie, I'd ask him to put on a tie." ie- The judge said Ms. Smith criticized him as sexist, but that was not what 3d he intended. lid Ms. Smith denied calling Wilson ot sexist but would not comment further )f- on Tuesday. Her client will have to se enter the plea at some other date, ie Tve seen plenty of women in courtrooms across the state wearing e- pantsuits," said Sue C. Erwin, presies dent of the South Carolina Women's [n )y EXPLOSION continued from page Lk education and research at Richland Ld Memorial Hospital said a patient is g, referred to some kind of burn center s- if his injuries could be classified as third degree burns over 10 percent of r. the body surface area or if second dets gree burns cover of his body 25 per1 cent. ji Raymond said 30 to 40 percent of Ld Bagwell's total body surface area conJ1 tained second degree burns, with the jd worst burns covering the entire asuperficial layer" of his skin. > Lovell said the container shattered because it was sealed when it was placed in the autoclave. A i ! -' <. ' "i ". 9 Power Ma S8MBt Power PC 601 drive, 15" color Power DOS < f 16MBi ? Power PC 6 15" color m 1 m i have time for i pplem I k Macintosh 8MBR Power PC 6i built-in 15' co and all the & \ All Macintosh computers are controversy courtroom Lawyers Association. Rules that used to specify what was considered appropriate dress for lawyers appearing in court no longer exist, Ms. Erwin said. Judges have the power to control their courtrooms and differ in what they think shows disrespect, she said. "The rules with regard to dress have been evolving over the past 20 to 30 years," said state Chief Justice Ernest A. Finney Jr. Finnev and Justice Jean Teal the Supreme Court's only woman, refused to comment specifically about the issue of lawyers' clothing because they might have to deal with it if a grievance were filed against the judge. However, Finney said he did not recall ever criticizing a female lawyer's attire. "I really don't think our judicial system would come to a screeching halt if men didn't wear ties or women didn't wear dresses or judges didn't wear robes," Columbia attorney Bob Guild said. Herbert A. Johnson, a University of South Carolina law professor who teaches a mock trial course, said he saw nothing wrong with allowing his female students to argue their case in a conservative pantsuit instead of a skirt and jacket. Pantsuits also are considered acceptable attire at some companies. "I have people working with me who wear pantsuits," said Fred Hannon, a NationsBank spokesman. Employees there are asked to dress appropriately for their job and take cues from coworkers, he said. Li "It's (the autoclave) like a big pressure cooker," Lovell said. "If you don't have any means for the pressure to escape from the vessel, the vessel can burst." Lovell said such an explosion hasn't happened at Coker before but, UlA.) 4. jy .- l* ' A-' A lb a nui an uniamiuar situation. Autoclaves are dangerous." Lovell said the autoclave was not the cause the explosion. "It was not an equipment failure; it was simply an accident, a very unfortunate situation but an accident," he said. 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