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2 DATE BOOK Entries 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 USC Women's Studies will sponsor a presentation entitled "Caryle and Jane." This is the North American premier of Henry Donalds dramatization of the letters of Jane Carlvle and Thomas Carlyle. The dramatization will be Friday, Oct. 13 at 8 p.m. in Gambrell Auditorium. r i Sundays PALM Campus Ministry, Worship and Dinner, 5:30 p.m., 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 Mondays Carolina Productions Concerts Commission, 7:30 p.m., RH 201 Model United Nations Club, 8:30 p.m., RH 302 Alpha Phi Alpha Service Table, 11 a.m.- 2 p.m., Greene Street Sorority Council, 5 p.m., RH Theater Fraternity Council, 4:30 p.m. Carolina Productions Traditional Events Commission, 6 p.m., du onn ivn o\JZ7 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, 1:15 2:15 p.m., College of Nursing room 125 Tuesdays Newman Club, 7 p.m., St. Thomas More Center. Hillel, 7:30 p.m., RH 315. Conlllondau STOpper simply carpi ' ' hompoqiin? tact 544-0607 for more information SAGE (Students Allied for a Greener Earth), 7-8 p.m., RH 302 Dissertation Writing Support Group, 3:30 - 5 p.m., the Counseling j tt r* i i. r> i. ana numan i^eveiupmem ^enier, 900 Assembly St., Room 212 or call 777-5223 Association of African' American Students, 6 p.m. P.E.E.R.S. meeting, every other week, RH 315 Carolina Productions Ideas and Issues Commission, 7:30 p.m., RH Witten room Carolina Productions Cinematic Arts Commission, 7 p.m., RH 201 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 Lounge. For more information, call 544-0899 and ask for Sonia Young Democrats, 7 p.m., RH 315 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 RH303. What is the "Mi Each Monday*, The Gamecock prin may rerun any advertisement publis not apply toward fulfillment of cont * The Monday, January 15,1996 issue of 1 To place and ad, call 777-4249. T - F | in a ? I Jr All programs paid foi assistance for disabili Th? Gamecock QUILT continued from page 1 T do want to keep it as a memory, and I've taken lots of pictures of it already, but the purpose of making a quilt panel is to make other people aware of the disease," she said. "I hope whoever sees this, as time goes along, will remember people living with the disease and be more aware of protecting themselves from it." FAIR continued from page 1 Amber Felkel said." I usually have a good time when I go, but the lines are really long, and apparently some people can't hold their bladder until they get to a bathroom." The fair continues though Oct. 15. It is open from 10 a.m.-midnight Monday through Saturday and 12 p.m.-ll p.m. on Sundays. Monday through Thursday, general admission for adults 12 and older is $4. Adult tickets, Friday through Sunday, are $5.. Children younger than five years are COCKFEST continued from page 1 nity performed "The Peanut's present Simply Carolina," while Alpha Delta R sorority and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity based their skit around "Simply Carolina... Still going after all these years." Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity titled their skit "What your parent's don't know won't hurt them." For the third year running, Alpha Delta Pi captured first place in the competition, winning a trophy. "It means a whole lot - especially for our president. It's her last year, so it's got to be exciting going out with a winning year," Sara Pendarvis, an Alpha Delta Pi sophomore, said about her sorority's latest Cockfest victory. Senior Lori Toland, Homecoming Scoring tl hat trick . : . wday Shop?" ts a tabloid edition with pick-up ads fr shed up to two weeks prior at half the ract volume. The Gamecock will be the broadslteet "Welcon he deadline for placing an ad In The ^ flomecomrh' TKET JAA DAr ke wad, 0?Msi!li $$?1 58?1 iillili ii!!? ifti fe ; in part, with student activity fees. P ties, please contact Carolina Producti V|bl Friday, October 6, 1995 The quilt display will start at 1 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. on Monday and Tuesday. Volunteers are still needed to help from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday to be quilt monitors. People who want to volunteer can call 777-6102. Admission is free and donations for AIDS and nlv research will be accepted at the Coliseum. admitted free and children ages 6-11 can get in for $2 every day. Advance ticket price for children is $1.50 everyday. Once you're in, you still have to pay for the rides. An all-day ride pass good Mondays through Thursday is $12. The 30-ride coupon deal, good every day, is $18. The ride costs range from 2 to 6 coupons. Some free activities at the fair will be an aquatic show; a dance show, performed by local dance teams; racing pigs; a hypnotic demonstration; and cereal sampling. commissioner, noted that although Cockfest didn't really sell out, it was "well attended." "I came (to Cockfest) to support my team, even though they're having a not-so-great season," senior marketing/management major Aaron Griswold said. English junior Hank Fuseler agreed with Griswold on attending Cockfest to support the Gamecocks but also admitted he came to see the band and show support for USC alumni, which he feels Homecoming symbolizes. "There's a lot of good people that have gone through school before me and walked these halls before me. They created the tradition I enjoy so much today," Fuseler said. he IPS lit L 111 r^n - i r om the previous two weeks. The tabic initial cost (contract rates will apply, c ne Back"issue. Monday Shopper Is 4 p.m. the prevl ^| il guest: EU \h>e*r (D ! r eene Street 3 ^ ICC PARTY Jack,! ersons needing special ons at 777-7130. Fc > Viewers agaii pay-per-view Associated Press LOS ANGELES ? O.J. Simpson's first big test of his marketability may be foundering: Some cable TV operators and viewers are rebelling at the idea of a pay-per-view interview with him. Major pay-TV distributor Request TV has refused to carry such a program, as has CNN, and others are re treating from the idea. "There's been an outpouring of calls from people who haven't heard we rejected it and who are imploring us not to do a (Simpson) pay-per-view event," Request President Hugh Panero said Thursday. "One woman, who described herself as being battered, was very emotional," Panero said in Denver. Word that Simpson was seeking a multimillion-dollar pay-TV deal began circulating shortly after his acquittal Tuesday on charges of murdering his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. Robert Kardashian, Simpson's friend and lawyer, told ABC on Tuesday that "0 J. has a lot to say." Asked if he would say it on pay-per-view TV, Kardashian replied: ^Probably so." The National Organization for Women's Los Angeles chapter issued a call Thursday for cable TV customers to cancel their service if it shows such an interview. Panero said cable operators have told him they already have received such threats. CNN, which said it would not carry a for-pay Simpson interview on journalistic grounds, also has fielded objections. "Without specific research, the calls are overwhelmingly against," said CNN spokesman Steve Haworth in Atlanta. He added that Larry King, host of CNN's "Larry King Live," would not participate in a for-pay interview. "We don't put money in the pockets of people we interview," Haworth said. However, King is quoted in an up 11 i" KVl 11 Lri? KmVIU I lM ?B9iBBillBanU )id will contain a list of all advertiser ;oupon clippers do not qualify). Ad ous Wednesday. ired of huge long-* New Customer Coupo j?^wlth coupon: /p FREE set-up ^2? Interlink prcpa H y* j card with 20 m Br to anywhere in expires 11-30-95 ill GAME ^^"^^Sports CaU rHis Week in Gamec men's Soc SUN, OCT. 8, vs nationally at 4 pm. nationally All home games are at' WOMEN'S SO WED, OCT 1 1, vs Universi All home games are at' VOLLEYB/ FRI, OCT. 6, vs University < chance to win a mo SUN, OCT. 8, vs Mississ All home games are at the For Ticket Information < dr more details' contact: USC spc ast Simpson TV deal coming issue of TV Guide as saying he would be willing to conduct the interview if it was "no-holds-barred" and if proceeds went to battered women. Simpson had a record of domestic abuse involving his former wife. Viewer's Choice, another major pay-per-view distributor, also appeared wary of an interview. "From what we've read and heard in the media, it is hard to foresee the circumstances under which an O.J. show, interview, would be an appropriate pay-per-view event," company president Jim Heyworth said in New York. Boxing matches, football games, concerts and other entertainment events are typical pay-TV fare. "I don't think we need to have a pay-per-view event around a tragedy," Panero said. "If O.J. Simpson wants to set the record straight in regard to misrepresentations he claims have been made, he has very traditional journalistic venues to discuss those things." Neither Request nor Viewer's Choice had been officially approached by a Simpson representative. Semaphore Entertainment Group, which packages pay-TV events, has contacted distributors about a Simpson interview, said a source speaking on condition of anonymity. The company refused comment Thursday. Even if major pay-TV firms veto the idea, individual cable operators could carry such a program. Eddie Kritzer, head of Eddie Kritzer Productions of Los Angeles, told the Daily News of Los Angeles that he has spoken to Simpson lawyer Johnnie Cochran Jr. about putting together a deal guaranteeing Simpson at least $20 million. "The man was acquitted. He's innocent. Why would I have a personal problem with someone who is found by our system to be innocent?" Kritzer said. s on its front page. Advertisers space in the Monday tab will nBatock r listance bills? n (a $30 Value) id & re-chargable calling inutes of FREE calling time the continental U.S. =poiceMagic~ 1-803-750-7279 ext.103 3402 Femandina Road, Suite C, Columbia, SC 29210 I COCKS jndar ock Athletics cer ranked North Carolina televised rhe Graveyard ccer ty of Florida at 7 pm The Graveyard ILL if MiSSiSSiDDi n* 7 nm untain bike ippi State at 2 pm ?P.E. Blatt Center :ALL 777-4274 3Rts Information 777-5204